The mortise and tenon joint consists of two parts: a projecting tongue (the tenon) cut on one member, and a rectangular cavity (the mortise) cut into the receiving member. When the tenon enters the mortise, the contact surfaces transfer shear and compressive forces across the joint. The resulting connection can be fixed or draw-bored, glued, wedged, or left dry for knock-down assembly.

Archaeological evidence from wooden objects found at Polish wetland settlements (e.g., Biskupin, dating to the late Bronze Age) shows that mortise and tenon construction was in use in the territory of present-day Poland well over two thousand years ago. Medieval church furniture and structural trusses in documented buildings across Mazovia and Lesser Poland use variants that closely resemble modern forms.

Technical diagram of a mortise and tenon joint showing the tenon projecting from one board and the rectangular mortise cut into another
Mortise and tenon joint diagram — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA)

Geometry and Proportions

Traditional proportions place the tenon thickness at one-third of the workpiece thickness. A 45 mm thick rail therefore yields a tenon of approximately 15 mm. Length varies with the application: furniture tenons are commonly 25–40 mm; structural tenons in timber framing can extend 80–120 mm to maximise contact area.

Shoulder cuts on all four faces of the tenon conceal any gaps at the joint line. The haunch — a stepped shoulder used in frame-and-panel construction — fills the groove that runs along the inner edge of a stile, preventing the mortise from opening. Polish cabinet makers working in the Biedermeier tradition popular in Warsaw and Poznań during the 19th century paid particular attention to tight shoulders, as veneered surfaces left no margin for visible gaps.

Variant Mortise Depth Typical Use
Through mortise Full workpiece thickness Structural timbers, workbench legs
Blind (stopped) mortise 60–80% of workpiece thickness Furniture rails, chair stretchers
Haunched tenon Blind, with stepped shoulder Frame-and-panel doors, window casements
Drawbored tenon Through or blind Timber framing, barn construction
Loose wedged (tusked) Through, with slot for wedge Knock-down furniture, trestle tables

Tooling: Traditional and Current Practice

Before mechanisation, Polish craftsmen cut mortises with a mortise chisel — a stout, thick-bladed tool designed to be mallet-driven without flexing — and finished the walls with a paring chisel. Tenons were sawn with a rip-type tenon saw and trimmed to fit with shoulder and rabbet planes.

In contemporary Polish furniture workshops (stolarnie), a hollow-chisel mortiser handles most production mortises. Tenons are typically cut on a sliding table saw or spindle moulder using purpose-made jigs. The geometry remains identical to hand-cut joints; the tolerance is tighter and more consistent.

Photograph showing a mortise cut into a piece of timber and a matching tenon
Mortise and tenon in timber — Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain)

Use in Polish Regional Furniture

The mortise and tenon is the primary structural joint in traditional Polish chairs, tables, and case furniture across all regional styles. In Highlander (góralski) furniture from the Tatra foothills, through-mortises with protruding wedged tenons are left visible as a decorative feature. In the Łowicz region of Mazovia, painted furniture boxes use blind mortises concealed beneath brightly coloured decoration.

Corpus furniture of the 18th and 19th centuries — wardrobes (szafy), cupboards (kredensy), and tall clock cases — relies on mortise and tenon framing for the carcass. Pine and oak were the most common species. Fir (świerk) was used in rural Podlaskie and Warmia regions where oak was less available.

Structural Behaviour

The joint resists bending moments at the connection point by placing wood fibre in compression on one face and tension on the other. In chair frames subjected to racking loads, the shoulder-to-stile contact area is the critical zone. A long tenon with tight shoulders outperforms a short tenon with loose shoulders regardless of adhesive type.

Drawboring — offsetting the peg hole between mortise and tenon so that driving the peg draws the joint tight — was the standard assembly method for structural timber frames in Poland until the advent of modern adhesives. Pegs were typically made of dry oak driven into green pine or larch; differential shrinkage locked them permanently.

The Muzeum Wsi Mazowieckiej in Sierpc maintains an open-air collection of reconstructed vernacular buildings from the Mazovia region, most of which use drawbored mortise and tenon framing in their timber structures. The museum's documentation provides measured drawings of joint details.

Further Reading

Last updated: 5 June 2026