Page 142 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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that ‘many sets of porcelain arrived, many of the ships carrying two or three thousand
                        80   The remains of this shipwreck have never been
                          excavated. In Western Cape, a large quantity of Kraak   sets, with twenty pieces each’, he was referring to sets of the mass-produced Kraak
                          porcelain was found on and near the archaeological
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                          remains of a survivor’s campsite from the  São   porcelain.  The  number  of  Lisbon  merchants  selling  porcelain  at  the  time  seems
                          Gonçalo shipwreck, which had been moored to   extremely low. As noted earlier, almost forty years earlier the Venetian ambassadors to
                          undergo repairs when it sank in a storm. The São
                          Gonçalo was carrying  Kraak porcelain of both fine   Lisbon mentioned that there were four or six shops, and even then that seemed low.
                          and coarse quality. The finds include shards of dishes,
                          bowls or klapmutsen (this term will be discussed in   Undoubtedly, future research will bring to light other written sources that will prove
                          the following pages of this Chapter) and covered   that many more shops or merchants sold porcelain in Lisbon.
                          boxes as well as shards that formed part of an
                          elephant-shaped kendi. I am grateful to Jane Klose,   Material from archaeological excavations at various urban and religious sites
                          Historical Archaeology Research Group, University of
                          Cape Town, for providing me with an image of these   in Macao, Goa and Mombasa provides further evidence of the variety of  Kraak
                          latter shards. Published in Canepa, 2012/1, p. 261,   and  Zhangzhou porcelain traded by the Portuguese, and most importantly of the
                          fig. 4; and Antonia Malan and Jane Klose, ‘Porcelain
                          at  the  Cape  of  Good  Hope  in  the  17th  century’,  in   predominance of Kraak.  In Macao, intact pieces and shards of large quantities of
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                          Van Campen and Eliëns, 2014, p. 160, fig. 11. The
                          elephant appears to have been the most common   Kraak porcelain were excavated from the sites of the gardens of the Santo Agostino
                          form of  Kraak zoomorphic  kendi, as a considerable   church and Rua da Judaria.  Shards that formed part of dishes, bowls, cups and kendis
                                                                                   95
                          number of extant examples are found in public and
                          private collections. Visual sources also attest to their   were also found at Rua Central and Rua Das Estalagens. Recently about 100 shards,
                          popularity. This may have been due to the fanciful
                          way in which liquid was poured from the vessel. When   most of them Kraak, were unearthed during renovations from the sites of Rua dos
                          used liquid spurts from the two tusks and crosses a   Mercadores (originally the area where the port of Pak Van was situated) and Rua dos
                          few centimeters below. For a discussion on elephant-
                          shaped  kendis, see Vinhais and Welsh, 2008/2,     Ervanários.  These shards provide ample evidence of the wide variety of shapes and
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                          pp. 188–193, no. 28 and pp. 194–195, no. 29. For
                          general information on the shipwreck and porcelain,   decorations of the porcelain traded by the Portuguese. In addition, a shard that formed
                          see Andrew B. Smith, ‘Excavations at Plettenberg
 Fig. 3.1.1.19  Blue-and-white bowl from the   Fig. 3.1.1.22  Kraak shards of a plate    Fig. 3.1.1.24  Fragment of a Kraak plate   Bay, South Africa of the camp-site of the survivors of   part of the centre of a dish decorated with deer in a landscape was found at Penny’s Bay
 Wanli shipwreck (c.1625)  excavated at the church of Our Lady of    excavated at the former convent of    the wreck of the São Gonçalo, 1630’, The International   in Hong Kong, where the Portuguese traded clandestinely before 1557.  A number of
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 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Grace, Velha (Old) Goa  Santana, Lisbon  Journal of Nautical Archaeology and Underwater
 Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign   Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Exploration, 15.1 (1986), pp. 53–63; Esterhuizen, 2001,   Kraak shards that formed part of dishes and kendi have been excavated at the church
 (1621–1644)    Ming dynasty, Wanli/Chongzhen reign   Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)  pp. 111–116; Vieira de Castro, 2005, p. 29: Canepa,   of Our Lady of Grace, popularly known as St. Augustine, which was built on the Holy
 © Sten Sjostrand  (1573–1644)   © Mário Varela Gomez and Rosa Varela Gomez  2008–2009, p. 62; and Canepa, 2012/1, pp. 261–262,   Hill at Velha (Old) Goa in 1602 (Figs. 3.1.1.22 and 3.1.1.23).  The French navigator
                          figs. 5 and 6.
                                                                                                                98
 © Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Goa  81   A naveta was a swift ship of galliot type, of a size of
 Fig. 3.1.1.20  Zhangzhou blue-and-white bowl   Fig. 3.1.1.25  Fragments of a Kinrande    around 300-tons. Souza, 1986, p. xii.  François Pyrard de Laval (1578–1623) who stayed in Goa between June 1608 and
 from the Wanli shipwreck (c.1625)  Fig. 3.1.1.23  Fragment of a Kraak kendi   plate excavated at the former convent of   82   Shards of a large vase were recovered from a cave   February 1610, in his Voyage de Pyrard de Laval aux Indes orientales (1601–1611),
 Zhangzhou kilns, Fujian province  excavated at the church of Our Lady of Grace,   Santana, Lisbon  in Bonza Bay near East London, where survivors are
 Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign   Velha (Old) Goa  Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  thought to have sought refuge after the shipwreck.   describes the Royal Hospital where he was a patient as ‘the finest in the world’, and
 (1621–1644)   Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)   Mentioned in Canepa, 2008–2009, p. 62; and Canepa,   states that it is ‘managed and governed by the Jesuits’ and the food was served in
                          2012/1, p. 261.
 © Sten Sjostrand  Ming dynasty, Wanli/Chongzhen reign   © Mário Varela Gomez and Rosa Varela Gomez  83   A few Kraak shards have been found at Cefane, where
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 (1573–1644)              the Nossa Senhora de Atalaya do Pinheiro wrecked.   porcelain.  Both Kraak and Zhangzhou porcelain were found during excavations at
 Fig. 3.1.1.21  Fragment of a Zhangzhou    © Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Goa  Excavations at the site of the survivor’s camp of this   Fort Jesus, situated in the old port of Mombasa in Kenya, which was built by the
 blue-and-white saucer dish  from the    wreck in the nearby sand dune yielded eight shards   Portuguese in 1593 and remained occupied by them until it fell to Omani Arabs in
 Wanli shipwreck (c.1625)  of Ming blue-and-white porcelain. Images of these
 Zhangzhou kilns, Fujian province  shards have not been published, thus it has not been   1698.  These archaeological finds and documentary references serve as examples of
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                          possible to identify them. Mentioned in Canepa,
 Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign   2012/1, p. 261.      the wide distribution of porcelain in Portuguese settlements in Asia.
 (1621–1644)            84   Shards  of  Kraak jars, lids, plates and dishes all
 © Sten Sjostrand         decorated  with  panelled  borders  were  recovered   In Portugal, archaeological finds at both secular and religious sites in Lisbon,
                          from the Santíssimo Sacramento. This carrack, part of   Oporto, Coimbra, Leiria, Silves,  Tavira and Lagos not only demonstrate that
                          the same fleet as the Santa Maria Madre de Deus and
 of stylized flower-heads, made at private kilns of Jingdezhen for the Chinese domestic   A few intact dishes and plates along with shards   the Nossa Senhora de Atalaya do Pinheiro, left Goa   considerable quantities of Kraak and other fine late Ming porcelain from Jingdezhen
 of pear-shaped bottles, dishes and plates with   after being detained for four years due to a Dutch
 market (Fig. 3.1.1.19). In addition, the shipwreck yielded a small bowl decorated   continuous, panelled or pomegranate borders   blockade. Canepa, 2012/1, p. 261.  were imported into the motherland in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth
 90
 were recovered from the wreck site. For general   85   The  Nossa Senhora da Consolação, which sank in
 with a shou character and a shard of a saucer dish with a diamond-shaped panel and   information on the shipwreck and its cargo, see   front of the San Sebastian Fortress during the Dutch   centuries, but also that they were highly prized by the royalty, nobility and clergy. In
 trigram decoration, both made of Zhangzhou blue-and-white porcelain (Figs. 3.1.1.20   Simonetta L. Afonso (ed.),  Nossa  Senhora dos   siege to Mozambique Island. After repeated failed   Lisbon, shards of a number of Kraak plates dating to the Wanli reign with continuous
 Mártires: The Last Voyage, exhibition catalogue,   attempts by the Dutch to steal the carrack while
 and 3.1.1.21).  The latter blue-and-white and Zhangzhou pieces together with a small   The Pavilion of Portugal, Expo ’98, Lisbon, 1998; Luis   on anchor at the bay laden with cargo from India   or panelled rim borders (Fig. 3.1.1.24), blue-and-white bowls, as well as shards from
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 Filipe Monteiro Vieira de Castro, The Pepper Wreck:   and waiting to resume her trip to Lisbon, it was set
 number of shards of similar porcelain pieces found on and near the archaeological   A Portuguese Indiaman at the Mouth of the Tagus   on fire together with another ship to avoid capture   a blue-and-white plate with Kinrande decoration (Fig. 3.1.1.25) were excavated from
 remains of a survivor’s campsite from the shipwreck São Gonçalo (1630), demonstrate   River, unpublished PhD Thesis, Texas A&M University,   by the Dutch. Written documents state that not   six cesspits at the former convent of Santana, the largest female convent in the capital
 2001; Castro, Fonseca and Wells, 2010, pp. 14–34.   everything was salvaged from the ship. So far, the
 that in the 1620s and into the 1630s the Portuguese merchants were shipping to   For a discussion and images of the porcelain cargo,   wreck site has yielded only two Kraak pieces: a plate   under the patrimony of John III, and after his death that of Catherine of Austria.
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 see Brigadier, 2002, pp. 69–80; and Inês Alexandra   (now reconstructed) and a globular  kendi, which
 Portugal some blue-and-white porcelain made for the domestic market as well as a   Duarte Pinto Coelho, A Cerâmica Oriental da Carreira   bears a white hare mark on its base. I am grateful to   Shards of 14 plates and 3 bowls, including some Kraak with continuous or panelled
 small quantity of the thicker and more crudely finished porcelain made at private kilns   da Índia no contexto da Carga de uma Nau – A   Alejandro  Mirabal  for  providing  me  with  images  of   borders dating to the Wanli reign, and other Jingdezhen blue-and-white dating to
 Presumível Nossa Senhora dos Mártires, unpublished   these  porcelain  pieces.  For  general  information  on
 in Zhangzhou prefecture (Appendix 2).    MA Thesis in Archaeology, Universidade Nova de   the shipwreck and its cargo, see Alejandro Mirabal,   the earlier Zhengde to Jiajing reigns, were also found among the ceramic material
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 Lisboa, 2008, pp. 104–145. Pinto Coelho mistakenly   Intermediate Report on Underwater Archaeological
 Considering the Kraak and other porcelain finds from the shipwrecks discussed   catalogued a group of  Kraak shards as  Zhangzhou   Excavations off the Island of Mozambique and   recovered from a water cistern at the former convent of São Francisco.
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 above it is likely that when Father Nicolau de Oliveira in his Livro das Grandezas de   porcelain in pp. 146–158. Also see Canepa, 2008–  Mogincual, Arqueonautas Worldwide S.A., January   In northern Portugal, a few small blue-and-white porcelain shards, including
 2009, pp. 62–63, fig. 1; and Canepa, 2012/1, p. 263,   2006; Canepa, 2012/1, pp. 261–262, figs. 7 and 8;
 Lisboa of 1620, stated that 17 merchants were selling porcelain in Lisbon and also   figs. 12 and 13.  and Alejandro Mirabal, The Excavation of the Nossa   Kraak, were excavated from a seventeenth century context at the Arca de Mijavelhas site
 140   Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer    Trade in Chinese Porcelain                                                                 141
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