Page 148 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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 porcelain used as an architectural feature in a number of aristocratic residences. These   94   t is important to note that a considerable quantity
 of Kraak and other blue-and-white shards dating to
 include the intact pieces displayed in the ceiling of a drawing room in the Santos   the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
 have been found in Mozambique Island, but not
 Palace, and the fragments used in the complex inlaid murals or embrechados of the   in archaeological contexts. Local residents have
 former royal Palace of Alcáçovas and the Palace of the Marquesses of Fronteira, and of   incorporated them into architectural displays of
 blue-and white porcelain at both private houses and
 other residences.  restaurants. The author had the opportunity to study
 some of them during a research trip to the island in
 Porcelain finds from archaeological excavations at Portuguese clandestine trading   August 2013. Four blue-and-white shards dating to
 posts in China, at secular and religious sites in settlements in Asia and Africa, and in   the  late  sixteenth/early  seventeenth  century  were
 excavated in the historic centre of Funchal in Madeira,
 Portugal, as well as from datable shipwrecks and survivor campsites, have shown that   from  the  cistern  of  the  houses  of  João  Esmeraldo,
 demolished in 1877. According to the archaeologists
 the majority of the porcelain imported into Portugal was blue-and-white porcelain   this  well  was abandoned in  the  mid-seventeenth
 from Jingdezhen. The porcelain imported also included a small quantity of Jingdezhen   century, when it was being used as a cesspit. Sketch
 drawings are published in Mario Varela Gomes and
 yellow-glazed, white-glazed, Kinrande and porcelain with overglaze enamel decoration.   Rosa Varela Gomes, ‘Cerâmicas, dos séculos XV a   Fig. 3.1.2.1  Blue-and-white ‘Trenchard Bowl’    Fig. 3.1.2.2  Celadon-glazed stoneware bowl
 XVII da Traça Cristóvão Colombo no Funchal’, Actas   with English silver-gilt mounts                              with English gold mounts
 Some of these pieces, such as the yellow-glazed bowls excavated at the former convent   das 2.as Jornadas de Cerâmica Medieval e Pós-  Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Probably Longquan kilns
 Medieval, 1995, p. 335, fig. 15, P1/C2–16 to P1/C2–19.
 Santa Clara-a-Velha in Coimbra and the blue-and-white pieces recovered from the   95   Many of the excavated pieces are exhibited at the   Ming dynasty, Jiajing reign (1522–1566)  Ming dynasty, c.1500
 São João (1552), São Bento (1554) and Espadarte (1558), were originally intended   Macao Museum. See, Armando J.G. Sabrosa, De   Mounts: England (London),     Mounts: England, c.1500–1530
                                                                                                                 Height: 12.3cm; diam: 16.6cm
                                         hallmarked 1599–1600
 Macau  a  Lisboa  –  Na  Rota  das  Porcelanas  Ming,
 for the Chinese imperial court as they bear Jiajing reign marks. Initially, most of   research project, Instituto Cultural da Ream, Lisbon,    Height: 13.9cm; diameter: 23.6cm  Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (acc. no. LI1086.1)
 the blue-and-white porcelain imported was of the ordinary trade type but marine   2003; Canepa, 2008–2009, p. 62; and Canepa, 2012/1,   Victoria and Albert Museum, London     Lent by New College, University of Oxford
 pp. 263–264.
                                      (museum no. M.945–1983)
 archaeological finds indicate that by the early 1590s it was mainly of the Kraak type.   96   A large number of the Kraak shards from the collection
 of Mr Pan Guoxing were included in the exhibition
 Thicker and more crudely finished blue-and-white porcelain made at private kilns   China Westward: Early Sino-Portuguese Trade of
 of Zhangzhou was also imported, but only in small quantities. The quality of the   Chinese Ceramics held at the City University of Hong   of  Segovia,  taken  in 1503  by order  of Queen  Isabella I  of  Castile  (r.  1474–1504)
 Kong in 2009; and the Exhibition of Pak Van Shards of
 Jingdezhen and Zhangzhou porcelain imported in each shipment was quite varied,   Export Porcelain in Macao held at the Macao Museum   the total ceramic finds, including some pieces   (hereafter Isabella I), is listed ‘A bowl of white porcelain with an open filigree foot of
 of Art in 2011. For a discussion on these finds, see Liu   dating to the eighteenth century. For a discussion
 ranging from high to rather low. In the early years of Portuguese trade in Asia, some   Zhaohiu, ‘Kraak Porcelain Found in Macao’, in Cheng,   and  images  of  the  porcelain,  excavated  between   twenty-two carats that together with the gold weigh one mark, three ounces and four-
 of the porcelain was acquired via the Chinese junk traders that frequented Malacca   2009, pp. 13–32; and Liu Zhaohiu, ‘The Excavation   2002–2010, see Mário Varela Gomes and Rosa Varela   eighths’.  This porcelain bowl, as noted by Krahe, would be the earliest documented
                                                                   123
 of Kraak Porcelain in Macao and Related Issues’, in
                          Gomes, ‘Escavações Arqueológicas no Convento
 and their clandestine trading post in Shangchuan, but after they settled themselves in   Cheng, 2012, pp. 34–52. Also see Canepa, 2012/1, pp.   de Santana, en Lisboa. Resultados Preliminares’,   piece of porcelain fitted with precious metal mounts (gold and silver) in Spain, a
 263–264.                 Olisipo. Boletim do Grupo “Amigos de Lisboa’, II
 Macao in 1557 porcelain was mostly acquired there. Numerous finds at religious sites   97   These archaeological finds were discussed by Liu   Série, No. 27, July/September 2007, pp. 76, 79, and   practice in Europe that not only highlighted the rarity and value of the imported
 in Portuguese settlements in Asia and in Portugal have shown that the clergy was an   Zhaohui, Department of Museology & Cultural Relics,   85–86, figs. 5–7; and Rosa Varela Gomes, Mário   object but also provided some protection to it. An inventory taken in 1503–1504
                          Varela Gomes, Mariana Almeida, Carlos Boavida,
 Fudan University, Shanghai, in a paper entitled
 important consumer of porcelain, as it was of Chinese silk, not only for use during   ‘Changes in Jingdezhen Export Porcelain from   Dário Neves, Kierstin Hamilton and Carolina Santos,   mentions a gift sent from Lisbon to Isabella I by her daughter María of Portugal, which
 15th to 17th Century: A Study on Archaeological   ‘Convento de Santana (Lisboa). Estudo Preliminar do
 religious services but also in their daily life as tableware. Furthermore, written sources   discoveries in Hong Kong and Macau’, presented   Espólio da Fossa 7’, Arqueologia em Portugal. 150   consisted of ‘a large blue-and-white Ottoman porcelain resembling a basin (bacía)
 indicate that the Jesuits participated in the trade of porcelain.     at the conference  Cultures of Ceramics in Global   anos, Associação dos Arqueólogos Portugueses,   that was given by the Queen of Portugal to our Queen in a white wooden box’. This
 History, 1300 to 1800 held at Warwick University,
                          Lisbon, 2013, p. 1059 and 1064, Fig. 1 A. I am grateful
 22–24 April, 2010.       to Mário Varela Gomes for granting me permission   was given to Violante de Albion, the Queen’s lady-in-waiting, in Medina del Campo
 98   I am indebted to Nizammudin Taher, Rohini Pande   to include images of the excavated porcelain in this
                                                                            124
 and Abhijit Ambekar, Archaeological Survey of India   doctoral dissertation.  on April 28, 1504.  The fact that this piece is described as Ottoman, argues Krahe,
 (ASI), Goa, for providing me with images of porcelain   102   The Franciscan friars also used Portuguese tin-  may indicate that it was imported through Turkey or that it was an early example of
 found at the St. Augustine complex for research   glazed earthenware. Only 17 of a total of 4.000
 purposes. Mentioned in Canepa, 2014/1, pp. 24 and   fragments recovered from the water cistern were   Iznik blue-and-white pottery.  Although it is impossible to ascertain if this piece was
                                                                                     125
 Trade to Spain [3.1.2]  251, note 50. It is interesting to note that a small   identified as porcelain. For more information, see   made of porcelain or not, this is the first documented use of the term ‘blue-and-white’.
 quantity of blue-and-white porcelain was recovered
                          Joana Bento Torres,  Quotidianos no Convento de
 from  the  Sunchi  wreck,  an  unidentified  Portuguese   São Francisco de Lisboa: uma análise da ceramic   Several pieces described as ‘porcelain’ appear in inventories of the Queen’s chamber
 shipwreck  that  sank  at  the  Sunchi  Reef  (between   vidrada, faiança portuguesa e porcelana chinesa,
 Mormugao  harbour  and  the  promontories  of  Cabo   unpublished  MA  dissertation,  Universidade  Nova   taken after her death, but the use of the term is ambiguous.  For instance, pieces such
 headland) in the shallow waters off Goa in the mid-  de Lisboa, September 2011, pp. 78–83, 98 and
 Evidence of porcelain in Spain before the settlement of Manila in 1571  seventeenth century. The wreck site yielded the bases   Appendix E, pp. 417–421.   as ‘a goblet made of a glass called porcelain, with black and blue leaves of the same
 Porcelain began to be imported into Spain earlier than into Portugal, long before the   of six medium sized jars, shards of saucer dishes and   103   See note 14.  [material], without a lid, …’ may have been made of porcelain or glass, as white glass
 a circular lid, which were probably kept on board for
                        104   For  a  discussion  on  these  finds  and  images,  see
 Spanish  settled  themselves  in  Manila, in 1571.  Spanish  textual  sources  and  shards   the daily use. Published in Sila Tripati, A. S. Gaur and   Santos, 2002, p. 55; and Santos, 2003/2004, pp.   imitating porcelain was manufactured in Europe as early as the end of the fifteenth
 Sundaresh, ‘Exploration of a portuguese shipwreck   29–30, figs. 21–24a.
 excavated at different archaeological sites demonstrate that a few pieces of porcelain   in Goa waters, western coast of India’,  Bulletin of   105   The convent was founded in 1471 by Catarina,   century.  The pieces described in an unpublished document of 1505 dealing with
                                                                   126
 reached Spain in the late Middle Ages, most probably as diplomatic gifts, via Eastern   Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology, 30   Countess of Loulé, daughter of Fernando, 2nd duke   Isabel I’s accounts, held in the archive of Simancas, as ‘Three porcelains that are ewers
                          of Braganza (1430–1483), in the area of Rossio by the
 (2006), p. 131, figs. 8a, 8b and 9.
 Andalusia (Sharq Al-Andalus), the Valencian territory during the period of Muslim   99   Pyrard de Laval, Voyages de Pyrard de Laval aux Indes   river Lis. The nun community was extinguished in   of the four, [that they had] each with a spout, blue and gilded, with lids, worth one
 orientales (1601–1611), Paris, 1998, p. 532. Cited in   1880, after the death of the last nun, Sor Joaquina
 rule.  The earliest textual references to the presence of porcelain in Spain, however,   Pinto de Matos, 2011, p. 128.  do Rósario. The convent was demolished in 1916,   thousand, six hundred and eighty-seven and a half maravedies’, may have referred to
 120
 date to the fourteenth century. 121  100   For sketch drawings of some of the Kraak shards, see   and the Santana market was built on its site. From   Kinrande porcelain ewers dating to the early sixteenth century, such as those in the
                          a total of 86 porcelain shards found at the site,
 Caroline Sassoon, Chinese Porcelain in Fort Jesus,
 The next known references to porcelain are found in royal inventories of   Mombasa, 1975.  there are 4 dating to the Kangxi and Qianlong   Topkapi Saray in Istanbul.  Porcelain appears to have been sought after by the high-
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 101   The convent, founded in 1562, was partly destroyed   reigns of the Qing dynasty. It is worth mentioning
 the beginning of the sixteenth century.  The following references, taken from the   by the earthquake of 1755 (the remaining structures   the site also yielded shards of Portuguese tin-  ranking nobility at the time, as male and female nobles purchased some of the pieces
 transcription of the original documents recently studied by Krahe, serve to illustrate   are now part of the Faculty of Medicine of Lisbon   glazed earthenware plates and bowls with designs   of porcelain that belonged to the Queen sold to repay debts. 128
 University). Cesspits 6 and 7 also yielded a large
                          imitating  Kraak  porcelain.  Nuns  from  wealthy
 the types of porcelain that reached Spain at the time, mostly via Lisbon.  In an   quantity of Portuguese, Spanish and Italian tin-  noble families, include the daughters of the D.   A Jiajing blue-and-white bowl, known as the ‘Trenchard Bowl’, is said to have
 122
 glazed earthenware, as well as German stoneware.   Manuel de Meneses, 5th Marquis of Vila Real, 1st
 inventory of the collection of artistic objects in the treasury of the Alcázar (fortress)   Porcelain amounting only to about 24 percent of   Duke  of  Vila  Real,  Governor  of  Ceuta  (1537–1590).   been a gift from Philip I of Castile (hereafter Philip I) and Joanna of Castile to Sir
 146   Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer    Trade in Chinese Porcelain                                                                 147
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