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Earth a long time’.  Peter Mundy published a manuscript between 1634 and 1637,
                                                                            564
                                                             explaining that porcelain pieces ‘should ly 100 yeares undergrounde before they come
                                                             to perfection…..’.  Later English publications, like Thomas Browne’s Pseudodoxia
                                                                            565
                                                             Epidemica of 1646, continued to include accounts of how to make porcelain.
                                                                                                                            566
                                                             Archaeological evidence of porcelain from English cities
                                                             Material evidence of the import of porcelain into England in the early to mid-seventeenth
                                                             century is provided by a few archaeological finds in London. Cesspit excavations
                                                             that took place between February and May of the year 2000 in the yards behind the
                                                             remains of timber houses of a site at 43–53 Narrow Street in the East London suburb
                        564   Kerr and Wood, 2004, p. 742. Mentioned in Pierson,
                          2005, p. 34.                       of Limehouse, yielded a small amount of porcelain along other imported ceramic
                        565   Jane Hwang  Degenhardt, ‘Cracking  the Mysteries
                                                                    567
                          of “China”: China (ware) in the Early Modern   material.  This area, first used for domestic occupation in the last two decades of the
                          Imagination’,  Studies in Philology, Vol. 110, No. 1,   sixteenth century, was inhabited by seafaring families that until the 1620s were involved
                          Winter 2013, p. 156.
                        566   For a full citation, see Adrian Hsia (ed.), The Vision   in privateering expeditions against the Spanish, especially in the Caribbean.  As
                                                                                                                              568
                          of China in the English Literature of the Seventeenth
                          and Eighteenth Centuries, Hong Kong, 1998, p. 41.  Killock and Medders have noted, some commanders of the EIC lived in the emerging
 Fig. 3.2.2.15  Blue-and-white jar with a woven   567   t is important to mention that the material
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 cane casing from the Tradescant Collection  recovered from rubbish pits of Phase VI, containing   merchant community of the Ratcliff waterfront and many of the mariners recruited by
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  ceramics imported from 1580 to 1630, do not   the Company at Ratcliffe, Limehouse and the neighbouring areas, served as privateer
 Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620), c.1600  include porcelain.  For  more  information  on  this
                                                                                                        569
 Height: 23.5cm           archaeological site and sketch-drawings of some   captains against both Spanish and Portuguese ships.  Thus it could be assumed that
 Ashmolean Museum, Oxford  porcelain finds, see Douglas Killock and Frank   the seafaring families who inhabited the houses in Narrow Street acquired at least
                          Medders, ‘Pottery as plunder: a 17th-century
 (inv. no. AN1685 B.687.b Jar)  maritime site in Limehouse, London’,  The Society   some of porcelain through plunder. Both Jingdezhen and Zhangzhou porcelain were
                          of Post-Medieval Archaeology, Vol. 39, Issue 1
                                                                                                               570
                          (2005), pp.  1–91.  Mentioned  in  David Gaimster,   found in four cesspits of Phase VII, dating to c.1640–1660.  The excavation of Pit
                          ‘Arqueology of an Age of Print? Everyday Objects in   912, located to the north of building IV, yielded two porcelain dishes, one of them
                          an Age of Transition’, in Tara Hamling and Catherine
 probably written in 1603 or 1604. When his character Pompey states that ‘they are   Richardson (eds.), Everyday Objects: Medieval and   Zhangzhou, which constitute 5.14 percent of the total assemblage excavated.  Pit
                                                                                                                              571
                          Early Modern Material Culture and its Meanings,
 not China dishes, but very good dishes’, he is implying that the dishes used commonly   Farnham, 2010, p. 142.   480, yielded two Kraak dishes with panelled rim borders. The fragment of another
 at the table were considered to be of inferior quality than those of porcelain.  The   568   Killock and Medders, 2005, p. 34.  dish from this latter cesspit, crudely decorated with two deer in a landscape within a
 557
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                        569   bid., p. 30.
 next reference appears in Ben Jonson’s recently discovered masque, Entertainment at   570   bid., pp. 35–48. The fact that cesspits of  c.1650–  panelled peach spray border, and a similar fragment excavated from Pitt 384, relate
                          I
                          1660,  c.1660–1670 and  c.1680–1700, and  a timber-
 Britain’s Burse, a performance that took place in London in April 1609 on the occasion   lined pit of  c.1670–1680 at this site also yielded    to finds from the Hatcher junk (c.1643).  Pit 214, associated with the property of
                                                                                               572
 of the opening of the Earl of Salisbury’s New Exchange, located adjacent to Salisbury   Kraak and  Zhangzhou porcelain demonstrate that   Captain Thomas Harrison, yielded a fragment of a Kraak dish with deer in a landscape
                          these two types of late Ming export porcelain
 House in the Strand, which was hoped would ‘rival Greshman’s Royal Exchange in   continued to be used in England during the second   within a white cavetto and continuous rim border as well as a few Zhangzhou shards,
                          half of the seventeenth century. These latter finds
 the City’.  Jonson claims that there was a profusion of manufactured luxury goods   are out of the scope of this study.  but they constitute only 0.54 percent of the assemblage.  Pit 307 with a context
                                                                                                             573
 558
 on display.  As Baker has noted, the ‘Shop-Boy’ character offers for sale a variety of   571   Killock and Medders, 2005, pp. 11 and 51.  dating to c.1650–1660, yielded the base of a small Kraak bowl (Fig. 3.2.2.16) and
 559
                        572   bid., p. 44. For a sketch-drawing of the Kraak dish,
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 exotic goods from China, describing them to his audience as ‘Veary fine China stuffes,   see p. 45, fig. 27:22.   Pit 913, dating to  c.1660–1670, yielded a fragment of a  Zhangzhou saucer dish
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                        573   n  1655, Captain Thomas Harrison  took  over the
 of all kindes and qualities’. They include ‘China Chaynes, China Braceletts, China   Noah’s  Ark  Inn,  located  in  the  south-east  corner   (Fig. 3.2.2.17), like those recovered from the Spanish shipwreck San Diego (1600), the
 scarfes, China fannes, China girdles, China kniues, China boxes, China Cabinetts’. 560   of the excavation area, and the adjacent tenement   Wanli shipwreck (c.1625), and the campsite of the Portuguese shipwreck São Gonçalo
                          from  Elizabeth  Ellis.  Harrison  bought  another
 The ‘Shop-Boy’, as Baker points out, attempts to discredit the porcelain that other   adjacent house at the same time, and later acquired   (1630) discussed earlier.
                                                                                574
                          two other houses to the east of the excavated area.
 merchants have for sale in London, saying that there are ‘other China howses about the   Killock and Medders, 2005, pp. 12, 29, 39 and 51. A   In London, other finds of late sixteenth and early seventeenth century porcelain
 town’, to be sure, but what do they offer? ‘Trash’, or counterfeit goods. ‘Not a peece   sketch-drawing of the Kraak dish is illustrated as fig.   were made during excavations undertaken between September 2000 and April 2001
                          27:20 in p. 45.
 of Purslane about this towne, but is most false and adulterate, except what you see on   574   I am grateful to Chris Jarret, Pre-Construct   at Paternoster Square, located immediately to the north of St. Paul’s Cathedral.  As
                                                                                                                               575
                          Archaeology Ltd, for providing me information and
 this shelfe’.  Although Robert Cecil was the owner of the new Burse and an investor   557   William  Shakespeare,  Measure for Measure, Act   images of some of the porcelain found at the site.  noted by Watson and Pierce, this area of London was known during the later medieval
 561
 in many of the trading companies trading in the Asian goods promoted by the ‘Shop-  2,  scene 1, in Brian Gibbons (ed.),  Measure  for   575   Sadie Watson and Jacqueline Pierce, ‘Taverns   period for the high end of the cloth trade (silk, lace and other quality materials) and
 Measure, Cambridge and New York, 1991, p. 103.
                          and other entertainments in the City of London?
 Boy’,  Jonson’s commentary saying that they ‘thinke to haue’ the same goods ‘cheape   Cited in Pierson, 2007, pp. 27–28.  Seventeenth-  and  18th-century  finds  from  from the sixteenth century onwards, for publishing houses.  The cesspit of Building
                                                                                                              576
 562
 558   The  Entertainment was discovered by James   excavations  at  paternoster  Square’,  Post-Medieval
 … at the next returne of the Hollanders fleete from the Indyes’, further indicates    Knowles among the State papers Domestic in the   Archaeology, Vol. 44, Issue 1 (2010), pp. 172–208. I am   3, yielded fragments of a Kraak plate crudely decorated with mandarin ducks in a
 that some of the porcelain that arrived in England at this time was acquired via the   Public Record Office. David J. Baker, ‘”The Allegory   indebted to Jacqueline Pierce, Museum of London   pond within a white cavetto and continuous border (Fig. 3.2.2.18).  Shards of two
                                                                                                                     577
                          Archaeology, for providing me with an image of one
 of a China Shop”: Jonson’s Entertainment at Britain’s
 Dutch Republic.    Burse’, ELH, vol. 72, No. 1, Spring 2005, p. 159.   of the shards excavated at the site and information   Kraak klapmutsen with panelled decoration and of two further plates were also found
 563
 559   Peck, 2005, p. 50.  on porcelain finds from the database MOLA, and
 Porcelain was still very much unknown in England at this time. By the 1610s,   560   Cited in Baker, 2005, p. 159.  to Cath Maloney, archivist, for information on the   in the cesspit, which appears to have been in use until the beginning of the eighteenth
                          LAARC online catalogue.
 English writers began describing what they believed about the process of manufacturing   561   Cited in Ibid., p. 173. Baker points out in p. 179, note   576   Watson and Pierce, 2010, p. 174.  century.  This porcelain, constituting only 4.9 percent of the local and imported
                                                                   578
 50, that ‘Purslane’ is an editorial emendation. The
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 porcelain. For instance, according to the philosopher Francis Bacon in his Novum   original text reads ‘Pursla’.  577   bid., p. 184, fig. 11.  ceramic assemblage, probably belonged to a reasonably well-to-do individual from
 562   Baker, 2005, p. 162.  578   Ibid., pp. 181 and 184.
 Organum of 1620, porcelain developed from an ‘artificial cement’ when ‘buried in the   563   Cited in Ibid., p. 174.  579   bid., pp. 180, 184–185.  London’s rapidly growing professional and middle class.  A fragment of a tiny finely
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 218   Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer    Trade in Chinese Porcelain                                                                 219
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