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potted blue-and-white wine cup decorated with a band of flame and scrolls excavated
 from Minnories, London EC3, relates closely to finds from two VOC shipwrecks,
 the  Witte Leeuw (1613) and  Banda (1615), discussed earlier (Figs. 3.2.1.11 and
 3.2.1.10, respectively). 580
 Porcelain has also been excavated in towns in the South West of England. Shards
 of Kraak and Kinrande porcelain were found among a large group of ceramic and glass
 household objects, dating to c.1600, in a garderobe pit (pit 314) in Queen Street,
 Plymouth.  In addition, 20 shards of blue-and-white porcelain were excavated along
 581
 other imported ceramics from a site at the centre of old Plymouth, known as Kitto
 Institute.  They appear to have formed part of a Kraak saucer dish, two blue-and-
 582
 white bowls (one with reticulated decoration) and two blue-and-white plates.  This
 583
 porcelain may have come from the Spanish royal ship San Felipe taken to Plymouth
 in 1587 after Sir Francis Drake captured her in the Azores carrying a cargo of 1,800
 pounds of porcelain on board.  Porcelain was also on board La Trinidad Valencera,
 584
 a large Venetian merchant ship requisitioned by Spain that wrecked during a storm
 off Donegal, northwestern coast of Ireland, when the Spanish Armada attempted to
 conquer England the following year, in 1588.  Two rim shards of a blue-and-white   Fig. 3.2.2.19  Blue-and-white bowl from the
 585
                               shipwreck La Trinidad Valencera (1588)
 plate decorated with auspicious symbols tied with ribbons along an intact crudely   Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province
 potted Jingdezhen blue-and-white bowl with sketchily painted horses flying among ruyi   Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)
                                              Diameter: 15.2cm
 clouds were recovered from the shipwreck (Fig. 3.2.2.19) (Appendix 3).  Plymouth,
 586
                                          Ulster Museum, Belfast
 as noted earlier, was the port of departure for ships of the Virginia Company (hereafter
 referred to as VC), formed with a charter from James I in 1606, which crossed the   Fig. 3.2.2.20  Shard of a Kraak plate and pottery
                        excavated at Berry Pomeroy Castle, south Devon
 Atlantic with settlers and supplies for the English colonies in Virginia.   Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province
 Several finds have been made in Devon. Shards of a few Kraak and other blue-  Fig. 3.2.2.16  Fragment of a Kraak    Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)
 and-white porcelain plates, saucer-dishes and a bowl, along other imported ceramics,   bowl excavated at Narrow Street,    © David Garner. English Heritage (M940025)
 were found during excavation at the ruins of Berry Pomeroy Castle, near the village of   Limehouse, London
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province
 Berry Pomeroy in south Devon (Fig. 3.2.2.20).  The porcelain was dated to c.1565–  Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign   in honour of John G. Hurst, Oxbow Books, Oxford,   documented as early as 1596. An Exeter inventory of November of that year mentions
 587
 1585, but it could have been made slightly later, in the 1580s–1590s.  It is likely   (1621–1644)  1992, p. 230 and p. 234, table 1.  that the apothecary Thomas Baskerville left ‘6 Carracke’ dishes with two stone jugs
 588
 © Chris Jarret         583   Ibid., p. 231, pl. 1.
 that the porcelain was acquired when the house was enlarged and transformed into ‘a   584   J. P. Allan (ed.), ‘Medieval and Post-Medieval Finds   and one dozen of cheese trenchers in his cellar, valued at a total of 5s (Fig. 3.2.2.24). 592
                          from Exeter, 1971–1980’, Exeter Archaeological
 very stately house’ by Lord Seymour’s son, Edward Seymour II (c.1563–1613), who   Fig. 3.2.2.17  Fragment of a Zhangzhou    Reports, Exeter, 1984, Vol. 3, p. 106. Mentioned in   Baskerville owned a remarkable range of oriental products, including benzoin, China
 saucer dish excavated at Narrow Street,   Pomper, 2014, p. 82.
 inherited Berry Pomeroy Castle in 1593.  Other porcelain finds in south Devon,   Limehouse, London  585   For information on the shipwreck, see Colin J. M.   root, camphor, rhubarb and musk.  An inventory taken in 1597, lists three ‘China
                                                                                          593
 589
 include blue-and-white shards of a Wanli saucer-dish dating to c.1600 excavated at 39   Zhangzhou kilns, Fujian province  Martin, ‘La Trinidad Valencera: an Armada invasion   dishes’,  valued  at  3s,  in  the  buttery  of Walter  Horsey;  and  another  taken  in  April
 Fore Street, Totnes.    Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign   transport lost off Donegal. Interim site report,   of the following year lists ‘9 carricke dishes’, valued at 5s, left by John Anthonye
 590
                          1971–76’,  The  International  Journal  of  Nautical
 (1621–1644)
 Fragments of a few Kraak and other blue-and-white porcelain pieces, also dating   © Chris Jarret  Archaeology  and  Underwater  Exploration,  Vol.  8,   in his ‘lyttell chamber’ (Fig. 3.2.2.25).  The estates left by Horsey and Anthonye
                                                                                             594
                          Issue 1 (1979), pp. 13–38; and David Atherton,  La
 to c.1600, have been excavated in Exeter. The site of 38 North Street yielded fragments   Trinidad Valencera, Derry-Londonderry, 2013.  valued at over £2,000, demonstrate that they were both very rich merchants.  The
                                                                                                                             595

 Fig. 3.2.2.18  Fragment of a Kraak plate   586   According to research by Martin, porcelain was only
 of a finely potted Kraak plate decorated with a landscape scene within a rim panelled   excavated at Paternoster Square, London  found on La Trinidad Valencera, not on the other   1596 inventory is of particular importance  because it provides the earliest written
 border of flower and peach sprays, and of a small saucer dish with a bird on a rock   Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Spanish Armada shipwrecks so far discovered,   reference known thus far of the use of the term ‘Carracke’ to refer to dishes, which in
                          the  Girona, Santa Maria de la Rosa and  San Juan
 Ming dynasty, Wanli/Tianqi reign (1573–1627)
 within a border of tear-drop medallions with peach sprays (Fig. 3.2.2.21 and 3.2.2.22).   Museum of London Archaeology, London  de Sicilia. Images of the shards are published in   all probability were made of Kraak porcelain. The fact that the inventory taken two
 The porcelain was found along other imported ceramic and glass objects dating to   Colin J. M. Martin, ‘Spanish Armada pottery’,  The   years later, in 1598, mentions again ‘carricke dishes’ proves that it was a commonly
                          International Journal of Nautical Archaeology
 c.1680, which represent a large assemblage even for a wealthy merchant’s household.   580   The cup fragment is now housed in the Museum   and Underwater Exploration, Vol. 8, Issue 4 (1979),   used term in northern Europe, in England as early as the last decade of the sixteenth
                          Fig. 13, nos. 98.TV and 99.TV; and Fig. 14 (sketch-
 The ceramic assemblage of c.1660 found in another cesspit located in Trichay Street,   of London (MIO 86:1010). Published in Rose Kerr,   drawing). For images of the bowl, see Laurence   century and in the Dutch Republic, as mentioned earlier, as early as the third decade
 Pillip Allen and Jean Martin, The World in Blue and   Flanagan, Ireland’s Armada Legacy, Dublin, 1988, p.
 which appears to represent the clearance of a household, includes a Kraak plate and a   White. An exhibition of Blue and White ceramics,   137, no. 9.70.   of the seventeenth century. Furthermore, this proves that the Dutch term kraken is not
 bowl, a blue-and-white saucer dish decorated with spotted deer (Fig. 3.2.2.23), and   dating between 1320 and 1820, from members of the   587   For a  full report of  the archaeological excavation,   derived from a type of wall-shelf used for displaying blue-and-white porcelain in the
                          see S. Brown (ed.), ‘Berry Pomeroy Castle’,  Devon
 Oriental Ceramic Society, exhibition catalogue, The
 a tiny finely potted wine cup decorated with a band of flame and scrolls, all dating   Oriental Ceramic Society, London, 2003, p. 47, fig. 8.   Archaeological Society, Proceedings No. 54, 1996.   Dutch town of Friesland.
                                                                                 596
 581   I am grateful to John P. Allan for providing me   588   Ibid., pp. 220–222, pl. 79.
 to the late sixteenth century.  The aforementioned wine cup relates to the fragment   with images of the porcelain recovered for     589   The Castle was built by the Pomeroy family in the   It is clear that the possession of porcelain in Exeter at the time, even among the
 591
 research purposes.
 excavated in London, as well as to finds from the VOC shipwrecks Witte Leeuw (1613)   582   John Allan and James Barber, ‘A seventeenth-century   late fifteenth century, and was bought in 1547 by   wealthy residents, was limited to only a few pieces. Allan has noted that the earliest
                          the wealthy and powerful Edward Seymour, Duke
 and Banda (1615) (Figs. 3.2.1.11 and 3.2.1.10).    pottery group from Kitto Institute, Plymouth’, in   of  Somerset  (c.1500–1552),  brother  of  Henry  VIII’s   documentary evidence of sizable quantities of porcelain owned by an Exeter resident
 David Gaimster and Mark Redknap (eds.), Everyday   third and favourite queen, Jane Seymour. That same
 As has been shown by Allan, the presence of pieces of porcelain in Exeter is   and Exotic Pottery from Europe c. 650–1900. Studies   year, Edward Seymour became ‘Lord Protector’ of   dates to 1603. The inventory taken this year after the death of Richard Bevys, Lord
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