Page 224 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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Fig. 3.2.2.22  Fragment of a Kraak saucer dish
                               excavated at 38 North Street, Exeter
                                 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province
                          Ming dynasty, Wanli/Tianqi reign (1573–1627)
                              Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter
                                     (museum no. 300/1988/2272)
                          Fig. 3.2.2.23  Fragment of a blue-and-white
 Fig. 3.2.2.21  Fragment of a Kraak plate   saucer dish excavated at Trichay Street, Exeter
 excavated at 38 North Street, Exeter  Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  Ming dynasty, Tianqi/Chongzhen reign
 Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)         (1621–1644)
 Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter    Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter
 (museum no. 300/1988/2269)          (museum no. 300/1988/2100)





 Mayor of Exeter, lists among his possessions ‘One Carricke Goblett with a foote of   his young nephew Edward VI, and thus effectively   bulk of the Hinde’s lading, the rest being brought in gold’.  This clearly reflects the
                                                                                                              601
 silver gilte’ valued at 26s 8d; ‘One other Carricke Goblett with a silver foote’ valued   ruler of England. His eldest surviving son by his   difficulties experienced by the Portuguese and other Europeans to trade with Chinese
 first marriage, Edward, Lord Seymour (1529–1593),
 at £1.  This mention of the term ‘Carricke’ further illustrates the common use of    built an Elizabethan courtyard house within the   to include images of these inventories in this   merchants at that time, when Ming China had fallen to the Manchus, who proclaimed
 597
 medieval castle walls. The information regarding   doctoral dissertation.
 the term.  Berry Pomeroy Castle is taken from the ‘History   595   E. A. Donaldson, ‘Inventory of the goods and   the Qing dynasty. Trade in porcelain was only restored in about 1680, during the reign
 Richard Carew in his Survey of Cornwall, first published in 1602, wrote in a   of Berry Pomeroy Castle’ in the English Heritage   chattels of  Richard Bevys, late  Mayor of Exeter.   of the second Qing emperor, Kangxi (1662–1722). The English, unlike the Portuguese,
 website www.english-heritage.org.uk, accessed on
                          1603’,  Trans. Devonshire Association 41, 1909, pp.
 reference to the town of Saltash that ‘Here that great carrack which Sir Francis Drake   November 17 2014; and Brown, 1996, pp. 1, 10–9.  215–240. Cited in Allan, 1984, pp. 107–108.  Spanish or Dutch, were going to import thousands of Blanc de chine pieces in the late
 590   D. M. Griffiths and F. M. Griffith, ‘An Excavation at   596   This interpretation was put forward by Barbara
 surprised in her return from the East Indies unloaded her freight, and through a   39 Fore Street, Totnes’, in John Allan (ed.),  Devon   Harrison in the early 1980s, and  has continued to   seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.  Blanc de chine figure and animal models
                                                                                                602
 negligent firing met with an improper ending’.  When Drake seized the San Felipe   Archaeological Society, No. 42, Torquay, 1984, p. 84,   be cited by many scholars from then on. Barbara   came to be greatly  admired and  collected,  along with  other Chinese  and Japanese
 598
 fig. 2, no. 1.
                          Harrison, ‘Kraak Porcelains’,  Oriental Ceramic
 off the Azores in 1587, this Portuguese carrack was carrying a double cargo as she   591   I am grateful to John Allan and Val Maxfield, Exeter   Society of Hong Kong, Bulletin Number Five, Hong   porcelain, in a number of English royal palaces and country houses.
 University, for providing me with images of some   Kong, 1980–1982, p. 29.
 had taken aboard the goods of the San Lorenzo. The ship, carrying great quantities   of the porcelain excavated in Devon for research   597   Cited in Allan, 1984, p. 107.  From the information provided by textual sources, archaeological excavations
 of pepper, calico, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, jewels, gold and silver, as well as silk   purposes. I am indebted to Thomas Cadbury,   598   F. E. Halliday (ed.),  Richard Carew of Anthony, The   and extant pieces discussed above it is possible to conclude that a small amount of
                          Survey  of  Cornwall,  London,  New  edition,  1969,
 curator of Antiquities at the Royal Albert Memorial
 and porcelain from China,  was taken in June of that year to Plymouth. Thus it   Museum in Exeter, for granting me permission   p. 182.  porcelain arrived in Tudor England through indirect routes before the establishment
 599
 to illustrate some of the porcelain finds from 38   599   John  Sugden,  Sir Francis Drake, London, 2006,
 is likely that the nobility and wealthy merchants of Devon acquired at least some of     North Street and Trinchay Street in this doctoral   pp. 215–216.   of the EIC in 1600. These earliest recorded pieces, owned by King Henry III and the
 dissertation, which are now housed at the RAAM.
 the porcelain and other imported luxury goods discussed above from the booty of the   592   Allan, 1984, p. 106. Cited in Jacqueline Pearce and   600   Mentioned in Curtis, 1998, p. 28.  Archbishop of Canterbury, were described as porcelain but were made of celadon-
                        601   Cited  in  H.  B.  Morse,  Britain  and  the  China  Trade
 San Felipe.   Jean Martin, ‘Oriental Blue and White Porcelain   1635–1842, Vol. I, London and New York, reprint   glazed stoneware. By the 1570s, a small number of pieces of porcelain were owned by
 Found at Archaeological Excavations in London:   2000, p. 32.
 Extant bills of lading of EIC ships bound for London prior to 1650 show that the   Research in Progress’,  Transactions of the Oriental   602   Shipping and sale records of the EIC show that   Queen Elizabeth I, some of which she received as gifts. A few extant pieces known as
 Ceramic Society, Vol. 67, 2002–2003, p. 102.
 EIC sometimes acquired porcelain and other Chinese goods from the Portuguese in   593   Allan, 1984, p. 106. Mentioned in Pearce and Martin,   the trade to England consisted mostly of Blanc de   having arrived in Tudor England in the second half of the sixteenth century serve to
                          chine figure and animal models. This period of the
 Macao. Two EIC ships that departed from Macao list porcelain among their cargoes:   2002–2003, p. 102.  English  trade in porcelain is  out of the scope of   illustrate the high appreciation that porcelain had in England at the time, as they are
 594   Allan , 1984, p. 106. I am greatly indebted to John Allan   the present study. For a detailed account on the
 the James in 1615 and the Catherine in 1637. 600  The Hinde arrived to Macao in August   and Todd Gray for providing me with digital images   EIC trade of  Blanc de chine porcelain to England   fitted with elaborate silver-gilt mounts made by renowned English silversmiths. These
 of 1644, but this English trading venture proved unfruitful as the city was ‘destitute   of extracts from the original ECA Orphans Court   in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries,   mounts sometimes transformed the porcelain piece into a different type of object. These
 inventories of Thomas Baskerville (1596) and John
                          see Geoffrey A. Godden,  Oriental Export Market
 of all sorts of commodities; there not being to be bought in the City, either Silks   Anthonye  (1598) as well as a transcription of them.   Porcelain and  its  Influence  on  European  Wares,   mounted pieces of porcelain were regarded as suitable for royal or diplomatic gifts, as
 I am grateful to Stuart Tyler, Devon Archives and   London, 1979, pp. 257–280; and Canepa, December
 raw or wrought, or Chinaroot … nor indeed anything but Chinaware, which is the   Local Studies Service, for granting me permission    2012/3, pp. 3–6.  well as for furnishing the interiors of royal palaces and aristocratic houses. Although
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