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Parris Island in South Carolina.  Santa Elena, originally intended as the capital of   685   Published in Pomper, Legg and DePratter, 2011,    in the so-called Transitional porcelain during the Chongzhen reign.  The villa of
 681
                                                                                                                      697
 Florida, was inhabited from 1566 to 1587. The shard finds form part of at least 76   p. 41, fig. 18.  Santa Fe served as the terminus of the overland trade route, known as the Camino Real
                        686   Fujian Provincial Museum, 1997, pl. 11, no. 1.
 pieces.  Most of the shards are of plates from Jingdezhen, including shards of plates   687   See Chapter II, note 254.  de Tierra Adentro (Royal Road of the Interior Land), which connected Mexico City
 682
 with the phoenix in profile design, similar to those excavated in Mexico City. There   688   A small number of porcelain shards have been also   and Veracruz (through Nueva Galicia and Nueva Vizcaya) with New Mexico during
                          excavated at Franciscan missions, including the
 are also shards of bowls variously decorated with Chinese characters, Chinese figures,   missions of Quarai, Abó, Awatovi and Pecos, but   the Spanish colonial period.  Finds at rural sites near Santa Fe clearly indicate that
                                                                                    698
                          the finds published thus far are out of the scope of
 landscape scenes with pine trees, or blossoming prunus branches pending from the rim,   this doctoral dissertation because they date to the   colonists who established homes in isolated estancias (ranches) had both the desire and
 which relate to finds from the shipwreck of the Manila Galleon San Felipe (1576) and   late seventeenth century onwards. I am grateful to   economic capacity to acquire porcelain, if only in small quantities.  Four blue-and-
                                                                                                                    699
                          Cordelia  Thomas  Snow,  David  Phillips,  curator  of
 the Church of Santa María de los Corporales in Daroca, Zaragoza (Fig. 3.3.1.1.21).   Archaeology Maxwell Museum, and other members   white shards of Kraak porcelain and two others of the so-called Transitional porcelain
                          of the New Mexico Archaeological Council, for
 In addition, there are shards of a bowl decorated with sketchily painted dragons, 683   sending me information and images of the porcelain   were excavated at an estancia known as the Sanchez Site (LA 20,000) in lower La
 similar to examples recovered from the San Felipe (1576) and the San Pedro, which   excavated in New Mexico. Although no material   Cienega, a villa situated about 24km southwest of Santa Fe.
                                                                                                              700
                          evidence has been found it is likely that late Ming
 sank while en route from Veracruz to Spain in 1595.  In addition, the site yielded   porcelain was imported alongside silk, as shown   While admittedly sparse, documentary evidence indicates that some of the
 684
                          in Chapter II, through the overland mission supply
 two white-glazed bowls (now partially reconstructed), of related shape to examples   caravans in the early seventeenth century. Most   porcelain imported into Acapulco in the late sixteenth century was among the
 recovered from the Portuguese shipwreck Espadarte (1558) (Fig. 3.1.1.8); and a few   of the ceramic material found at all mission sites   common household items owned by Spanish colonists in Puebla de Los Angeles, a
                          consists of Pueblo ceramics. For information on the
 shards of Zhangzhou porcelain decorated with flowers and leaves executed with broad   porcelain excavated at the missions, see Alfred V.   city founded 130km to the southeast of Mexico City in 1531. This is not surprising as
                          Kidder, The 1939-1940 Excavation Project at Quarai
 blue brushstrokes (Fig. 3.3.1.1.22),  which probably formed part of a saucer dish of   Pueblo and Mission Buildings, New Mexico, 1990, p.   Puebla was situated midway on the mule route overland from Acapulco to Veracruz.
 684
                          167; and Trigg, 2005, p. 113.
 the type excavated at the Erlong kiln site in Pinghe county (Appendix 2).    689   According to Thomas Snow, the majority of the   An early example is that of a man named Jerónimo de la Fuente, who was a maestro de
 686
 By the early seventeenth century, a small quantity of porcelain, alongside silk,   settlers were descended from second and third   cantería (master of stone carving) from Toledo (Spain). An inventory of his possessions,
                          generation of Spanish conquerors, and others
 made its way to Spanish settlements in the northernmost province of New Mexico. 687   arrived in New Mexico directly from Spain. Cordelia   taken in 1589, lists a ‘dozen Chinese plates and bowls valued at 5 pesos, two large
 Although excavated colonial sites of this period are not numerous, shards of porcelain   Thomas Snow, ‘Objects Supporting Ideas: A Study   porcelains of China valued at 3 pesos’.  The presence of porcelain in this area is
                                                                                              701
                          of Archaeological Majolica and Polite Behaviour
 have been found at urban and rural settlements.  The porcelain could have been   Fig. 3.3.1.1.21  Shard of a blue-and-white bowl   in New Mexico, 1598–1846’,  The Archaeological   further demonstrated by a few shards of sixteenth and early seventeenth century blue-
 688
                          Society of New Mexico, No. 31, 2005, p. 194.
 brought by the colonists when they emigrated there or could have arrived through the   excavated at Santa Elena, Parris Island, South   690   Trigg, 2005, pp. 15 and 178.  and-white porcelain excavated just northwest of Puebla at the church and convent
 Carolina               691   Snow, 2005, p. 188.
 overland mission supply caravans provided by the Spanish Crown, which regularly   of San Miguel in Huejotzingo, which was built between about 1554 and 1570 by
 Jingdezhen kilns, Jiangxi province  692   Heather B. Trigg, ‘The Ties that Blind: Economic and
 supplied imported ceramics, and once there, may have been exchanged among the   Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)  Social Interactions in Early-Colonial New Mexico,   Franciscan friars. The fact that the amount of porcelain found at this religious site
 Spanish colonists’ (including governors and  encomenderos)  households.  Thus   © Chester DePatter  A.D. 1598–1680’, Historical Archaeology, Vol. 37, No.   was proportionally higher than that of European ceramics suggests that porcelain was
 689
 690
                          2 (2003), pp. 66–67.
 porcelain appears to have been desired by the early colonists, not only for its practical   Fig. 3.3.1.1.22  Shards of Zhangzhou blue-  693   Two blue-and-white shards of Jingdezeh porcelain   more available and/or that the Franciscans desired it more and could afford it.  It
                                                                                                                               702
                          are illustrated in the web page  The Testimony of
 function in the household but also because it would have served to exhibit to others   and-white porcelain excavated at Santa Elena,   Hands. https://hands.unm.edu/68-43-56. Accessed   is important to remember that the Franciscan Mendicant Order was, together with
 Parris Island, South Carolina  June 2013. These shards together with the Kinrande
 their social status and wealth. As noted by Thomas Snow, porcelain together with   Zhangzhou kilns, Fujian province  shard are discussed and illustrated in Pierce, 2010,   the Spanish Crown, Spanish colonial political elites, governors and clergy, one of the
 imported Mexican and Spanish majolica (tin-glazed earthenware) were a means by   Ming dynasty, Wanli reign (1573–1620)  p. 159, fig. 7. The Kinrande shard is also published in   major participants in the colony-empire trade.  Until 1664, the Crown facilitated
                                                                                                    703
                          Shulsky, 1994, p. 15, fig. 1.
 © Chester DePatter
 which the colonists maintained their ties to polite society and mannerly behaviour of   694   Pierce, 2010, p. 159.  the Franciscan’s trade by providing commodities and wagons of the supply caravans
                        695   Viceroy Peralta, in keeping with the villa’s status as
 the Spanish culture of which they were a part.  Archaeological finds, however, show   capital of the colony, established the  casas reales   for their use.
 691
 677   AHCM, section B, box 4, exp. 4. Cited in Machuca   to serve as a home for the governor, a fortification,
 that the early colonists owned only limited quantities of porcelain in comparison to   Chávez, 2010, p. 21.  storerooms, and a prison. Trigg, 2005, p. 69.  Material evidence shows that porcelain also circulated to Spanish colonial
 Mexican and Spanish majolica brought to New Mexico or to ceramics made locally by   678   David H. White, ‘A View of Spanish West Florida:   696   The blue monochrome and gilt shards have been   settlements in southern New Spain. A few shards of late Ming blue-and-white
 Selected Letters of Governor Juan Vicente Folch’,   dated to between 1610 and 1680, the terminus date
 native Pueblo Indians.    The Florida Historical Quarterly, Vol. 56, No. 2 (Oct.,   corresponds to the year the native Pueblo Indians   porcelain were excavated at the former convent of the religious Mendicant Order of
 692
 1977), p. 138.           revolted and attacked Santa Fe. The revolt forced
 The finds from urban sites include a few shards of Jingdezhen blue-and-white   679   n 1513, Juan Ponce de Leon first explored the   the  Spanish  colonists  to  retreat  southward  out   the Dominicans in Oaxaca (present-day Mexico), bordering Veracruz to the north and
 I
 porcelain dating to the Wanli reign, and one other Jingdezhen shard of the Kinrande   continent, where he  discovered  the bay  of Saint   of New Mexico. Only twelve years later, in 1692, a   the Pacific in the south.  The remains of the convent Santo Domingo de Guzmán,
                                                                                 704
 Augustine in Florida. The French had established   Spanish army under the command of Diego de
 type decorated in cobalt blue on one side and overglaze red enamel on the other,   a colony of three hundred people on the Carolina   Vargas returned and conquered New Mexico again.   which began to be constructed in 1572, yielded shards that formed part of a few
 coast. A few days after Pedro Menéndez de Aviles   For this opinion, see Shulsky, 1994, p. 17. For images
 excavated from the Spanish settlement San Gabriel del Yunque, the capital of New   (1519–1574) founded Saint Augustine, he moved   of the shards, see Kuwayama, 1997, p. 69, fig. 23; and   Kraak plates with continuous naturalistic rim borders (Fig. 3.3.1.1.23), dishes with
 Mexico founded in 1598.  Thus far this is the earliest porcelain known to have   northward and after a fierce attack destroyed the   Pierce, 2010, p. 162, fig. 13a.  panelled rim borders (Fig. 3.3.1.1.24), cups of the type known as ‘crow cups’ and
 693
 French colony.         697   Published in Shulsky, 1994, p. 17, fig. 5; and Pierce,
 arrived in New Mexico, during the period between 1598 and 1610, when San Gabriel   680   Linda  S.  Shulsky,  ‘Chinese  Porcelain  in  Spanish   2010, p. 162, fig. 12b (right hand side).  small bowls with deer surrounded by foliate and wheel motifs (Fig. 3.3.1.1.25), which
 Colonial Sites in the Southern Part of North America   698   Santa Fe was the largest Spanish settlement in New
 was abandoned.  A few other shards of Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain that   and  the Caribbean’,  Transactions of  the  Oriental   Mexico. The Spanish term villa denotes that it was a   relate closely to pieces recovered from the Spanish shipwreck San Diego (1600) and the
 694
 probably formed part of a small cup of the  Kraak type and two shards of a bowl   Ceramic Society, Vol. 63, 1998–1999, p. 91 and p. 93,   settlement of limited size and complexity, but that it   VOC shipwreck Witte Leeuw (1613).  It also yielded Zhangzhou shards that formed
                                                                                            705
 fig. 9.                  had a complete civil government. A villa was smaller
 with monochrome blue-glaze and gilded decoration of the Kinrande type that may   681   I am greatly indebted to Linda Pomper and Chester   than a ciudad but larger than a pueblo. According to   part of saucer dish with a phoenix design within a diamond and trigram border (now
 DePratter, South Carolina Institute of Archaeology   the former Governor Martínez de Baeza, there were
 have been similar to the example fitted with English gilt mounts in the Metropolitan   and Anthropology, for providing me with images of   only 50 inhabitants in Santa Fe in 1639 and that in the   reconstructed) (Fig. 3.3.1.1.26),  similar to those excavated at the Moneda Street site
                                                                                       706
 Museum of Art discussed earlier (Fig. 3.2.2.11), all dating to the late sixteenth or   the Jingdezhen and Zhangzhou porcelain excavated   entire population of the colony was ‘two hundred   in Mexico City, as well as shards of a bowl with floral decoration.  The Dominican
                                                                                                                   707
 at the site and for granting permission to include   persons, Spaniards and mestizos’. About two thirds
 early seventeenth century, were excavated from the site of the Palace of the Governors   some of them in this doctoral dissertation.   of the population lived in rural areas on ranchos or   friars, as noted by Gómez Serafín, may have acquired the porcelain as gifts rather than
 682   Published in Pomper, Legg and DePratter, 2011, pp.   estancias. Trigg, 2005, pp. 69–70 and 72.
 (former casas reales) in downtown Santa Fe,  where the capital of New Mexico was   34–41, figs. 2–3, and 5–16.  699   The vast majority of the ceramic material excavated   through direct purchase. 708
 695
 relocated in 1610.  An interesting find is a blue-and-white shard decorated with a   683   Ibid., p. 37, fig. 9.  from rural  estancias was made locally by Pueblo   A small number of shards of late Ming blue-and-white porcelain have been found
 696
 684   The author studied the shards of these bowls during   Indians. Ibid., p. 107.
 stylized four-petalled flower, which may have formed part of a high-quality ewer made   a research trip to Bermuda in March 2012.  700   Mentioned in David H. Snow, ‘Ceramics from LA   at two religious sites in Santiago de Guatemala (present-day La Antigua Guatemala),
 240   Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer    Trade in Chinese Porcelain                                                                 241
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