Page 459 - Chinese and japanese porcelain silk and lacquer Canepa
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Index lacquer pyxes in Goa from Japan, 326 porcelain salts and Gentlemen Seventeen, 289 porcelain from Mauritius shipwreck, 183
porcelain from shipwreck Nao de Acapulco, 239
porcelain shipped from Formosa by Gallias, Texel
lectern gift to Augustinian convent of nuns by the
Philippine Augustinian Order, 342 and Noordwyck, 289–90 porcelain from Witte Leeuw shipwreck, 184–85
liturgical lacquers ordered by Mendicant Orders in porcelain table plates vs. samples supplied to the Fig. 3.2.1.7, 184–85 Fig. 3.2.1.8, 184 Fig.
early Edo period, 348–49 Chinese, 306 3.2.1.4–184 Fig. 3.2.1.6
liturgical lacquers ordered by Spanish Franciscan porcelain wall-tile for building projects, 301 porcelain shards from Banda shipwreck, 185
friars in early Edo period, 323 porcelain with glaze and cobalt blue decoration, 306 Zhangzhou blue-and-white saucer dish excavated at
A ‘character cups’ and ‘500 large cups with Chinese porcelain tankard with print entitled Peace by David Namban boxes of oval form with ‘IHS’ monogram Portuguese merchants and trading posts in, 116 Dominican convent of Santo Domingo de
Acapulco (New Spain (Mexico)) characters’ from Schetdam, 189 Vinckboons, 298 and Pedro dos Santos, 326 Schetdam and 500 large cups painted with Chinese Guzmán, Oaxaca, 241, 242 Fig. 3.3.1.1.26
Andrés de Urdañeta and eastward route across Chinese merchants were given models of turned Portuguese-Jewish merchants and silk mills, 120 silk clothing embroidered with birds from Holy characters, 189 Zhangzhou blue-and-white saucer dishes, 193, 196
Pacific Ocean to Acapulco, 35, 149 wood with Chinese figures to copy, 283 profile of the city, 43, 45Fig. 1.2.1.2 Cross monastery in Coimbra, 65 Sir Thomas Dale, 215, 373 Zhangzhou porcelain from Witte Leeuw shipwreck,
Asian goods imported into, 39, 41 ‘crow cup’ with bird on the interior, 180 saucer-dishes imported into the Dutch Republic, silken fabrics with gold and Martin de Rada, 68 States-General of the Dutch Republic and 184
Chinese porcelains, silks, spices, wax and iron Directors in Amsterdam instructed merchants to buy 185 St. Augustine convent in Macao, 275m877 diplomatic lacquer gift, 367 See also Chongzhen; Jiajing; Tianqi; Wanli; Wanli
carried on Nuestra Señora de la Cinta, 244 porcelain in Asia, 180–81 silk cargo from Santa Catarina sold in public action, viceroyalty of New Spain, 321n18 table made after a Dutch model from Breda, 384 shipwreck; Zhangzhou; Zhengde
Chinos (Chinese Indians), 83, 83n229–30, 84 Directors of VOC instructed merchants to puchase 89 trade with China and Japan, 45 brocade (Chinese)
Domingo de Villalobos, 84 porcelain for Dutch domestic market, 203 silk factories, 93 trading factory (1603), Dutch, 45 António de Morga and woven silk cloths and
eastward route across the Pacific to, 149 distributing centre for northern and middle Europe, silk trade (1550), 89 B Transitional porcelain, 190 brocades of gold and silver, 70
Gaspar de Castro’s wholesale shop in Mexico City, 43n67 Thomas Hendricksz de Keyser’s portrait called Bantam (Java), 42, 45, 47, 182, 203, 397 VOC and unsold lacquer, 392, 397, 400 brocaded satin (zhuanghua duan), 57n25, 549
364 Dutch were forbidden from trading lacquer in Portrait of a Young Silversmith, 287 Batavia (Dutch East Indies) VOC Asian headquarters and Chinese junks, 44Fig. Canton’s biannual fair of silk, 117
gold and silk en route, 80 Hirado (Taiwan incident), 369–70, 392, 400 Zeeland bought small dishes from the East Indies, balustrades ordered for Princess [of Orange] in 1.2.1.3, 45, 182, 203–4 Chinese junks brought raw silks, woven silk cloths,
imported porcelain for frontier provinces of New folding chairs with lacquer decoration, 383 183 Japan, 385 VOC ordered furniture and small utilitarian objects, brocades, and other silks, 118
Spain, 239 Gentlemen Seventeen’s lacquer and porcelain gifts to Zhangzhou blue-and-white saucer dishes, 193, 196 beakers imported into the Dutch Republic, 299 400 Domingo de Salazar, Bishop of the Philippines, 69
‘Indios Chinos’ and raw silk and woven silk cloths Maria de Médicis, 371 Antwerp (Belgium) beer mugs made at Shibaqiao kiln in Jingdezhen, VOC servants, 282–83, 381, 387 ecclesiastical vestments and furnishings of damask
trade, 84 ‘Indian lacquer’ and Japanese lacquer as gifts to Adriaen van Utecht’s painting Allegory of Fire, 373 289 VOC ships and porcelain from captured Portuguese and brocade, 239
Jingdezhen and Zhangzhou porcelain imported, 239 Elizabeth, daughter of James I, 367 Albrecht Dürer, 77, 174 bell-cups with ears, 305 ships, 188 Fernão Lopes de Castanheda, 59
Juan de Escudero, 81 Italian and Levantine silk trade, 89 António da Fonseca, 175 Blanc de chine, 193n434 VOC shipwrecks with pewter and lead caps, gold brocades and wedding of the marquises of La
Manila galleon and Chinese goods, 39, 80, 119, 235 Jacob Cornelisz Van Neck, 43, 89, 120, 180 commercial city of all Europe, 77 Chinese porcelain with paintings vs. patterns, 303 283n906, 287n925 Bañeza, 72–73
Manila galleon with porcelain and other Chinese Jan Huygen van Linschoten published Itinerario, distributing centre for northern and middle Europe Chinese warned of the Dutch blockade by Wassenaer and coffers, nests of coffers, cantooren and Grand Duke Giuliano di Lorenzo de’ Medici of
goods, 235 178, 395 until 1585, 43n67 Gentlemen Seventeen, 91 kisten, 369–70 Florence, 54–55
Manila galleons, trans-Pacific trade declined, 119 Jesuits acquired lacquered five-tiered food boxes, 395 East Asian spices, 42 cruijcken (pitchers) or wine jugs, 289 Beijing (China) from Hangzhou in Zhejiang, 52
mule route from Acapulco to Veracruz, 241 Jiajing blue-andwhite dish with Buddhist lion, 179 Emmanuel Ximenes, 174 Dutch orders were with one lacquer worker, Chinese Imperial court in, 29 Jiajing dish decorated with a Buddhist lion playing
Peru was banned from trading with, 86, 88 Jingdezhen potters and made to order porcelain after English merchants, 47 craftsmen complained that, 371 imperial silk tapestry weaving workshops, 55, 106 with a brocaded ball, 165, 179
Peruvian merchants and silk, 86 European shapes, 289 glass bottles to hold wine, 279 François Caron, 385 Jesuit Matteo Ricci, 106 João Sardinha Mimoso, 65
porcelain and Chinese goods trade, 235 Jingdezhen potters copied a pewter shape with intercontinental trade in luxury goods, 175 Grol and nests of coffers covered in ray skin, 370 Ming dynasty hanging Kesi slit tapestry, 104 Kinrande (gold brocade), 136
porcelain and fine gilt china, 149, 229 Chinese narrative scene in the Transitional Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain in 1630, 177 Hatcher (Chinese junk), 166n216, 191 Fig. 2.3.1.7, 106 liturgical vestment, Manuel I’s, 55
port of, 37 Fig. 1.1.2.2, 39 style, 299 Manuel I established an official royal porcelain Hendrick Hagenaer and a taller contoor (comptoir), Muslim eunuchs, 265n841 liturgical vestment of brocaded silk, 107Fig.
port of Cavite (Manila) to, 37 Johannes Isaäcs Pontanus, 197 factory in 1501, 174 371 silk manufacturing, 122, 408 2.3.1.10, 108–9, 114
sailors brought silk clothing and other Chinese jugs with spouts (kannekens met pijpen), 289 Martin de Orujas’s gift to Father Jacobo Tirino of 3 Hoge Regering’s letter to Tayouan re: European silk producers’ colour schemes, 122 Martin Enriquez, 79
goods, 80 Kraak and Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain from Japanes escritoires, 359 wooden models, 283 silk textiles, late Ming, 77 Brussels (Belgium)
Santa Margarita, 232 Oudezijds Voorburgwal, 192 New Christians and Genovese merchants, 63n71 Japanese document box (bunko) with scenes from workshop for satins and tabbies for imperial and Asian objects from Kunstkammer, 171
ships traversed the Pacific from Cebú to Acapulco, Kraak and Jingdezhen blue-and-white porcelain from Philip II and porcelain salts, 287 Genji Monogatari (Tale of Genji), 384 palace use, 52 Bernard van Orley, 171
229 Witte Leeuw, 184–85 Fig. 3.2.1.7, 184–85 Fig. porcelain bottles with Christian iconography, 279 jugs with spouts (kannekens met pijpen), 289 Black Ship (kurofune), 32–34, 61, 138, 349n130, 394 Charles V’s palace, 148
ships traversed the Pacific from Manila to Acapulco, 3.2.1.8, 184 Fig. 3.2.1.4–184 Fig. 3.2.1.6 porcelain chest from Portugal, 177 Kraak beer mugs from Shibaqiao kiln, Jingdezhen, Blanc de chine (Chinese porcelain) Emperor Charles V, 42n63–42n64
118, 149, 329 Kraak cup in the painting Family in Prayer before porcelain household items, 173 289 Buddhist lion incense stick holder from Nuestra Habsburg courts in, 174
silk cloths, woven, 79 Mealtime, 197 porcelain imported from Portugal (1552–1553), lacquer, Chinese silk and porcelain ordered by Señora de la Limpia y Pura Concepción, 155, imperial court in, 34n37
silk purchased by the royal treasury, 88 Kraak dishes, saucer-dishes, klapmutsen and cups 174, 177 Gentlemen Seventeen, 289, 366 163, 163 Fig. 3.2.2.22, 193, 216, 236, 239 Isabella Clara’s porcelains, 171
silk transshipped from Acapulco to Peru, 86 from Mauritius shipwreck, 183 porcelain in 1630s was considered an imported lacquer from Hirado, 369–70 figure models and Martino Martini, 193, 196 pillaged by Spanish troops in 1576, 179n300
Spanish colonists in Puebla de Los Angeles and Kraak klapmuts in still life painting by Jan Janz curiosity vs. practical object, 175 lacquer shipments, 368–69 Guanyin on rockwork throne with two standing William I, 173
porcelain of late sixteenth century, 241 Treck, 196 porcelain owned by the Portuguese community, lacquer trade, 366 acolytes, Jade Maiden and the Golden Youth,
Spanish trans-Pacific trade route through Manila to Kraak plate with deer in landscape within a white 174, 178 lacquer with red and green interiors was not needed Shoukai, 193, 195 Fig. 3.2.1.19, 196
Acapulco, 37, 235n647, 349 cavetto, 180 porcelain trade in late sixteenth century, 173 (1640), 371 porcelain, 23n16, 155, 165n197, 167, 193n434, C
trade ban (1582) and importing of porcelain from Kraak porcelain and India House, 191 porcelain with grotesque imagery, 259, 261 lacquered bed frame and spears with lacquered shafts 250, 310 Canton (China)
Manila into the New World, 250 Kraak porcelain dish from Hendrick van Fig. 3.4.1.1.8a–c from Santa Maria, 360–61 ‘puzzle cup’ from Alkmaar, 192 Fig. 3.2.1.17a and Alonso de Vado’s silk order sent from Mexico City,
trade ban (1587, 1595) between Peru and Acapulco Doesburgh’s house, 251 porringer, nine-lobed, 277n888 lacquered camerstoel for the Governor-General from b, 193 74
vs. illicit trade, 86, 88, 245 lacquer from Spanish merchant sold in Amsterdam, Portuguese monopoly vs., 42 Castricum, 383 blue-and-white (Chinese porcelain) Andrea Corsali, white raw silk, and woven silk
trade in Chinese goods overland from Acapulco to 366 Portuguese royal factory, 179n299 lacquered table of Dutch deisgn with sekreet bowl and plate fragments from San Pedro shipwreck, cloths, 54–55
Audiencia ports of Acajutla, 243 lacquer objects as diplomatic gifts to rulers of raw and thrown silk from Italy, 89 kelderken from the Salamander, 384 149 Fig. 3.1.2.3–3.1.2.5, 149 Fig. 3.1.2.5, Antonio Peixoto, 259
trans-Pacific trade route, 39, 79, 119, 229–30 European countries, 392, 397, 400 silk, Italian and Levantine, 85 large lacquer from Hirado (1636), 371 150, 239, 244, 253 Chinese junks, 118
Urdañeta’s return route to, 67 lacquer tankards and beer beakers, 397 Willem van Haecht’s painting Appelles Painting letter to Deshima for square kisten, comptoirs and bowls and chi-dragon bowls, 244 Dragon and bales of Canton silk, 93
Acapulco Fair (Feria de Acapulco ), 39 Manoel Rodrigues Vega and a silk factory to teach Campaspe, 175 cantooren (1642), 371 bowls shards and Kraak pieces from convent of Santa English indirect trade with China, 96, 121
Alcázar (fortress), 146 the Dutch, 91 Asian manufactured goods, 17, 17n8, 19–20, 23, 39, letterbook from Batavia (1640), 370Fig. 4.1.2.2 Clara-a-Velha in Coimbra, 142 Gaspar da Cruz, Father, 360n186
Alkmaar (Netherlands) Martini, Martinus (Jesuit), 66 42, 404–5, 407 Martino Martini, 196n437 Jesuits ordered porcelain with their individual Imperial decree bannned trade with Portuguese, 31
Blanc de chine ‘puzzle cup,’ 192–93 Fig. 3.2.1.17a Namban lacquer coffer with a domed lid, 367 Asian maritime trade, 16, 23, 404 Nieuw Amsterdam and coffers, nests of coffers, kisten emblems or monograms, 272 Jorge Álvares and Island of Tunmen, 29
and b, 193 Namban style European chest with refined lacquer Augustinian (friars) (chests) and cantooren (comptoirs), 370 Kinrande, Kraak and other Jingdezhen porcelain lacquered beds in gold, 359 Fig. 4.1.1.2.7, 360
Kinrande blue-and-white bowls, 180 decoration, 390 Andrés de Urdañeta, 35, 99n36 Nieuw Amsterdam and lacquer from Hirado, 370, from San Felipe shipwreck, 149, 180, 416 Nagasaki-Macao-Canton trade, 33
Kinrande bowl fragments from Oude Gracht, New Amsterdam’s consignment of lacquer from Augustinian emblem on stone fountain of Our Lady 380–81 Kinrande plate shards with blue-and-white and Pires’s Suma Oriental, 55
Alkmaar, 179 Fig. 3.2.1.1, 180 Hirado to Batavia, 380 of Grace church, Velha (Old) Goa, 273 Noordwyck and small flasks, wine-jugs and snelletjes, overglaze red enamel decoration from Plaza de Portuguese bought silk directly in Canton or from
porcelain from archaeological excavations, 191 New Christians and Genovese merchants, 63n71 Augustinian jars and dishes, 274n874 289 Armas site, 244 Chinese junk traders from Macao, 116
porcelain from private kilns in Jingdezhen, 179 Nieuw Amsterdam’s shipment of coffers, nests Church of the Holy Spirit in Nagasaki, 341 Philips Lucasz, 385 Kinrande porcelain in Northern Netherlands, 203 Portuguese breached etiquette, 29
Álvares, Jorge, 29 of coffers, kisten (chests) and cantooren friars ordered porcelain with their individual porcelain, preference for high quality, 190 Kraak and Jingdezhen porcelain from building on Portuguese merchants and the bi-annual fair, 32, 57,
Álvares Cabral, Pedro, 54, 128 (comptoirs) from Hirado, 370 emblems or monograms, 272 porcelain and silk from privateering against the Oudezijds Voorburgwal, 192 66, 117
Amsterdam (Netherlands) Peter Mundy’s diary of visit to Amsterdam (1640), friars reached Japan in 1602, 340 Portuguese and Spanish ships and Chinese plate fragment deom Templo Mayor site, Zócalo Portuguese trade in silk, 54, 76, 116
balustrade, straw mats and ropes on Witte Olifant, 202 hexagonal jars with pentagonal panels, emblem of junks, 311 area, Mexico City, 237, 237 Fig. 3.3.1.1.14, saucer dish from, 243n706
385 porcelain circulated in towns of the Dutch Republic, the Augustinian order and exotic animals, 272 porcelain bottles, snellen, beakers, 299 243 silk as a trade good, 52
balustrades on the Salamander were ordered for 191 Juan González de Mendoza and silk from Granada, porcelain brought by Chinese junks, 188 porcelain and Order of the Dominicans in Oaxaca, silk cloths from Zhejiang, 70
Princess [of Orange] in Japan, 385 porcelain dishes from Wapen van Amsterdam, 184 69 porcelain demand declined, 299 241 silk diplomatic gifts from VOC, 120
blue-and-white porcelain from Mauritius shipwreck, porcelain from private kilns in Jingdezhen, 179 Kraak jars painted with six ogival panels and the porcelain from Chinese junk traders in Banten and porcelain from church and convent of San Miguel in silk exported, estimated types, prices and volumes
183 porcelain from Santa Catarina, 213 monogram of the Society of Jesus, 273 Batavia, 203–4, 397 Huejotzingo, 241 of, 57
Cardinal Mazarin acquired a close stool and lacquer porcelain gift to Amalia from Amsterdam Chamber lacquer lecterns with ‘IHS’ monogram and Pedro porcelain requirements (1638), 190 porcelain from Jingdezhen and New Spain, 177, 234 silk gifts to royalty from Gentlemen Seventeen, 92
chests, 391 of the VOC, 199 dos Santos, 327
458 Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer Index 459