Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box. A rare hexagonal box and cover. From the Tek Sing decorated with a peony flower and scrolling foliage within a meander band. Measures 3.2cm tall with a diameter of 6.5cm. There is a little wear to the rims but overall in very good condition – please see all photos for confirmation. The Tek Sing (Chinese, “True Star”). Was a large three-masted Chinese ocean-going junk which sank on February 6, 1822. In an area of the South China Sea known as the Belvidere Shoals. The vessel was 50 meters in length, 10 meters wide and weighed about a thousand tons. Its tallest mast was estimated to be 90 feet in height. The great loss of life associated with the sinking has led to the Tek Sing being referred to in modern times as the “Titanic of the East”. Sailing from the port of Amoy (now Xiamen in Fujian, People’s Republic of China), the Tek Sing was bound for Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta, Indonesia) laden with a large cargo of porcelain goods and 1600 Chinese immigrants. After a month of sailing, the Tek Sing’ s captain, Io Tauko, decided to attempt a shortcut through the Gaspar Strait between the Bangka-Belitung Islands, and ran aground on a reef. The junk sank in about 30m (100 feet) of water. On May 12, 1999, Michael Hatcher discovered the wreck of the Tek Sing in an area of the South China Sea north of Java, east of Sumatra and south of Singapore. The Tek Sing’ s recovered cargo was auctioned by Nagal auctioneers in Stuttgart in November 2000. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom.
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)
  • Product: Box & Cover
  • Featured Refinements: Tek Sing
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Age: 1800-1849

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Hexagonal Box
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine. A rare miniature figurine of a boy astride a standing water buffalo salvaged from the Tek Sing, partially covered with a dark glaze and the details rendered with various pigments. Measures 6.5cm long and 5.5cm tall. N very good condition – please see all photos for confirmation. The Tek Sing (Chinese, “True Star”). Was a large three-masted Chinese ocean-going junk which sank on February 6, 1822. In an area of the South China Sea known as the Belvidere Shoals. The vessel was 50 meters in length, 10 meters wide and weighed about a thousand tons. Its tallest mast was estimated to be 90 feet in height. The great loss of life associated with the sinking has led to the Tek Sing being referred to in modern times as the “Titanic of the East”. Sailing from the port of Amoy (now Xiamen in Fujian, People’s Republic of China), the Tek Sing was bound for Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta, Indonesia) laden with a large cargo of porcelain goods and 1600 Chinese immigrants. After a month of sailing, the Tek Sing’ s captain, Io Tauko, decided to attempt a shortcut through the Gaspar Strait between the Bangka-Belitung Islands, and ran aground on a reef. The junk sank in about 30m (100 feet) of water. On May 12, 1999, Michael Hatcher discovered the wreck of the Tek Sing in an area of the South China Sea north of Java, east of Sumatra and south of Singapore. The Tek Sing’ s recovered cargo was auctioned by Nagal auctioneers in Stuttgart in November 2000. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom, United States, Japan, Ireland, Germany, Canada, Australia.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Country of Origin: China
  • Product: Figurine
  • Age: 1800-1849
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Featured Refinements: Tek Sing
  • Antique: Yes
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Boy & Water Buffalo Figurine
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari’Bamboo & Pine’ Pattern Teabowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari’Bamboo & Pine’ Pattern Teabowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari’Bamboo & Pine’ Pattern Teabowl & Saucer. A Nanking Cargo porcelain teabowl and saucer, decorated in the rare imari’Bamboo & Pine’ pattern featuring a large leafy pine rising from a small cluster of bamboo on a terrace. Christie’s labels to both pieces – lot number 5279. The tea bowl measures 3.5cm tall and 7.5cm in diameter; the saucer has a diameter of 11.5cm. The overglaze enamels on both pieces are in good condition; the saucer has a couple of tiny nibbles to the rim and the cup has two small rim chips, one with an associated hairline. Please see all photos for confirmation of condition. The Nanking Cargo 1752. On Monday January 3, 1752, the. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea. For final transportation to the Netherlands. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea on January 3, 1752. As’The Nanking Cargo. Chinese Export Porcelain and Gold. Two hundred and thirty five years later. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: Teabowl & saucer
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Featured Refinements: Nanking Cargo
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari'Bamboo & Pine' Pattern Teabowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer. A Nanking Cargo porcelain tea bowl and saucer, decorated with the rare’Imara Pagoda Riverscape’ pattern featuring a double roofed pagoda on a rocky riverbank with trees and shrubs. Iron red and gold decoration have deteriorated due to the long immersion in the sea. Christie’s label to the base of the saucer (lot number 5194) but NOT the tea bowl. The tea bowl measures 4cm tall and 7.5cm in diameter; the saucer has a diameter of 11.5cm. Generally good condition; there is a small chip to the rim of the tea bowl (photo 8) and two small chips to the rim of the saucer (photo 9). The Nanking Cargo 1752. On Monday January 3, 1752, the. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea. For final transportation to the Netherlands. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea on January 3, 1752. As’The Nanking Cargo. Chinese Export Porcelain and Gold. Two hundred and thirty five years later. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Featured Refinements: Nanking Cargo
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: Tea bowl & saucer
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper. An exceptionally rare opium pipe damper with incised floral motifs. From the Tek Sing, one of only a small number that were salvaged. Measures 5cm tall with a diameter of 5cm. There is surface wear and degradation following the long immersion in sea water but the damper is free from chips, cracks and restoration. Please see all photos for confirmation of condition. The Tek Sing (Chinese, “True Star”). Was a large three-masted Chinese ocean-going junk which sank on February 6, 1822. In an area of the South China Sea known as the Belvidere Shoals. The vessel was 50 meters in length, 10 meters wide and weighed about a thousand tons. Its tallest mast was estimated to be 90 feet in height. The great loss of life associated with the sinking has led to the Tek Sing being referred to in modern times as the “Titanic of the East”. Sailing from the port of Amoy (now Xiamen in Fujian, People’s Republic of China), the Tek Sing was bound for Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta, Indonesia) laden with a large cargo of porcelain goods and 1600 Chinese immigrants. After a month of sailing, the Tek Sing’ s captain, Io Tauko, decided to attempt a shortcut through the Gaspar Strait between the Bangka-Belitung Islands, and ran aground on a reef. The junk sank in about 30m (100 feet) of water. On May 12, 1999, Michael Hatcher discovered the wreck of the Tek Sing in an area of the South China Sea north of Java, east of Sumatra and south of Singapore. The Tek Sing’ s recovered cargo was auctioned by Nagal auctioneers in Stuttgart in November 2000. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: Opium pipe damper
  • Age: 1800-1849
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Featured Refinements: Tek Sing
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Pipe Damper
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750

Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750

Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750

Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Porcelain Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750. Hand painted in cobalt blue with a fisherman punting his boat in a wide river landscape. A two story pavilion can be seen beside pine and tall rockwork near a bank within a band of spearheads at the well, the border depicts a band of trellis pattern. Size: 22.8cm in diameter During the manufacturing process, the enamel detailing was applied on top on the already glazed porcelain, thus providing no protection from the ravages of the sea and coral sands. It is remarkable to see that so much of the original enamel detailing has survived. When tilted in the light you will notice the original detailing that has faded away at a glance, actually remains present in what I call a ghost form. Shipwreck items can be cross checked with the original sale catalogues. Catalogue not included in this sale. This catalogue is not available for sale. The Nanking Cargo Shipwreck Story c1750 The Nanking cargo is the most famous of the shipwreck cargoes. It attracted world wide media attention when it was auctioned by Christies Amsterdam in April 1986. The VerenigdeOostIndische Compagnie V. She set sail from Canton on December 18th 1751 bound for Amsterdam. The valuable cargo consisted of over 160,000 pieces of porcelain, tea, raw silk, textiles and one hundred and forty five gold ingots. On January 3rd 1752, after 16 days sailing the Geldermalsen hit a reef and sank in the South China Sea. I spent four days viewing the porcelain in order to select the nicer pieces. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “joblackdog” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: dish
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Features: Handpainted
  • Sub-Type: Plate
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original

Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Blue White and Enamel Boatman Plate c1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750

Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750

Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750

Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Nanking Chinese Shipwreck Cargo Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Tea Bowl and Saucer c1750 This set retains a vast amount of enamelled detailing which as Nanking Cargo collectors are aware was not propected by the glaze whlist submerged within the seabed, making this a very special set indeed. The pattern a double roofed Pagoda on a rocky riverbank. To either side are trees nd shrubs, around the rim is a trellis pattern. Size: Tea bowl, 7.5 cm Saucer, 10.5 cm If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact. The condition of this set is good considering the age, both pieces have an all over rubbed glaze. Small rim frit to the tea bowl, no other chips, cracks or hairlines. Nanking Shipwreck Cargo c1750 The Nanking cargo is the most famous of the shipwreck cargoes. It attracted world wide media attention when it was auctioned by Christies Amsterdam in April 1986. The VerenigdeOostIndische Compagnie V. She set sail from Canton on December 18th 1751 bound for Amsterdam. The valuable cargo consisted of over 160,000 pieces of porcelain, tea, raw silk, textiles and one hundred and forty five gold ingots. On January 3rd 1752, after 16 days sailing the Geldermalsen hit a reef and sank in the South China Sea. I spent four days viewing the porcelain in order to select the nicer pieces. Track Page Views With. Auctiva’s FREE Counter. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “joblackdog” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: tea bowl and saucer
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Features: Handpainted
  • Original/Repro: Original

Chinese Shipwreck Nanking Cargo c1750 Rare Imari Pagoda Riverscape Set 1750
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo’Boy & Lotus Bloom’ Bowl

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo’Boy & Lotus Bloom’ Bowl

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo’Boy & Lotus Bloom’ Bowl. A porcelain blue and white bowl. Salvaged from the Tek Sing decorated with a boy and a lotus bloom beside a garden fence between flowers issuing from rockwork and a banana plant, the base with a two character mark within a double ring. Measures 17cm in diameter at the rim and 8cm tall. There are no chips, cracks or restoration but there are several small firing flaws and some light marine growth. Lease see all photos for confirmation of condition. The Tek Sing (Chinese, “True Star”). Was a large three-masted Chinese ocean-going junk which sank on February 6, 1822. In an area of the South China Sea known as the Belvidere Shoals. The vessel was 50 meters in length, 10 meters wide and weighed about a thousand tons. Its tallest mast was estimated to be 90 feet in height. The great loss of life associated with the sinking has led to the Tek Sing being referred to in modern times as the “Titanic of the East”. Sailing from the port of Amoy (now Xiamen in Fujian, People’s Republic of China), the Tek Sing was bound for Batavia, Dutch East Indies (now Jakarta, Indonesia) laden with a large cargo of porcelain goods and 1600 Chinese immigrants. After a month of sailing, the Tek Sing’ s captain, Io Tauko, decided to attempt a shortcut through the Gaspar Strait between the Bangka-Belitung Islands, and ran aground on a reef. The junk sank in about 30m (100 feet) of water. On May 12, 1999, Michael Hatcher discovered the wreck of the Tek Sing in an area of the South China Sea north of Java, east of Sumatra and south of Singapore. The Tek Sing’ s recovered cargo was auctioned by Nagal auctioneers in Stuttgart in November 2000. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: Bowl
  • Age: 1800-1849
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Featured Refinements: Tek Sing
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Tek Sing Chinese Shipwreck Cargo'Boy & Lotus Bloom' Bowl
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690

Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690

Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690

Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Porcelain Cargo Rare Diving Bird and Floral Saucer Dish c1690. This is Beautifully painted with five medallions containing diving birds, flowers and traditional scrolling vines. This is the only one I have have available. Height 4.5cm Diameter 13.2cm Please Note. The coral is for display purposes only and does not come with this item Condition: Glaze crazing to the underside and minor glaze crazing to the central detailing. There is a small professional repair to the rim. As these pieces have spent hundreds of years submerged beneath the sea, an overall dulling of the glaze is quite common and more prominent in some examples. The Vung Tau Cargo Chinese Export Porcelain Christies Amsterdam Tuesday 7. April 1992 & Wednesday 8. Pyramids of porcelain: a veritable mountain of bright China ware. There was no question that in the later 17. Century, Europeans were fascinated by the newly abundant ceramic wares of China and Japan. For the first time in history, these boldly painted blue and white, overglaze coloured, porcelain vessels from the Far East were imported to Europe in sufficient quantities to play a crucial role in the development of taste and interior decoration, in many of Europe’s most cosmopolitan capitals. Century, the fashionable character and exotic variety of a’Palace of Porcelain’. The Shipwreck In 1989, A Vietnamese fisherman, trawling the sea bed for the locally plentiful supplies of shellfish, snagged his nets on an obstruction. He was a few miles away from Con Dao Island, which lies approximately 100 nautical miles away south of Vung Tau on the southern coast of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The fisherman’s chance discovery gradually came to public attention. Under the authority of the Vietnam Government, the Vietnam Salvage Corporation, headed by Mr Le Minh Cong, its General Director, a state owned company of the Ministry of Transport and Communications, undertakes all salvage and sea bed investigations within the territorial waters of Vietnam as a monopoly on behalf of the Government. It was decided to raise the Cargo as a commercial operation, with the sale of a proportion of the cargo helping to finance the installation of other parts of it in appropriate Vietnamese museums. Seeking a joint venture partner to share the costs of the recovery, the Corporation (VISAL) joined forced with a Singapore based Swedish diving expert, Sverker Hallstrom, whose Company had extensive experience of surveying and operating remote controlled diving vehicles at unusually great depths. In fact, this was not essential for the Vung Tau Cargo; it lay only at some 120 feet. But visibility was poor, the diving seasons were interrupted by seasonal monsoons, and eventually it required three seasons of diving to complete a systematic recovery of the cargo, recorded by site grid drawings of the hull, and underwater film. Examination of the timbers showed clearly that the vessel had been burned to the waterline; a part of the cargo had rolled off the damaged deck, and lay encrusted and broken around the irregular remains on the sea bed. What was the rationale for the trading route of this nameless wreck? The sea route south from Con Dao Island was one of the best established in Asia, part of the enormous and intricate network of maritime trade routes which had linked South Asia for millennia, bringing trade goods from China at an early date as far West as the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf. At this date, the Vung Tau Cargo was probably intended for the major trading centre in Java, the city of Batavia (now Jakarta). Settled by the Dutch in 1619, it had prospered greatly while the British trading port at Bantam, 10 miles west up the coast, yielded influence to the excellent natural harbour. It was the greatest Dutch colonial fortified city in Asia for centuries. As the Asian administrative centre of the enormous Dutch East India Company (VOC), it enjoyed great political and economical independence, and drew substantial revenues from the sprawling local market outside the walls which attracted buyers and sellers from all over South East Asia. There are strong grounds for supposing that much of the present cargo would have ended up here, ready to be bought by the Dutch VOC supercargoes (business managers) preparing a mixed consignment for the homeward run to Amsterdam or elsewhere along the Netherlandish seaboard. The best evidence lies in a study of the cargo itself, for the Chinese porcelain that comprises it is a very remarkable consignment indeed. The Porcelain The provincial coastal kilns of China, and the more sophisticated inland ones at Jingdezhen in South Central China, had been producing’export market’ ceramics for well over a thousand years before our junk loaded its ill fated consignment. Arab Dhows from the Near East, ocean going Chinese junks capable of travelling to India, and’Country’ boats commuting under western license from India to China had all helped transport Chinese porcelain across remarkable distances. Dating as it does from very close to AD1690, the porcelain is exceptionally interesting for two reasons. Firstly, it was made within a decade of AD1683, the year ceramic historians regard as the official date of the re opening of China’s major porcelain kilns, at Jingdezhen. Civil war had disrupted industry since the 1630’s, as northern Manchu invaders systematically drove the native Ming Dynasty court southwards and into exile. The records show that Jingdezhen suffered badly from the economic and political dislocation; while Fujian Province, where blanc de chine was made, was a last centre of resistance to the victorious Manchus, and suffered accordingly. Although the Manchus dated their new hegemony from AD1644, the disruption caused both to ceramic production, and to the export trade, is traditionally believed to have lasted several more decades. By 1690, the industry had recovered. The present cargo shows dramatically, and in a way never before noted so clearly by ceramic historians, that western demand apparently played a direct and influential role in this recovery. It was not just in restimulating the industry, but even more so by supplying specific models for Chinese potters to reproduce in porcelain. This is the really remarkable characteristic of the export porcelain in the Vung Tau Cargo. The consignments heading for Batavia were in many cases forms of objects which had no precedent in China or Asian ceramics but were consciously copying Western metal or glass shapes and designs, to cater presumably for the burgeoning long distance trade to Europe based around the entrepot market at Batavia. The printed records of the Dutch VOC gives some clues as to what happened. There are still records of models made of wood, and in other materials, being sent to show Chinese and Japanese artisans what vessels should look like. Indeed, even in European porcelain rooms of the period, there are records that such painted wooden vessels copying porcelain wares were entirely acceptable substitutes when lost in an extensive baroque display; certainly, in Germany. These’Design models’ would have been delivered from Holland, throughout Batavia or Canton, to Chinese merchants controlling the complicated ceramics trade with Jingdezhen. During the warm dry potting season, when the clay was malleable, the models would have been delivered, moulds made, the commissions prepared, and the peculiar, finished products finally return to the Asian port of origin – perhaps a year later. Among the vessels in the cargo showing clear western inspiration, the standing pieces with multi knopped stems are perhaps most obviously influenced by the 17. Century preference for’turned’ decoration; barley twist legs on furniture, rows of horizontal flanges up the stems of glasses and candlesticks, tiered finials on silver cups. Goblets and covers, wine cups, flat topped tazze, small vases with elaborate lower parts, deep cups with shallow covers; these are remarkable shapes, irresistibly western inspiration. Very many of the small vases are potted with spiral panels in shallow relief. This too, is most unusual in Chinese ceramics, but can easily be found in European decoration, because by that time there was no established Eastern tradition this somewhat disturbing design element, which imparts movement and a certain apparent asymmetry to perfectly standard little storage vases and beakers. The painted deisigns too, reflect a blend of traditional Eastern patterns, and some remarkable Western innovations. The cargo contains an exceptional range of fairly simple floral patterns drawn with cross hatching filling in the main fields, quite unlikely anything Chinese, but entirely Similar to western prints with cross hatched backgrounds. A group of shallow covers and cups have an extraordinary design; a seated western monarch and queen, clearly holding an orb and sceptre, and known only from about ten examples where the pattern is accompanied by a virtuous French proverb. And, above all, a series of large vases, some baluster shaped with covers, some of flaring form – are uniquely painted with panels of tall, gabled, tightly clustered non Chinese houses that have an uncanny resemblance to Dutch canal houses of the period. Since the design is combine with an entirely baroque cartouche of pendent swags of flowers, it seems very likely that here too we see a very early appearance on Chinese export porcelain of precisely copied Dutch prints. Secondly, the academic interest of the porcelain itself is only one side of the fascination this cargo holds for historians. Equally revealing is the other side of the same coin; the effect this type of porcelain had, when it arrived in Europe. This was not porcelain for everyday use; dinner services, soup plates, cups and saucers, porcelain to be used in architectural assemblages; standing vessels which could be built into room ornamentation or used to dress an imposing piece of furniture. Reform, stock market, frenzies, maritime expansion, massively profitable new industrial activity; all were burgeoning enterprises in cosmopolitan countries recently released from crippling land and sea wares, and free to flex their muscles economically, politically, socially and culturally. Into this late 17. Century welter of cultural exploration, full of sudden fancies and fashions, of tea drinking and tulipmania, came an opportunity to transform export of China into the very pineapple of politeness. Like an exotic hothouse bloom introduced to a somewhat stolid drawing room, the architectural use of imported Chines and Japanese porcelain revolutionised taste and interior decoration in many of the greatest European houses from Lisbon to St Petersburg it was, as the English writer Daniel Defoe described it somewhat critically, the new English Queen Mary II who’brought in the Custom of humour, as I may call it, of furnishing houses with China ware which increased to a strange degree afterwards, piling China upon the tops of cabinets, scrutores (writing stands), and every chimney piece, to the tops of the ceilings, and even setting up shelves for their China ware, where they wanted (lacked) such places’. Century, precious objects and even some porcelain had been displayed, in symmetrical wall arrangements on individual small brackets. This tradition was continued, but now it was the massed effect which mattered. Those who disliked the novel fad, even those who enjoyed the contrasts it created, called the phenomenon’China Mania. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “joblackdog” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Country of Origin: China
  • Product: Saucer Dish
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Features: Handpainted
  • Antique: Yes
  • Original/Repro: Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Vung Tau Cargo Vietnamese Shipwreck Rare Diving Bird and Floral Dish c1690
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo’Batavian Willow’ Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo’Batavian Willow’ Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer
Nanking Shipwreck Cargo’Batavian Willow’ Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer. A rare Nanking Cargo porcelain tea bowl and saucer decorated in the’Batavian Willow’ pattern, the interiors featuring a large blossoming peony and a willow tree issuing from a fenced terrace and the exteriors under a chocolate brown glaze. Christie’s labels to the bases of both pieces (lot number 5274). The tea bowl measures 4.5cm tall and 8.5cm in diameter; the saucer has a diameter of 13.5cm. There are a few small firing flaws to the glaze of both pieces (the most notable being a small brown mark to the interior of the saucer); otherwise in excellent condition – please see all photos for confirmation. The Nanking Cargo 1752. On Monday January 3, 1752, the. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea. For final transportation to the Netherlands. Struck a reef on her return journey to the Netherlands and sank in the South China Sea on January 3, 1752. As’The Nanking Cargo. Chinese Export Porcelain and Gold. Two hundred and thirty five years later. This item is in the category “Antiques\Asian/Oriental Antiques\Chinese\Porcelain”. The seller is “jedadiahwolf” and is located in this country: GB. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom, United States, Japan, Ireland, Germany, Canada, Australia.
  • Region of Origin: Chinese
  • Product: Tea bowl & saucer
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Primary Material: Porcelain/ Pottery
  • Featured Refinements: Nanking Cargo
  • Original/Repro: Antique Original
  • Chinese Dynasty: Qing (1644-1911)

Rare Nanking Shipwreck Cargo'Batavian Willow' Pattern Tea Bowl & Saucer