Antique Shipwreck Salvaged China Porcelain Fisherman Saucer - Ca Mau Cargo 1723

Pricing & History
  • Sold for
    Start Free Trial or Sign In to see what it's worth.
  • Sold Date
  • Source eBay
A wonderful vibrant Chinese blue on white porcelain plate dating to the Yongzheng Period of China's Qing Dynasty (1723-1735) and salvaged from the Ca Mau shipwreck. An officially recorded piece with the Sotheby's Ca Mau sticker and numbers. The plate depicts a striking and evocative scene of a Chinese landscape. A fisherman, located near his house and underneath a large tree, stands on the edge of an island and fishes into an endless expanse of water, through which two boats can be seen to pass in the distance. A beautiful, romantic scene of Qing China, which would have appealed as much to early 18th Century Europeans as it does to us today. A wonderful cafe au lait slip adorns the outside of the vessel. This plate was exported from Jingdezhen (a Kiln in southern China) on the Ca Mau vessel, a Junk bound for the port of Jakarta, modern day Indonesia. The Junk, or large trade vessel, was capitalizing on the booming business of Chinese Export porcelain. The beginning of the 18th Century saw an insatiable appetite for Chinese ceramics sweep across most of Europe, with coffee and tea drinking a new and popular pass-time for the wealthy and middle-class alike. Archaeologists have discerned that the final hours of the Ca Mau were spent ablaze, as the crew failed to control a fire on the ships deck. She finally sank thirty nautical miles read more