Ancient Relics - Antiquities Online

Tel: 01425618734
Email: sales@antiquitiesonline.co.uk
Web site: https://www.antiquitiesonline.co.uk/

A Chinese Tek Sing shipwreck porcelain saucer, c. 1822 A.D.

SOLD

Code: 2447



Description: A small Tek Sing shipwreck pale duck egg blue glazed porcelain saucer with the interior of the bowl decorated with two character motifs in darker blue. The saucer in very good condition with no damage. The reverse also in good condition with Nagel Auctions Tek Sing Treasures auction label attached.

Size: 84 mm/3.3 ins. in diameter

Culture: Chinese, Shipwreck ceramic

Date: c. 1822 A.D.

Notes: The Tek Sing (meaning ‘True Star’) shipwreck was a large Chinese ocean-going junk that was wrecked on a reef on the Belvidere Shoals, Gaspar Straits, Indonesia, in the South China Sea, in 1822, whilst on route from Xiamen (then known as Amoy) in Fujian, China, to Batavia, Dutch East Indies, the cargo ultimately intended for European markets. The wreck was discovered by British marine salvor Michael Hatcher in May 1999. His team recovered around 350,000 pieces of porcelain from the wreck – the largest recovery of Chinese shipwreck ceramics to date. The cargo was auctioned by Nagel Auctions in Stuttgart, Germany, in November 2000.