Globalisation of Sino-foreign Maritime Exchange: Ocean Cultures
Part of: Society for Historical Archaeology 2023
This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "Globalisation of Sino-foreign Maritime Exchange: Ocean Cultures," at the 2023 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology.
This Symposium seeks to promote research that evidences, through the study of archaeology, art history, and the interdisciplinary field of material culture studies, the globalization of Sino-foreign maritime cultural exchange and the oceanic networks which facilitated this. We are particularly interested in new information regarding the manner in which Sino-Foreign social relations were constituted, reproduced, or altered through material forms.
Other Keywords
Chinese Porcelain •
Ceramics •
Pottery •
Commerce •
Material Culture •
Materiality •
Kenya •
globalization •
Ship archaeology •
Acapulco
Geographic Keywords
Europe •
Pacific •
East Africa •
Pacific Ocean •
Eurasian Maritime Trade Routes •
Asia > China •
Southeast Asia and South China Sea •
Portugal, Lisbon
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-9 of 9)
- Documents (9)
- A Common Denominator: The Materiality of Information in the Pacific China Trade, 1785-1825 (2023)
- A Global Consumption: Chinese Porcelain In Lisbon In The First Half Of The 16th Century (2023)
- Historical Production and Materiality: The Mystery of the Zheng He’s Chinese Descendants on the Kenyan Coast. (2023)
- Imitation, Counterfeiting And Cultural Appropriation. Chinese Influences on European Ceramics (1560-1780) (2023)
- Looking for the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road (2023)
- Maritime Dvāravatī and the South China Sea from an Integrated Perspective of Ship Archaeology (2023)
- Port of Appeal: Examining the Socio-Materiality of Sino-Foreign Maritime Cultural Exchange at Liu Family Harbour, Taicang (2023)
- The Temporality of the Landscape in the Port of Acapulco Through an Analysis of Chinese Porcelain Shards. (2023)
- The Treasure of an Ottoman House: A Rare Piece of Chinese Porcelain in Ottoman Hungary (2023)