[20] See E. Bonaffe, Les Faiences de Saint-Porchaire (1898).
[21] See examples in colour, Plate X.
[22] An excellent summary of the remains of English medieval pottery will be found in Hobson’s “Medieval Pottery found in England,” Archaeological Journal, vol. lix.
[23] Böttger at Meissen made a similar ware as his prelude to the discovery of white porcelain, but this was after Dwight’s death.
[24] For a discussion of the stages through which this was achieved the reader is referred to special works, such as Prof. A.H. Church’s English Earthenware, and W. Burton’s English Earthenware and Stoneware.
[25] It is amusing or annoying to find in European museums the wares of Wedgwood, Turner, Adams and one of the Leeds potteries, all lumped together as “Wedgwood,” and yet one can hardly wonder at it, remembering how much has been written of Wedgwood and how little of the other English potters of the 18th century.
[26] See examples in colour, Plates VII. and VIII.
[27] S.W. Bushell, Chinese Art (Victoria and Albert Museum Handbooks, ii. 5-6).
[28] Yao is the Chinese term equivalent of the English “pottery” or “ware.”
[29] See Brinkley, Japan and China, ix. 353-365.