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The Global City: On the Streets of Renaissance Lisbon

af Annemarie Jordan Gschwend

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912,000,458 (5)Ingen
The volume highlights the unique status of Lisbon as an entrepôt for curiosities, luxury goods and wild animals. As the Portuguese trading empire of the fifteenth and sixteenth century expanded sea-routes and networks from West Africa to India and the Far East, non-European cargoes were brought back to Renaissance Lisbon. Many rarities were earmarked for the Portuguese court, but simultaneously exclusive items were readily available for sale on the Rua Nova, the Lisbon equivalent of Bond Street or Fifth Avenue. Specialized shops offered West African and Ceylonese ivories, raffia and Asian textiles, rock crystals, Ming porcelain, Chinese and Ryukyuan lacquerware, jewellery, precious stones, naturalia and exotic animal byproducts. Lisbon was also a hub of distribution for overseas goods to other courts and cities in Europe. The cross-cultural and artistic influences between Lisbon and Portuguese Africa and Asia at this date will be re-assessed --… (mere)
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This is an absolutely amazing book lavished with beautiful photographs and blessed with well-written articles that reflect the latest in scholarship--a combination that is a rare treat in itself, much less when its topic is so fresh and little-known as Lisbon in the 16th century, when it was a global city bursting with exotica and luxury goods. The cover is a section of the Rua Nova paintings of Lisbon's main shopping street when at its height in the 1500s--a painting once lost and only found in the back room of a bookshop by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the famous pre-Raphaelite artist, in the spring of 1866. Its streets show black-robed citizens, chamber-pot bearers, religious figures, police, nobles, dark-skinned slaves (one carrying a large jug on his back in chains, sign of an attempted escapee), half-breed children, and even a turkey, newly brought to Lisbon from the New World. It was a world of exploration and colonisation and the riches that came with such foreign conquests, that lasted only 100 years when Portugal's monopoly of the Pacific Ocean was curtailed with the emergence of the Dutch and English East India companies. Lisbon's glory days came to a final climactic end when the city was destroyed in a disastrous earthquake and tsunami in 1755.

This is not a book about Portugal's maritime explorations and conquests, but rather a look into the financial and material rewards that came as a result. Begin with the epilogue, which tells the story of Rossetti's purchase, before dipping into the 14 articles, each on an aspect of Lisbon and its sensational exotic booty that turned it into a global city, its shops bursting with foreign wares that were sought by the elite and crowned heads of Europe. The details are amazing--Queen Catarina of Austria's Ming Chinese porcelain shopping list, examples of rock crystal carvings of the baby Jesus probably made for India's wealthiest new Christians, Japanese Namban screens with their detailed scenes of the unloading of Portuguese ships with Martaban jars, porcelains and textiles. The focus is on the cosmopolitan nature of the city, and the goods available in its shops--ivories, crystals, textiles, bezoar stones, gems, porcelain, jewellery, lacquerware, and even exotic birds and animals. The articles are all richly illustrated, often with artefacts shown for the first time.

Kudos to the two editors of this handsome and intelligent volume (Annemarie Jordan Gschwend and Kate Lowe). ( )
  pbjwelch | Jul 25, 2017 |
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The volume highlights the unique status of Lisbon as an entrepôt for curiosities, luxury goods and wild animals. As the Portuguese trading empire of the fifteenth and sixteenth century expanded sea-routes and networks from West Africa to India and the Far East, non-European cargoes were brought back to Renaissance Lisbon. Many rarities were earmarked for the Portuguese court, but simultaneously exclusive items were readily available for sale on the Rua Nova, the Lisbon equivalent of Bond Street or Fifth Avenue. Specialized shops offered West African and Ceylonese ivories, raffia and Asian textiles, rock crystals, Ming porcelain, Chinese and Ryukyuan lacquerware, jewellery, precious stones, naturalia and exotic animal byproducts. Lisbon was also a hub of distribution for overseas goods to other courts and cities in Europe. The cross-cultural and artistic influences between Lisbon and Portuguese Africa and Asia at this date will be re-assessed --

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