CONTENTS

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PAGE
Preface v
List of Illustrations xii
Selected List of Works on Porcelain xxvi
Key to the Bibliographical List xxxiii
List of Works on other subjects referred to in the Text xxxv
ChapterI. Introductory and Scientific 1
ChapterII. The Materials: Mixing, Fashioning, and Firing 14
ChapterIII. Glazes 30
ChapterIV. Decoration by means of Colour 38
ChapterV. The Porcelain of China. Introductory—Classification—The Sung Dynasty—The Mongol or Yuan Dynasty 49
ChapterVI. The Porcelain of China (continued). The Ming Dynasty 78
ChapterVII. The Porcelain of China (continued). The Manchu or Tsing Dynasty 96
ChapterVIII. The Porcelain of China (continued). Marks 117
ChapterIX. The Porcelain of China (continued). King-te-chen and the PÈre D’Entrecolles 123
ChapterX. The Porcelain of China (continued). Forms and uses—Descriptions of the various Wares 137
ChapterXI. The Porcelain of Korea and of the Indo-Chinese Peninsula 168
ChapterXII. The Porcelain of Japan 177
ChapterXIII. From East to West 208
ChapterXIV. The First Attempts at Imitation in Europe 233
ChapterXV. The Hard-Paste Porcelain of Germany. BÖttger and the Porcelain of Meissen 244
ChapterXVI. The Hard-Paste Porcelain of Germany (continued). Vienna—Berlin—HÖchst—FÜrstenberg—Ludwigsburg—Nymphenburg—Frankenthal—Fulda—Strassburg. The Hard and Soft Pastes of Switzerland, Hungary, Holland, Sweden, Denmark, and Russia 259
ChapterXVII. The Soft-Paste Porcelain of France. Saint-Cloud—Lille—Chantilly—Mennecy—Paris—Vincennes—SÈvres

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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