portselanist
Portselanist is a term used to describe a person who studies, collects, or practices porcelain in relation to maritime trade and port locales. In contemporary discourse it is not a formally recognized profession; rather it appears in niche discussions within ceramics history and maritime archaeology to denote a focus on how porcelain moved through, and was shaped by, port cities. A portselanist may engage with artifacts, trade records, and the cultural exchanges that accompanied porcelain’s distribution.
Etymology and scope. The coinage blends references to port towns with the material heyday of porcelain. The
Practice and methods. Scholarly portselanists typically examine provenance, marks, inventories, ship manifests, and warehouse inventories to
Historical context. Porcelain reached global markets largely through major port cities from the 16th century onward,
See also. Porcelain, Ceramics, Maritime archaeology, Trade routes, Delftware, Sèvres porcelain.