Initially, the lands around the Islamic cultures of the Mediterranean were the main source of imported luxury goods. This changed in the 16th century, when Europeans established sea routes to China and Japan
Eastern craftsmen sometimes adapted their goods to western taste and lifestyles. European producers, meanwhile, were influence by the form and decoration of the imported goods, and also tried to reproduce the techniques used by their eastern counterparts
Unknown maker
1400-1500
Brass, engraved and damascened
Museum no. 311-1854
Unknown maker
1500-1600
Brass, engraved and damascened with silver
Museum no. M.31-1946
Unknown maker
About 1450-1500
Manises, Spain
Tin-glazed earthenware
Museum no. 8968-1863
Unknown maker
1552
Jingdezhen, China
Porcelain, with underglaze blue decoration, and metal stopper
Museum no. 237-1892
Unknown maker
About 1513-1523
Forlì, Italy
Painted tin-glazed earthenware
Museum no. 30-1866
Unknown maker
1600-1620
Kyoto, Japan
Wood covered with black and gold lacquer inlaid with mother-of-pearl
Museum no. FE.23-1982
Unknown maker
About 1550
Hand knotted woollen pile, on woollen warp and weft
Museum no. 151-1883
Unknown maker
1595-1625
Jingdezhen, China
Porcelain painted in underglaze cobalt blue
Museum no. C.477-1918
Unknown maker
About 1580
Venice, Italy
Beechwood with panels of painted bone and bronze handles
Museum no. 217-1866
Unknown maker
1510-1520
Gubbio, Italy
Tin-glazed earthenware
Museum no. 8893-1863
Unknown maker
About 1575-1587
Florence, Italy
Soft-paste 'Medici' porcelain painted in underglaze blue and moulded
Museum no. C.2301-1910