Porcelain manufacturing companies in Europe
Appearance
Porcelain manufacturing companies are firms which manufacture porcelain.
European porcelain manufacturers before the 18th century
[edit]The table below lists European manufacturers of porcelain established before the 18th century. This table may be sorted according to the year of foundation, description and country.
Year |
Description |
Site / location |
Country |
Remark |
---|---|---|---|---|
1575 | Medici porcelain | Florence | Italy | Tuscany |
1673 | Rouen porcelain | Rouen | France | Normandy |
1693 | Saint-Cloud porcelain | Saint-Cloud | France | Ile-de-France |
18th-century European porcelain manufacturing companies
[edit]The table below lists European manufacturers of porcelain established in the 18th century. This table may be sorted according to the year of foundation, description and country.
Year |
Description |
Site / location |
Country |
Remark |
---|---|---|---|---|
1710 | Meissen porcelain | Meissen | Germany | Saxony |
1718 | Vienna porcelain | Vienna | Austria | This first phase called the "Du Pacquier factory"; from 1744 owned by the emperors |
1720 | Vezzi porcelain | Venice | Italy | Until 1727. First of the Venetian factories.[1] |
1730 | Chantilly porcelain | Chantilly | France | Ile-de-France |
1735 | Doccia porcelain | Sesto Fiorentino | Italy | Tuscany |
1740 | Manufacture de Vincennes | Vincennes | France | Moved to Sèvres in 1756 |
1743 | Capodimonte porcelain | Naples | Italy | moved to Madrid in 1760, becoming Real Fábrica del Buen Retiro |
1743 | Chelsea Porcelain | London | England | Merged with Derby in 1769 |
1744 | Imperial Porcelain Factory, Saint Petersburg | Saint Petersburg | Russia | Formerly Lomonosov Porcelain Factory |
1745 | Mennecy porcelain | Mennecy | France | Ile-de-France |
1746 | Höchster Porzellanmanufaktur | Höchst (Frankfurt) | Germany | Hesse |
1747 | Bow porcelain factory | London | England | active c. 1747–64 and closed in 1776. Rival to Chelsea Porcelain |
1747 | Fürstenberg China | Fürstenberg | Germany | Lower Saxony |
1747 | Nymphenburg Porcelain Manufactory | Schloss Nymphenburg | Germany | Bavaria |
1750 | Royal Crown Derby | Derby | England | Year of establishment disputed with 1757 |
1750 | Real Fábrica de Alcora | Alcora | Spain | Also called Real Fábrica de Loza y Porcelana; founded 1727 but porcelain production only began c. 1750 |
1751 | Tournai porcelain | Tournai | Belgium | Hainaut[1] |
1751 | Royal Worcester | Worcester | England | Acquired by Portmeirion in 2009 |
1754 | Liverpool porcelain | Liverpool | England | Produced in various factories in Liverpool. |
1755 | Frankenthal Porcelain Factory | Frankenthal | Germany | |
1756 | Manufacture nationale de Sèvres | Sévres | France | It is the continuation of Vincennes porcelain, founded in 1740, which moved to Sèvres in 1756. |
1757 | Porzellanmanufaktur Gotha | Gotha | Germany | Thuringia |
1757 | Royal Crown Derby | Derby | England | Year of establishment disputed with 1750 |
1757 | Lowestoft Porcelain Factory | Lowestoft | England | Suffolk |
1758 | Marieberg porcelain | Stockholm | Sweden | [1] |
1758 | Ludwigsburg porcelain | Ludwigsburg | Germany | Baden-Württemberg |
1758 | Ansbach Porcelain | Ansbach | Germany | Bavaria |
1759 | Wedgwood | Stoke-on-Trent | England | The manufacture began to produce porcelain only in 1812[1] |
1759 | Weesp porselein | Weesp | Netherlands | First Dutch porcelain factory was founded in Weesp, near Amsterdam |
1760 | Real Fábrica del Buen Retiro | Madrid | Spain | Capodimonte porcelain was moved to Madrid. Popularly called La China. |
1760 | Kloster Veilsdorf porcelain factory | Veilsdorf | Germany | Thuringia |
1761 | Porzellanmanufaktur Kelsterbach | Kelsterbach | Germany | Hessen |
1762 | Volkstedt porcelain | Volkstedt (Rudolstadt) | Germany | Thuringia |
1762 | Le Nove porcelain | Nove | Italy | Republic of Venice. Until 1835. |
1763 | Royal Porcelain Manufacture Berlin | Berlin | Germany | Abbreviated as KPM |
1763 | Niderviller pottery | Niderviller | France | Founded 1735; made porcelain from 1763 to 1827 |
1764 | Cozzi porcelain | Venice | Italy | Republic of Venice. Until 1812. |
1764 | Wallendorf Porcelain | Lichte (Wallendorf) | Germany | Thuringia |
1766 | Gardner Manufacture | Verbilki | Russia | Moscow oblast, Taldomsky District |
1766 | Lunéville Faience | Lunéville | France | Founded 1730, made porcelain from 1766 to 1777 |
1766 | Villeroy & Boch | Mettlach, Saarland | Germany | Established in Audun-le-Tiche, Lorraine, France; the company was established in 1748, but it began to produce porcelain wares only in 1766 |
1768 | Plymouth porcelain | Plymouth, Devon | England | Moved to Bristol 1770–1781, New Hall 1781-1835 |
1770 | Spode | Stoke-on-Trent | England | The manufacture began to produce porcelain only in 1800[1] |
1770 | Rörstrand | Stockholm | Sweden | The company was established in 1726; however, it began to produce porcelain wares only in the 1770s |
1771 | Limoges porcelain | Limoges | France | Limoges maintains the position it established in the 19th century as the premier manufacturing city of porcelain in France. |
1771 | Naples porcelain | Naples | Italy | "Naples Royal Porcelain Manufactory" (Real fabbrica delle porcellane di Napoli). Also called the Real Fabbrica Ferdinandea. Until 1806. |
1774 | Loosdrechts porselein | Loosdrecht | Netherlands | Joannes de Mol established the manufactory |
1775 | Aynsley China | Longton, Staffordshire | England | Acquired by Belleek Pottery in 1997 |
1775 | Royal Copenhagen | Copenhagen | Denmark | The Royal Copenhagen manufactory's operations began in a converted post office in 1775. |
1777 | Graf von Henneberg Porcelain, Ilmenau | Ilmenau | Germany | Thuringia |
1777 | Hollóháza Porcelain Manufactory | Hollohaza | Hungary | Borsod-Abaúj-Zemplén County |
1783 | Porcelain Manufacture Rauenstein | Rauenstein | Germany | Thuringia |
1790 | Weimar Porcelain | (Blankenhain) | Germany | Thuringia |
1792 | Haas & Czjzek | Horní Slavkov | Czech Republic | German: Schlaggenwald; defunct as of 2011 |
1793 | Mintons | Stoke-on-Trent | England | United Kingdom |
1794 | Thun 1794 | Klášterec nad Ohří | Czech Republic | Chomutov District |
1794 | Königlich privilegierte Porzellanfabrik | Tettau | Germany | Bavaria |
19th-century European porcelain manufacturing companies
[edit]The table below lists European manufacturers of porcelain established in the 19th century. This table may be sorted according to the year of foundation, description and country.