“…A fairly large number of sites have been associated with Portuguese 16th‐ or 17th‐century shipwrecks, but, with a few exceptions, the cargoes have not been fully published as monographic studies and, when studied, importance has mostly been given to eastern commodities. The Aveiro A wreck dated to the mid 15th–mid 16th‐century (Alves et al ., ; Carvalho and Bettencourt, ); the possible Bom Jesus (1533) wrecked off the coast of Namibia (Knabe and Noli, ; Werz, ); the São João (1552) and the São Bento (1554), both off the coast of South Africa (Auret and Maggs, ; Maggs, ); the Seychelles (Boudeuse Cay) Portuguese shipwreck, probably the Santo António of 1589 (Blake and Green, ); the Nossa Senhora dos Mártires in the Tagus River (1606) (Afonso, ; Castro, ); the Nossa Senhora da Luz (Monteiro, ), and the Angra wrecks in the Azores (Bettencourt, ; Monteiro, ); the Santíssimo Sacramento wrecked off Bahia (Brazil) (1668) (Pernambucano de Mello, ; Bandeira and Gomes, ); the Santo António de Tanná in Kenya (1698) (Sassoon, ); and the cargo of the late 17th‐century Sal Island wreck in Cape Verde (Gomes et al ., ), are all Portuguese wrecks where pottery has been found.…”