Robert Peters Napper (1818–1867) was a Quaker who published albums of photographs from Andalusia, Spain and the Vale of Neath, Wales.

Robert Peters Napper - Seville, Gypsy boy dressed as a 'majo' - Google Art Project.jpg
Robert Peters Napper
Born23 December 1818 Edit this on Wikidata
Died1867 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 48–49)

Life

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The son of Peter and Mary Napper, he was born in Newport, Wales on 23 December 1818.[1]

He became interested in natural history and sailed for Sydney, Australia, in 1841. From there he went to collect specimens among the Aborigines around Moreton Bay, Queensland.[2] He then moved on to business in Manila, Philippines for 12 years. In 1856 he returned to Britain via America, where he learnt about photography. He was a partner in a London photographic company, McLean, Melhuish, Napper & Co.[3] from 1859 to 1861. He is most famous for photographs taken as an employee of Francis Frith in Spain, particularly Andalucia, in the early 1860s.[4][5]

He died, after a year of illness, on 31 October 1867.[6]

Publications

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  • Views in Andalusia (1862), sold for '8 or 10 guineas [7]
  • Views in Wales. The Vale of Neath (by R. P. Napper. Photographed by the British and Foreign Portrait Company. With descriptive letterpress by C. H. Waring) (1864)

Photographic works

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e.g.

References

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  1. ^ Public Record Office RG6/927, accessed Nov 2020 via Findmypast
  2. ^ "Sydney Morning Herald". 14 December 1842.
  3. ^ Early Photography web site Early Photography
  4. ^ Sougez, M.L.; Pérez Gallardo, H. (2003). Diccionario de historia de la fotografía. Madrid: Ediciones Cátedra. pp. 327–328. ISBN 84-376-2038-4.
  5. ^ Fontanella, L. (1981). La historia de la Fotografía en España desde sus orígenes hasta 1900. Madrid: Ediciones El Viso. pp. 84, 206. ISBN 84-86022-00-2.
  6. ^ Annual Monitor for 1868, p. 101-108
  7. ^ Monmouthshire Merlin, 29 April, 1865