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Moipu, the captain and Lloyd
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Item Record
Category Library Item
Item No 19394
Title Moipu, the captain and Lloyd
Description Hakaiki Moipu, a chief of the Marquesas Islands, stands with his back to the camera. He is wearing a loin cloth and a headdress. Beside him stands a captain holding a straw hat and wearing glasses. Lloyd Osbourne is standing to the right; both western men are wearing jackets and trousers. In the background a building can be seen with a fretwork window.
Artist / Maker Unknown
Date 1888
Size 11.1 x 13.2 cm
Type "Photograph"
Location City Art Centre
More Information
The Marquesas Islands are situated in French Polynesia, in the southern Pacific Ocean. They are volcanic and are named after the Marquis of Ca¤ete, who financially supported the Spanish Explorer Alvaro de Menda¤a de Neira who disovered the islands in 1595.

Lloyd Osbourne was Robert Louis Stevenson's step-son.

Born in Edinburgh on 13th November 1850, Robert Louis Stevenson was a Scottish novelist, poet, essayist, playwright and travel writer. Although he was plagued by ill health all his life, he was extraordinarily well-travelled, visiting Europe, America and the South Seas. He married American born Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne in 1880 and is best-known for works like Treasure Island (1883), Kidnapped and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (both 1886). From the late 1880s, Stevenson stayed in the South Pacific with his family on his own estate in Vailima in Samoa. He died here on the 3rd December 1894 of a brain haemorrhage at the age of 44, leaving what many consider his best work, Weir of Hermiston (1896) unfinished.
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