Horace Knight (fl. 1884–1920) was a natural history illustrator with the British Museum, noted particularly for his images in The Moths of the British Isles by Richard South.[1]
Biography
Knight, who lived at 16 Dafforne Road, Upper Tooting,[2] had a son, Edgar S. Knight, who also illustrated.[3] Horace Knight retired from the British Museum in 1917 due to illness, at which point he had been producing drawings for William Lucas Distant for over 30 years, working for the chromo-lithographers and letter-press printers, West, Newman & Co. of Hatton Garden.
Horace and his brother E. C. Knight worked together at West, Newman & Co.[4]
His work appeared in
Henry C. Lang : Rhopalocera Europae descripta et delineata / The butterflies of Europe described and figured., London, L. Reeve 1884
John Henry Leech/Richard South: Butterflies from China, Japan and Corea, Transactions of the Entomological Society of London 1901
Charles Thomas Bingham: The Fauna of British India, Including Ceylon and Burma: Butterflies 1905-7
^"DSI - Database of Scientific Illustrators". Uni-stuttgart.de. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
^Ormerod, Eleanor (1904). "Commencement and Progress of Annual Report of Observations of Injurious Insects". In Wallace, Robert (ed.). Economic Entomologist: Autobiography and Correspondence. New York: E. P. Dutton. p. 63. I engaged the valuable assistance of two brothers [...] Messr. Horace Knight and E. C. Knight
^"DSI - Database of Scientific Illustrators". Uni-stuttgart.de. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
^Supplement to the Catalogue of the Books, Maps, &c., in the British Museum (Natural History). Vol. 8 Supplement (P-Z). University Press Oxford. 1940. p. 1016 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
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