Alfred Saint-Ange Briquet (30 December 1833, Paris â 1926, Mexico) was a French pioneer of photography, particularly in Mexico.
Briquet became a photographer in Paris in 1854. He taught photography at ÃÂcole spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr, the prominent French military academy.
He closed his studio in Paris in 1865, but it not certain when he started work in Mexico, however in 1876, he did receive a commission to record the construction of the Mexican National Railway (Ferrocarril Nacional Mexicano - FNM) line being built between Veracruz and Mexico City. He gained the attention of President Porfirio DÃÂaz and secured a number of commissions. He also published a series of photography books: Vistas Mexicanas, Tipos Mexicanos and Antiquedades Mexicanos. Following the Mexican Revolution of 1910 he no longer received any government contracts.
His photos appeared in several books, and albums among them we can mention "Mexico artÃÂstico y pintoresco" edited by Julio Michaud and "Mexico, Its Social Evolution" coordinated by the historian Justo Sierra.