Nopcsa was born in 1877 in Déva,
Transylvania,
Kingdom of Hungary (today
Deva, Romania), to the
Hungarian Nopcsa aristocratic family. He was the son of (1848-1918), a member of the Hungarian Parliament and his wife, Matylda Henrietta Żeleński z Żelanki (1852-1938). In 1895 Nopcsa's younger sister Ilona discovered dinosaur bones at the family estate at Szacsal (today part of
Sânpetru, Sântămăria-Orlea, Romania). He shared the bones with Professor
Eduard Suess, who encouraged him to study them. Following the professor's advice, he started studying geology at the
University of Vienna in 1897, He acquired a PhD in geology in 1903 from the university; his doctorate focused on
geologically mapping the area surrounding the family estate. On 20 November 1906 Nopcsa met the then eighteen-year-old
Bajazid Doda in Bucharest and hired him as his secretary. Nopcsa later recounted this meeting in his memoir: Nopcsa had a close relationship with Doda for over 30 years. It is widely suspected that Nopcsa was gay and was in a homosexual relationship with Doda. He soon learned the
Albanian dialects and customs. Eventually, he got on good terms with the leaders of the Albanian
nationalist resistance who fought against the
Turks in the region. Nopcsa gave passionate speeches and smuggled in weapons. In 1907, on one of his expeditions into the Albanian mountains, he and Bajazid Doda were taken hostage by the bandit Mustafa Lita. Lita demanded ten thousand Turkish pounds for his release. He was eventually rescued by Doda's father, who had brought 'ten armed retainers'. Out of these conflicts,
Albania arose as an independent state, which needed a king. Nopcsa volunteered, suggesting he would use money he would gain from marrying a rich American girl to fund the war efforts, however, to no avail. &
Tançica, cca 1913 Later, during the
First World War, Nopcsa was on another mission as a spy for
Austria-Hungary, working undercover as a shepherd in Transylvania. With the defeat of Austria-Hungary at the end of the war, Nopcsa's native
Transylvania was ceded to
Romania. As a consequence, the
Baron of
Felső-Szilvás lost his estates and other possessions in 1920. Compelled to find paid employment, he landed a job as the head of the
Hungarian Geological Institute in 1925. But Nopcsa's tenure in the Geological Institute was short-lived, he soon became bored of the sedentary job. He went to Europe on a motorcycle journey together with his long-standing Albanian secretary
Bajazid Elmaz Doda to study
fossils. He later returned to Vienna where he ran into financial difficulties again and was distracted in his work. To cover his debts, he sold his fossil collection to the
Natural History Museum in London. Nopcsa struggled with illness, to the extent that he had to give a lecture in a wheelchair in 1928. During his lifetime Nopcsa wrote a memoir based on diaries and notes from 1897 to 1917. Even though he finished the memoir around 1929, it was never published during his lifetime. == Contributions to paleobiology and geology ==