Autorenbild.

Carl von Linné (1707–1778)

Autor von Lappländische Reise und andere Schriften.

157+ Werke 544 Mitglieder 10 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 3 Lesern

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: From "Little Journeys To the Homes of the Great Scientists," Elbert Hubbard, 1916 (Project Gutenberg)

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Werke von Carl von Linné

Nemesis Divina (1981) 32 Exemplare
Carl von Linnés västgötaresa (1747) 23 Exemplare
Svensk flora : Flora Svecica (1755) 21 Exemplare
Linnæi Systema Naturæ (1735) 18 Exemplare
Carl von Linnés dalaresa (1984) 18 Exemplare
Fyra skrifter 6 Exemplare
Lapin kasveja (1991) 5 Exemplare
Caroli Linnaei Flora Lapponica (1977) 5 Exemplare
Species plantarum (2017) 4 Exemplare
Om Smålands naturalhistoria (1992) 4 Exemplare
Skrifter 4 Exemplare
Linnés Blomster-Almanach (1989) 3 Exemplare
Carl von Linné (1987) 3 Exemplare
Travels 3 Exemplare
Tre tal 3 Exemplare
Linné i Lappland [1732] (1977) 2 Exemplare
Anmärkningar om Coffé (1747) 2 Exemplare
Beskrifning om öl (1749) 2 Exemplare
A Tour in Lapland 1 Exemplar
Blomster-almanach 1 Exemplar
Voyage en Laponie (2002) 1 Exemplar
Anmärkningar om brännwin (1748) 1 Exemplar
Om chokladdrycken 1 Exemplar
Lapplandsresan (2015) 1 Exemplar
Genera plantarum 1 Exemplar
Linnés dietetik 1 Exemplar
Om jämvikten i naturen (1978) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Classic Travel Stories (1994) — Mitwirkender — 62 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
von Linné, Carl
Rechtmäßiger Name
Linnæus, Carolus
Carl von Linné
Andere Namen
Linnæus, Carl Nilsson
Linnaeus, Carl Nilsson
Geburtstag
1707-05-23
Todestag
1778-01-10
Begräbnisort
Uppsala Cathedral, Uppsala, Sweden
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Sweden
Geburtsort
Råshult, Småland, Sweden
Sterbeort
Uppsala, Sweden
Wohnorte
Lund, Sweden
Uppsala, Sweden
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Ausbildung
Lund University, Sweden
Uppsala University, Sweden
Harderwijks University, Netherlands
Berufe
botanist
physician
zoologist
taxonomist
Beziehungen
Kalm, Pehr (student)
Kurzbiographie
Carl Linnaeus, later called Carl von Linné, is regarded as the father of modern taxonomy, the system of naming, ranking, and classifying organisms. He was born in the province of Småland in southern Sweden. His father was a Lutheran minister and an avid gardener. Carl showed a deep love of botany and a fascination with the names for plants from an early age. His parents wanted him to become a minister, but he decided to study medicine, which would involve the study of plants as a part of every doctor's education at the time. He began at the University of Lund and transferred to the University of Uppsala, the most prestigious university in Sweden. He went on a botanical-ethnographical expedition to Lapland in 1731 and another to central Sweden in 1734. He finished his medical degree at the University of Harderwijk in the Netherlands in 1735, and then enrolled in the University of Leiden for further studies. That same year, he published the first edition of his classification of living things, the Systema Naturae. He met or corresponded with Europe's great botanists, and continued to develop his classification system. In 1738, he returned to Sweden, where he practiced medicine and became a professor at Uppsala. There he inspired a generation of students, many of whom traveled on voyages of discovery to the USA, South America, the Middle East, and the Pacific. Linnaeus continued to revise his Systema Naturae as more and more plant and animal specimens were sent to him from every corner of the world. He still found time to practice medicine and eventually become personal physician to the Swedish royal family. In 1758 he bought the manor estate of Hammarby, outside Uppsala, where he built a small museum for his extensive personal collections. In 1761 he was ennobled by the king and took the name Carl von Linné. He continued to write and teach, and his international reputation spurred even more contributions to his collections, including from Catherine the Great of Russia.

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Rezensionen

Jeder Biologe kennt Linne, dem Urvater der binominalen Nomenklatur. Ausdruck seines unermüdlichen Sammeleifers sind seine umfangreichen Werke, wie z.B. die Systema Naturae. Doch sein Sammeleifer beschränkte sich nicht nur auf die Natur. Die Nemesis Divina ist Linne´s persönliche Sammlung von fragmenthaften Anekdoten, die Beispiele göttlicher Rache illustrieren. Diese Sammlung war wohl ursprünglich als Warnung für seinen Sohn gedacht und nicht zur Veröffentlichung bestimmt. Was für ein schöner Nachlass für seinen Sohn! Die Geschichten sind meist recht kurz, anfangs ist diese Sammlung interessant bis erheiternd, bald ist die Wiederholung jedoch ermüdend. Irgendwann habe ich die Lektüre abgebrochen.… (mehr)
 
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jochenB | Apr 26, 2009 |

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