DLDC ESSAY Life Times and Work of Carl Linnaeus
DLDC ESSAY Life Times and Work of Carl Linnaeus
DLDC ESSAY Life Times and Work of Carl Linnaeus
Work
of Carl Linnaeus
Carl Linnaeus
French-Genevan writer philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau known to
have nothing good to say about anyone once told a Swedish visitor,
“So you know my master, my teacher, the great Linnaeus! Tell him that I know of
no man on earth who is greater than he. Tell him that I owe him my health and my life.”
Carl Linnaeus was the elder son of Nils Linnaeus, a Lutheran clergyman,
and Christina Brodersonius. Born on 23 May 1707, he grew up in the
marshlands and meadows of Stenbrohult in Småland, Sweden. Since young,
Linnaeus was taught gardening, Latin and geography by his father who was an
amateur botanist and avid gardener. Linnaeus loved to do work with Nils in the
latter’s rectory garden which to Linnaeus, “inflamed my mind from infancy
onwards with an unquenchable love of plants”1. He constantly asked Nils about
the plants’ names but frequently forgot them. This vexed Nils who threatened
never to give any more names unless Linnaeus remembered them. Linnaeus
was only five-year old when he set to remember the entire botanical names.
1
Written by Linnaeus, in his 1745 Öland and Gotland journal
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In August 1727, Linnaeus entered the University of Lund. He befriended
physician–naturalist Dr Kilian Stobaeus who provided him free food and
lodging. Stobaeus encouraged Linnaeus’ passion for botany, lent him books and
showed him his herbarium, which inspired him to create his personal
herbarium. He stopped his medical studies when he fell ill in May 1728.
2
Medical degrees were not granted in Sweden then due to professional conflict between
university professors and Stockholm doctors.
3 Blunt (2001), pp.78–79.
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In 1733, he spent Christmas in Falun with his fellow student Claes
Sohlberg’s family. In Falun, he made friends with Governor of Dalaerna, Baron
Nils Reuterholm and his chaplain Johannes Browallius who was a botanist. He
also met Sara Elisabeth Moraea, whom he got engaged to in January 1735. The
Governor commissioned him to make a natural history study of Dalearna and
invited Linnaeus to stay in Falun to tutor his sons.
Linnaeus was a great networker who made many friends in Sweden and
abroad. During his stay in Holland, he travelled to UK, Brabant and France
and met fellow scientists, naturalists, botany students and botanical artists
there. In UK, he won over the English botanists who didn’t want to like him as
he was turning the nomenclature system upside down. Although Linnaeus did
not speak English, he could converse in Latin. He made time to correspond
with his contacts and built a vast network of correspondents during his
lifetime. These international contacts were useful to him as they provided him
with seeds and specimens from all over the world.
4https://www.alvin-portal.org/alvin/attachment/document/alvin-record:215323/ATTACHMENT-
0007.pdf
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In 1735, he befriended banker-businessman George Clifford who was
introduced to him by his close friend, renowned naturalist Dr Hermann
Boerhaave. Clifford hired him to curate his botanical and zoological garden in
his estate, the Hartekamp in Leiden and serve as his personal physician. Two
years later, Linnaeus collaborated with Clifford and botanical artist Georg
Dionysius Ehret to produce Hortus Cliffortianus, a catalogue of the species in
Hartekamp.
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The most well-known apostles included Peter Kalm, who travelled
through North America between 1748 and 1751; Daniel Solander, who
accompanied explorer James Cook on his first HMS Endeavour voyage from
1768 to 1771; and Carl Peter Thunberg, who reached Japan in 1776. These
apostles' expeditions helped to promote Linnaean taxonomy to the world.
English naturalist and patron of natural sciences Sir Joseph Banks, who greatly
admired Linnaeus, started the tradition of having a naturalist aboard all British
research ships. Thus Linnaeus’ apostles had a direct influence on future
expeditions including Charles Darwin's expedition aboard HMS Beagle5.
In 1784, Linnaeus’s widow sold his library of 1600 volumes, over 4000
letters from correspondence, and circa 300 manuscripts; and his entire
collection of 19000 plants, 3198 insects, 1564 shells to James Edward Smith. In
1788, Smith founded the Linnaean Society which is still based in Burlington
House, London today.
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orders based on the pistils. Orders were divided into genera by the form of the
fruit.
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pharmacology as a result of Materia Medica (1749); on physiology through his
writings on plant sexuality and embryology8. These topics were also treated in
dissertations by Linnaeus’ students published in Amoenitates Academicae
(1749). In 1745, he inverted Anders Celsius’ temperature scale created earlier in
1742, to its present standard. The original scale had the boiling point at 0 °C
and freezing point at 100 °C 9 . He was first scientist to classify humans as
primates and identify their species name as Homo sapiens and also the first
scientist to recognize that whales are mammals.
8 https://www.britannica.com/biography/Carolus-Linnaeus
9 Koerner (1999), p.204
10
Koerner (1999), p.7
11 Kur (2008), pp.15-16
12 Jarvis (2008), p.83
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From late 1700s onwards, many artists followed the Linnaean style.
Many florilegia began to exhibit dissections of the flower’s sexual anatomy, such
as Pierre-Joseph Redoute’s famous Les Liliacees. Notable artists who adopted
Linnaean style were Georg Ehret, Robert John Thornton and Franz Bauer.
2495 words
Evonne Tay
1 April 2019
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Figure 1: The original drawing of the 24 classes of flowering plants by Georg Ehret (1708-1780).
This drawing illustrated Linnaeus' sexual system. It was first published in Linnaeus' Genera
Plantarum, first edition, 1737.
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Pre-Linnean style of Illustration Linnean style of Illustration
Source: http://botanicalillustrations.org/species.php?id_species=365862&SID=0&mobile=0
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