Linnaean Garden
{{Short description|Botanical garden in Sweden}}
Image:CarlvonLinne Garden.jpg]]
Image:Rudbeck Botanic garden.jpg
The Linnaean Garden or Linnaeus Garden ({{langx|sv|Linnéträdgården}}) is the oldest of the botanical gardens belonging to Uppsala University, Sweden, and nowadays one of two satellite gardens of the larger University of Uppsala Botanic Garden, the other being the Linnaeus family's former summer home Linnaeus's Hammarby.{{cite web|title=University of Uppsala Botanic Garden|url=http://www.bgci.org/garden.php?id=263&ftrCountry=SE&ftrKeyword=&ftrBGCImem=&ftrIAReg=|publisher=Botanic Gardens Conservation International|accessdate=28 June 2011}} The garden has been restored and is kept as an 18th-century botanical garden, according to the specifications of Carl Linnaeus, who started studying at Uppsala University in 1730 where he later became professor of botany and principal and is known for formalising the modern system of naming organisms, creating the modern binomial nomenclature,Swedish Linnaeus Society [http://www.linnaeus.se/eng/link1_1.html From Råshult to Uppsala](Retrieved February 21, 2017) and who owned the garden from 1741 and had it rearranged according to his own ideas, documented in his work Hortus Upsaliensis (1748).{{cite web|title=Botanical Garden History|url=http://www.botan.uu.se/Historia/History.html|publisher=Uppsala University|accessdate=28 June 2011|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110608075542/http://www.botan.uu.se/Historia/History.html|archivedate=8 June 2011}}
The garden was originally planned and planted by Olaus Rudbeck, professor of medicine, in 1655, and had about 1,800 different species in late 17th century, but was damaged in the 1702 Uppsala city fire. In 1693, Rudbeck also built the house adjacent to the garden, nowadays known as the Linnaeus Museum (Linnémuséet), which was residence of Linnaeus from 1743, and from his death in 1778 to 1934 residence of employees at Uppsala University, the last of whom was musician Hugo Alfvén. Since 1937, the house has been a museum of Linnaeus personal and professional life, with furniture, household items and textiles belonging to the Linnaeus family exhibited together with Linnaeus personal medicinal cabinet, insect cabinet and herbarium.Swedish Linnaeus Society [http://www.linnaeus.se/eng/link3_1.html Home life and scientific achievements] (Retrieved February 21, 2017)Swedish Linnaeus Society [http://www.linnaeus.se/eng/link3_2.html At home with the Linnaeus family](Retrieved February 21, 2017)
Image:Uppsala Linnaean garden from Busser.jpg
After the gardens of Uppsala Castle had been donated to the university by King Gustav III to serve as a new botanical garden, the old one was left to decay. It was bought by the Swedish Linnaean Society in 1917 and restored according to the detailed description in the Hortus Upsaliensis. The garden was later taken over by the university, while the Linnaeus Museum is still run by the Society.
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References
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Gallery
:Photos of the Linnean Museum
CarlvonLinne house.jpg|Residence of Carl Linnaeus 1743–1778
Linnemuseet 08.JPG|Wallpaper of the large room at the bottom floor
Linnemuseet Uppsala 02.JPG|Large room at the bottom floor
Linnemuseet 03.JPG|Bottom floor
Linnemuseet 04.JPG|Hall, upstairs
Linnemuseet Uppsala 01.JPG|Entrance from the Linnaean Garden
External links
- {{Commons category inline|Linnaean Garden}}
- {{Commons category inline|Linne Museum|Linnaean Museum}}
{{Coord|59|51|44|N|17|38|2|E|region:SE_type:landmark|display=title}}
{{Uppsala University}}
{{Carl Linnaeus}}
Category:Botanical gardens of Uppsala University
Category:Biographical museums in Sweden
Category:Science museums in Sweden
Category:Commemoration of Carl Linnaeus