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Carl Linnaeus the Younger

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Cause of death
  
Jaundice

Name
  
Carl the

Books
  
Supplementum Plantarum


Carl Linnaeus the Younger

Born
  
20 January 1741 (
1741-01-20
)
Falun

Died
  
November 1, 1783, Uppsala, Sweden

Parents
  
Carl Linnaeus, Sara Elisabeth Moraea

Siblings
  
Elisabeth Christina von Linne, Sophia von Linne

Grandparents
  
Johan Moraeus, Nils Ingemarsson Linnaeus, Christina Brodersonia

Similar People
  
Carl Linnaeus, Olof Rudbeck the Youn, Olaus Rudbeck, Gustav I of Sweden, Emanuel Swedenborg

Carl Linnaeus the Younger, Carl von Linné or Carolus Linnaeus the Younger (20 January 1741 – 1 November 1783) was a Swedish naturalist. He is known as Linnaeus filius (Latin for Linnaeus the son; abbreviated to L.f. as a botanical authority) to distinguish him from his famous father, the systematist Carl Linnaeus.

He was enrolled at the University of Uppsala at the age of nine and was taught science by his father's students, including Pehr Löfling, Daniel Solander and Johan Peter Falk. In 1763, aged just 22, he succeeded his father as the head of Practical Medicine at Uppsala. His promotion to professor—without taking exams or defending a thesis—caused resentment among his colleagues.

Linnaeus' work was modest in comparison to that of his father. His best-known work is the Supplementum Plantarum systematis vegetabilium of 1781, which contains botanical descriptions by the elder Linnaeus and his colleagues, edited and with additions by the son.

He inherited his father's extensive scientific collections and correspondence and worked to preserve them. When he died childless on 1 November 1783 his mother sold the collections to the English botanist Sir James Edward Smith, whose widow sold them to the Linnean Society of London.

References

Carl Linnaeus the Younger Wikipedia