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  1. Thunberg brought back knowledge on Japan's religion and societal structure, boosting interest into Japan, an early cultural form of Japonism. [12] [13] In both countries, Thunberg's knowledge exchange led to a cultural opening-up, which also manifested itself in the spread of universities and boarding schools which taught knowledge of the other ...

  2. Carl Peter Thunberg in Japan. Employed as a surgeon by the Dutch East India Company, the Swedish botanist Carl Peter Thunberg left Amsterdam in December 1771. Via South Africa and Java, Thunberg arrived in Nagasaki, Japan, in August 1775. Confined to Deshima.

  3. The Swedish botanist Carl Peter Thunberg, born in 1743 and one of Carl Linneaus' pupils in Uppsala, was the first scientist to collect and describe plants in Japan using the Linnaean approach. His book, Flora Japonica (1784), was the first flora of Japanese plants.

  4. カールペーテルツンベルク (Carl Peter Thunberg [ˈkɑːɭ ˈpeːtər ˈtʉːnˈbærj], 1743年 11月11日 - 1828年 8月8日 )は、 スウェーデン の 植物学 者、 博物学 者、医学者。 カール・フォン・リンネ の弟子として 分類学 において大きな功績を残した。 また 出島 商館付医師として 鎖国 期の江戸日本に1年滞在し、日本における植物学や 蘭学 、西洋における 東洋学 の発展に寄与した。 出島の三学者 の一人。 日本語表記.

  5. Jul 11, 2007 · In 1775, 83 years after Kaempfer left Japan, a Swedish doctor, Carl Peter Thunberg, arrived at the Dutch Trading House. Thunberg was Linnaeus's pupil and later became a full professor at...

    • His Majesty The Emperor of Japan
  6. Jun 17, 2005 · Carl Peter Thunberg, pupil and successor of Linnaeus – of the great fathers of modern science – spent eighteen fascinating months in the notoriously inaccessible Japan in 1775-1776, and this is his story.

    • Carl Peter Thunberg
  7. Carl Peter Thunberg, pupil and successor of Linnaeus – of the great fathers of modern science – spent eighteen fascinating months in the notoriously inaccessible Japan in 1775-1776, and this is his story.

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