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  1. Linné is referred to as the first female botanist in Sweden in a modern sense, despite not having received any formal education. It was she who first described the optic phenomenon in which the Tropaeolum majus appears to send out small bursts of lightning, now named the Elizabeth Linnæus Phenomenon [3] (or, in German, Das Elisabeth-Linné ...

  2. Sara Elisabeth " Sara Lisa " von Linné (née Moræa; 26 April 1716 – 20 April 1806) was married to Carl Linnaeus [1] and was mother to Carl Linnaeus the Younger and Elisabeth Christina von Linné. [2] [3] She was involved in the creation of the Linnean Society of London through the auctioning of her late husband's scientific papers. [1]

  3. Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782) Sara Christina von Linné (1751–1835) References. ^ "Von Linné nr 2044 - Adelsvapen-Wiki". www.adelsvapen.com (in Swedish). Retrieved 2022-02-11. ^ "Linné on line – Linnés familj i Småland". www2.linnaeus.uu.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 2022-02-11. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Linné family.

  4. Feb 19, 2021 · 1743-06-14 — 1782-04-15. Botanist. Elisabeth Christina von Linné was a botanist. She became famous for her discovery of a lightning-like phenomenon in orange flowers at dusk. Elisabeth Christina von Linné was born in 1743 in Uppsala Cathedral parish. She was the family’s second child with the surname Linnaea, the feminine form of Linnaeus.

  5. Swedish botanist / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782) was a Swedish botanist, daughter of Carl Linnaeus and Sara Elisabeth Moræa.

  6. Elisabeth ChristinaLisa Stina” von Linné, född 14 juni 1743, död 15 april 1782 [ 2], var en svensk botaniker, äldsta dotter till Carl von Linné och Sara Elisabeth Moræa. [ 3] Biografi. Elisabeth Christina von Linné föddes 1743 som äldsta dotter och andra barnet till Carl von Linné och Sara Elisabeth Moræa.

  7. Dec 30, 2013 · Her name was Elisabeth Christina von Linné, and she was a daughter of the preeminent scientist Carl Linnaeus (also known as Carl von Linné), who devised the system for naming species that scientists use to this day.