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  1. Aug 14, 2023 · His own father had originally been called Nils Ingemarsson, because he was the son of a man named Ingemar and most Swedes used a patronymic, but when Nils went off to university to study theology ...

  2. May 23, 2007 · Linnaeus’s father was born Nils Ingemarsson. Dr. Moran said Swedes were switching to Latinized surnames around the time Nils went to theology school. He decided to name himself after the linden ...

  3. Oct 31, 2014 · Genealogy for Nils, Ingemarsson Linnaeus (1674 - 1748) family tree on Geni, with over 245 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives. People Projects Discussions Surnames

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  4. Jul 26, 2023 · In his several autobiographical works, Linnaeus writes of his parents with warm affection. His father was a farmer’s son, born Nils Ingemarsson and a man who “walked slowly throughout his world, finding his pleasure in the ordering and care of his garden with its several and sundry plants as, in such matters, he found all his peace.”

  5. this same tree their sister's son, NILS INGEMARSSON, took the name LIN-NAEUS. NILS INGEMARSSON was a minister, and his first living was in Raashult, the parish of Stenbrohult in Smaaland. He married CHRISTINA BRODERSONIA, and their first-born child was a boy who was christened CARL LINNAEUS. From his early childhood this boy showed an unmis-

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  7. Mar 1, 2019 · Born May 23, 1707 - Died January 10, 1778. Carl Nilsson Linnaeus (Latin pen name: Carolus Linnaeus) was born on May 23, 1707 in Smaland, Sweden. He was the first born to Christina Brodersonia and Nils Ingemarsson Linnaeus. His father was a Lutheran minister and his mother was the daughter of the rector of Stenbrohult.

  8. Nils Ingemarsson was a peasant lad from Sunnerbo, in the province of Småland in Sweden, who was destined for the priesthood. When at school, not having previously had any family name, as was the case with the country people in general in Sweden, he adopted the name of Linnæus, after a mighty linden-tree growing near his home, which was regarded by the country folk as a sort of sacred tree.