Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q347903> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 57 of
57
with 100 triples per page.
- Q347903 subject Q6644891.
- Q347903 subject Q6933525.
- Q347903 subject Q7015432.
- Q347903 subject Q7020244.
- Q347903 subject Q7021011.
- Q347903 subject Q7047313.
- Q347903 subject Q8015353.
- Q347903 subject Q8308309.
- Q347903 subject Q8308358.
- Q347903 subject Q8752425.
- Q347903 subject Q8836103.
- Q347903 subject Q9043661.
- Q347903 abstract "Adam Afzelius (8 October 1750 – 20 January 1837) was a Swedish botanist and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus. Afzelius was born at Larv in Västergötland in 1750. He was appointed teacher of oriental languages at Uppsala University in 1777, and in 1785 demonstrator of botany. In 1793, he was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.Between 1792 to 1796, as part of the Sierra Leone Company, he made two journeys to West Africa, where he reported on the geography, climate, and natural resources of the region. While here, he also collected botanical specimens that were later acquired by Uppsala University. In 1797-1798 he acted as secretary of the Swedish embassy in London and on 19 April 1798, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society. Returning to Sweden, he again took up his position as botanices demonstrator at Uppsala, and was in 1802 elected president of the "Zoophytolithic Society" (later called the Linnaean Institute). In 1812, he became professor of materia medica at the university. He died in Uppsala in 1837. In addition to various botanical writings, he published the autobiography of Carl Linnaeus in 1823.His brother, Johan Afzelius (1753–1837) was professor of chemistry at Uppsala; and another brother, Pehr von Afzelius (1760–1843; the "von" was added when he was ennobled), who became professor of medicine at Uppsala in 1801, was distinguished as a medical teacher and practitioner.The botanical genus Afzelia (subfamily Caesalpinioideae) commemorates his name, and in 1857, the plant species Anubias afzelii was named after him by Heinrich Wilhelm Schott.".
- Q347903 thumbnail Adam_Afzelius_by_CF_Breda.jpg?width=300.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q1071.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q112191.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q112476.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q123885.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q1291275.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q15405.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q157156.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q185246.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q191583.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q213283.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q213551.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q2329.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q2624777.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q2640516.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q3055179.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q311373.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q34.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q3483448.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q441.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q4412.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q599824.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q6554653.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q6644891.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q6933525.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q7015432.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q7020244.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q7021011.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q7047313.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q7432.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q78434.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q8015353.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q8308309.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q8308358.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q84.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q84079.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q8752425.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q8836103.
- Q347903 wikiPageWikiLink Q9043661.
- Q347903 type Thing.
- Q347903 comment "Adam Afzelius (8 October 1750 – 20 January 1837) was a Swedish botanist and an apostle of Carl Linnaeus. Afzelius was born at Larv in Västergötland in 1750. He was appointed teacher of oriental languages at Uppsala University in 1777, and in 1785 demonstrator of botany.".
- Q347903 label "Adam Afzelius".
- Q347903 depiction Adam_Afzelius_by_CF_Breda.jpg.