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- Q13360126 description "Swedish botanist".
- Q13360126 description "Swedish botanist".
- Q13360126 subject Q6318626.
- Q13360126 subject Q6644815.
- Q13360126 subject Q6768647.
- Q13360126 subject Q7021011.
- Q13360126 subject Q7108232.
- Q13360126 subject Q8084506.
- Q13360126 abstract "Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782), was a Swedish botanist, daughter of Carl von Linné and Sara Elisabeth Moræa.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 (or, in German, Das Elisabeth-Linné-Phänomen) after her. She published her observations on the topic in a paper for the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1762, aged 19. This paper came to the notice of the English doctor, scientist and poet, Erasmus Darwin. He included a reference to it in his ″The botanic garden, part II, containing the loves of the plants″ (1789) in which he also reported a confirmation of the phenomenon by M.Haggren, a Lecturer in Natural History who had published his findings in Paris in 1788. The poets William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge read Darwin’s accounts early in their careers and, influenced by these accounts, they referred to flashing flowers in their poems, Wordsworth in ″I wandered lonely as a cloud″ also called "Daffodils" (′They flash upon that inward eye′) and Coleridge in his ″Lines Written At Shurton Bars …″ (′Flashes the golden-coloured flower / A fair electric flame′). Thus Elizabeth Linnaeus came, through Darwin, to influence the pioneers of English Romantic poetry. Linné was married and had two children.".
- Q13360126 birthDate "1743".
- Q13360126 birthYear "1743".
- Q13360126 deathDate "1782".
- Q13360126 deathYear "1782".
- Q13360126 thumbnail Elisabeth_Christina_von_Linné.jpg?width=300.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q156288.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q6318626.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q6644815.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q6768647.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q7021011.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q7108232.
- Q13360126 wikiPageWikiLink Q8084506.
- Q13360126 dateOfBirth "1743".
- Q13360126 dateOfDeath "1782".
- Q13360126 name "Linne, Elisabeth Christina von".
- Q13360126 shortDescription "Swedish botanist".
- Q13360126 type Person.
- Q13360126 type Agent.
- Q13360126 type Person.
- Q13360126 type Agent.
- Q13360126 type NaturalPerson.
- Q13360126 type Thing.
- Q13360126 type Q215627.
- Q13360126 type Q5.
- Q13360126 type Person.
- Q13360126 comment "Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782), was a Swedish botanist, daughter of Carl von Linné and Sara Elisabeth Moræa.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 (or, in German, Das Elisabeth-Linné-Phänomen) after her.".
- Q13360126 label "Elisabeth Christina von Linné".
- Q13360126 depiction Elisabeth_Christina_von_Linné.jpg.
- Q13360126 givenName "Elisabeth Christina von".
- Q13360126 name "Elisabeth Christina von Linne".
- Q13360126 name "Linne, Elisabeth Christina von".
- Q13360126 surname "Linne".