Ljungstedt was later hired by the
Swedish East India Company, but after it folded, he moved to
Macau, where he resided for the rest of his life working as a merchant. The King of Sweden later made him a Knight of the
Order of Vasa, and in 1820 he was also appointed Sweden's first
consul general in
China. Ljungstedt took great interest in the
history of Macau and he is famous for being the first Westerner to refute the
Portuguese claim that the
Ming dynasty had formally ceded sovereignty over
Macau. Ljungstedt never returned to his native country and was buried in the
Protestant cemetery in Macau. Today, a in Linköping bears his name and an avenue in Macau (Avenida Sir Anders Ljungstedt, 倫斯泰特大馬路, pinyin Lúnsītàitè dàmǎlù) was named in his honor in 1997 by the local Portuguese government. ==Sources==