in 1737 Linnaeus started his herbarium as a student at
Lund University in 1727–28, collecting about 600 Swedish plants by autumn 1729. The collection grew significantly during his time in
Holland and England (1735–38), where he acquired specimens from
Virginia, the
West Indies,
Central America, and various gardens. This period was vital for his botanical development, as he obtained specimens from diverse sources, including
George Clifford's garden and
John Clayton's Virginian collection (via
Johann Gronovius). Linnaeus avidly collected specimens during his 1732
Lapland journey (where he named
Linnaea borealis) and trips to
Öland,
Gotland, and
Skåne. He also cultivated plants in the
Uppsala Garden from seeds sent from various regions. Despite travel challenges and preservation difficulties, Linnaeus's collections formed the foundation for his extensive botanical work. His
network of students, colleagues, and correspondents, including
Torbern Bergman,
Erik Brander,
Johann Reinhold Forster,
Pehr Osbeck,
Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber,
Anders Sparrman, and
Domenico Vandelli, contributed specimens from around the world, further enriching his herbarium. Linnaeus pioneered the practice of keeping herbaria unbound, storing dried plant sheets separately in purpose-built cabinets. This innovation facilitated easy addition, removal, and reorganisation of specimens, significantly influencing 18th-century botanical study methods. His herbarium cabinets were designed to store unbound sheets of dried plants. The specimen paper was relatively small, 12.3 by 8 inches (32 cm x 20.56 cm), and often provided scant information about the collector and collection details. Linnaeus relied on memory, using brief notes or signs to remind himself of a specimen's source. By 1753, when Linnaeus published
Species Plantarum, the herbarium included specimens from southern France, other parts of Europe,
Siberia, coastal China, India, southeastern Canada,
New York, and
Pennsylvania. After 1753, Linnaeus added specimens from
South America,
Jamaica, China, and the
Cape of Good Hope. Lists from 1753, 1755, and 1767 provide some insight into the herbarium's contents, but the collection was not static. Linnaeus continually added to it, and it also suffered losses over the years, making it difficult to identify all original specimens. After Linnaeus's death in 1778, his herbarium passed to his son,
Carl Linnaeus the Younger. When the Carl Linnaeus the Younger died in 1783, the herbarium was sold to English botanist
James Edward Smith, fulfilling Linnaeus's wishes. This sale has been a source of regret for Swedish botanists ever since. While the main herbarium went to England, many Linnaean specimens stayed in Sweden. These specimens were often gifts from Linnaeus to friends and disciples. For example, about 30 plants classified by Linnaeus are in the Bergian herbarium at the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Carl Linnaeus the Younger also had his own herbarium, including plants he collected and some from his father. After his death, part of this collection (the 'Herbarium parvum') was given to Baron Clas Alströmer, and eventually became part of the Swedish Museum of Natural History collections. Linnaeus organised his herbarium by genera, species, and classes, with specific names written outside. Each species was glued to a half-sheet of paper, and all half-sheets of the same genus were placed in a whole sheet with the genus name on it. In December 1783, Sara Elisabeth Moræa, Linnaeus's widow, offered to sell his collection to Sir
Joseph Banks for 1000
guineas. Banks declined but advised James Edward Smith, a young medical student, who then purchased the herbarium and manuscripts in 1784. The collection, which included three cabinets of herbarium sheets, was shipped to England. According to an illustration in
Robert John Thornton's
New Illustration Of The Sexual System Of Linnaeus, published during the
Napoleonic Wars, the collection's transport to England involved a dramatic pursuit by a Swedish vessel, though this detail may be part of a manufactured narrative celebrating Britain's acquisition of the collections. The acquisition of the collection marked a significant moment in
natural history, as it provided the material and social basis for the advancement of the
Linnaean system in Britain. Smith founded the
Linnean Society of London in 1788, initially meeting at his residence where the collections were housed in their original storage cabinets. These cabinets, though later returned to Sweden, had played a crucial role in preserving the specimens in their original arrangement. Smith's botanical education began in Norwich with local botanists like Hugh Rose, who introduced him to Linnaeus's works. He later studied at
Edinburgh under
John Hope, the first to teach the Linnaean system in Scotland. Smith's deep interest in botany and his acquisition of Linnaeus's collections significantly influenced botanical research and education in Britain. Smith extensively used the Linnaean collections in his publications, including
English Botany (1790–1814) and
Flora Britannica (1800–1804). These publications advanced botanical knowledge and served as valuable references for future taxonomic studies. Smith's ownership of the collections was not without controversy; he was accused by some contemporaries of appropriating Linnaeus's work and passing it off as his own. However, Smith viewed himself as a 'trustee' or 'steward' of national treasures. , housed at
Burlington House in
Piccadilly Since 1873, the Linnaean Herbarium has been housed by the Linnean Society of London at
Burlington House in
Piccadilly, following the Society's move to its current location in the South West portion of the courtyard. Prior to this, from 1856 to 1873, it was housed in Old Burlington House. Contrary to belief, it was not gifted or bequeathed to the Society. The Society bought it from the executors of Sir James Edward Smith (1759–1828) to make its contents permanently available to botanical scholars. The Linnaean Herbarium is fundamental to modern
botanical nomenclature, as Linnaeus's 1753 work
Species Plantarum serves as the internationally accepted starting point. It provides essential context for interpreting approximately 5,900 Linnaean specific names published in this work. Linnaeus's pioneering work in botanical data management involved innovative paper-based technologies to handle information overload. He used interleaved books, index cards, and systematic filing systems to catalogue species and maintain extensive notes on various genera. His annotations included details on the medicinal and economic uses of plants, reflecting his broader goal of utilizing natural resources efficiently. Linnaeus's extensive correspondence network across Europe and beyond was important for expanding his collections and updating classifications. His work was foundational for botanical taxonomy and had significant practical applications in agriculture, medicine, and other industries. ==Contents==