| The Danmark Trail |
On this map you can see how Linnaeus walked the trail.
Go to the
website of the city of Uppsala to see how you can walk the trail
today.
Map from Linnaean Landscapes
© Copyright: Lantmäteriet, the National Land Survey of Sweden |
Good to know |
The entire distance from the harbour to Linnaeus's
Hammarby is 16 km, which can be divided up thus:
Uppsala harbour to Kuggebro: 5 km
Kuggebro to Linnaeus's Sävja: 4.2 km
Linnaeus's Sävja to Danmark Church: 4.2 km
Danmark Church to Linnaeus's Hammarby: 2.7 km
Public Transport
For information about buses along the trail, see Upplands
Lokaltrafik and Linnébussen.
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Kungsängstull |
| During the 1740s, Carl Linnaeus introduced highly
popular excursions into his teaching, which he entitled Herbationes
Upsalienses. Herbatio Danensis commenced at Kungsängtull, leading
across Kungsängen with its newly discovered King's Lily and on
to the Danmark Church. After 1758, the excursion was extended to Linnaeus's
estates at Sävja and Hammarby. |
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| Kungsängen |
| In 1742, Linnaeus's friend, Sten Carl Bielke travelled
across Kungsängen. There, he found Fritillaria meleagris,
the plant known today as King's Lily. Bielke reported his find to
Linnaeus, who immediately understood that it had spread there from
Uppsala Botanical Garden. Thousands of King's Lilies blossom at Kungsängen
in the middle of May. |
Nåntuna grove |
| Here at Nåntuna grove, Linnaeus stopped to show
grove plants and allow the students to gather insects. In those days,
the grove was grazed and much more open. Since 1953, part of Nåntuna
grove has been projected as a nature reserve. There are also many
Iron Age graves in the area. |
Linnaeus's Sävja |
| Most people have heard of Linnaeus's Hammarby. A less
well-known fact is that Linnaeus also owned an agricultural property
in Sävja. Linnaeus purchased Sävja on 14 November 1758,
the same year he purchased Hammarby. At Sävja, Linnaeus built
two rooms for himself where he could be alone. Here, unlike Hammarby,
he did not have to receive students and foreign guests. During Herbatio
Danensis, Linnaeus would stop here with his students for breakfast
and a brief rest with the farmer who rented the estate. |
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| Falebro |
| According to local tradition, Linnaeus planted two
ashes at Falebro, one on each side of the southern bridge abutment.
This was important for travellers to find their way to the bridge
in the dark or in snowstorms on the plane. Today, the only remaining
ash is the one which stood west of the old road. |
Danmark Church |
| Danmark Church was Linnaeus's Parish church. His dog,
Pompe, would accompany Linnaeus to church lie with his master in the
Hammarby pew. Linnaeus would leave after an hour, even if the service
was not yet over. When Linnaeus himself did not go to church, the
dog would come on his own and lay in his master's pew. Just like his
master, Pompe would get weary after an hour. Then he would bark, jump
out of the pew and leave. |
Linné's Hammarby |
| Hammarby was dedicated as a cultural reserve on 13
May 2007. Linnaeus purchased Hammarby on 8 December 1758. The residential
house contains many furnishing details from Linnaeus's time and in
the park, plants put there by Linnaeus still grow. Following a blaze
in Uppsala in 1766, Linnaeus decided to move his collections to Hammarby.
He had a small museum built on what was then a totally bare rise behind
the estate. The building was completed in 1769 and remains there to
this day. |
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