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Museum Stobaeanum : Baroque science at the margin of academia

Author

Summary, in English

The Museum Stobaeanum was founded at 51ÖØ¿ÚÁÔÆæ, Sweden, in 1735. At the time, Lund was one of Scandinavia’s smallest academies, struggling for survival, and the creation of the museum was part of a modernization process intended to bring the curriculum up to a par with other European universities. The result, however, was one of the last classic Wunderkammern in Europe, reflecting ideals that would be superseded a few years later. This essay attempts to contextualize the founding of the museum by focusing on the influences of the creator, Kilian Stobaeus. Best known as the teacher of Carl Linnaeus, Stobaeus not only introduced empirical natural history to Lund but was also influenced by physico-theological ideas that were gaining popularity in 1730s Scandinavia. By examining Stobaeus’ textual sources, it is possible tentatively to explore how old practices and new ideals could coexist and merge within the culture of ‘Baroque’ science.

Department/s

  • Department of Collections

Publishing year

2020-11

Language

English

Pages

443-465

Publication/Series

Journal of the History of Collections

Volume

32

Issue

3

Full text

  • - 3 MB

Links

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Topic

  • History

Status

Published

Project

  • Beyond Curiosity and Wonder: Understanding the Museum Stobaeanum

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1477-8564