1862 in Sweden
1 majparad 1862, litografi - Livrustkammaren - 61348
Events from the year 1862 in Sweden
Incumbents
Events
- Rudberg publishes a minor revision of his proposal of the Stockholm city plan. A new administrative reform comes into effect.[1]
- Tax-paying women of legal majority (unmarried women, divorced women and widows) are granted the right to vote in municipal elections, making Sweden the first country in the world to grant women the right to vote.[2]
- Queen Louise and Princess Louise takes swimming lessons for the pioneer Nancy Edberg, making swimming socially acceptable for females.[3]
- The theological seminary Johannelunds Teologiska Högskola is founded in Uppsala.
- Peggy Hård is employed as a clerk at a bank office in Stockholm, regarded as a pioneer within the profession of women clerks.
Births
- 4 February – Hjalmar Hammarskjöld, politician (died 1953)
- 1 April – Carl Charlier, astronomer (died 1934)
- 8 May - Emilie Rathou, temperance- and women's rights activist (died 1948)
- 17 July – Oscar Levertin, poet, critic and literary historian (died 1906)
- 18 August – Carl-Emil Johansson, tug-of-war competitor (died 1938).[4]
- 19 September – Arvid Lindman, rear admiral, industrialist and conservative politician (died 1936)
- 24 September – Olof Bergqvist, bishop (died 1940)
- 26 October – Hilma af Klint, painter (died 1944)
- – Alexandra Skoglund, suffragette, women's rights activist and politician (died 1938)
Deaths
References
- ↑ Hall, Thomas (1999). Huvudstad i omvandling – Stockholms planering och utbyggnad under 700 år (in Swedish). Stockholm: Sveriges Radios förlag. ISBN 91-522-1810-4.
- ↑ P. Orman Ray: Woman Suffrage in Foreign Countries. The American Political Science Review. Vol. 12, No. 3 (Aug., 1918), pp. 469–474
- ↑ Idun (1890): Nr 15 (121)
- ↑ "Carl-Emil Johansson". Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
|
---|
| 18th century | |
---|
| 19th century | |
---|
| 20th century | |
---|
| 21th century | |
---|
|