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Ebba Katarina Jakobsson was born on 29 October 1950 in the town of Lund in Scania, Sweden. [3] In 1969, Jakobsson started experiencing symptoms of schizophrenia. [4] [5] As a direct consequence, she was admitted to the Malmö Östra psychiatric hospital in Segevång, where she received pills and injections of antipsychotics to combat her illness.
Soot was found in her lungs, indicating she was alive as she burned, and her neck was bruised, possibly from a fall or blow. Analysis of the woman's blood and stomach showed that she had consumed between 50 and 70 Fenemal brand sleeping pills, [8] and found next to her body were a further twelve sleeping pills. At autopsy, her teeth and jaw ...
Since 2013, she has hosted several conservationist events, including the YouTube channel Animal Watch, which explores the nature and history of various animals, mostly wolves and dogs. Svenska, a passionate animal rights activist, [3] specialises in canine behaviour. [4] She is the founder of Green World TV and a patron of the World Animal Day. [5]
In May 1995, an unidentified woman using the alias "Jennifer Fergate" (or "Jennifier Fairgate") checked into the luxurious Oslo Plaza Hotel (now Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel) under mysterious circumstances. Her death days later, under conditions that defied explanation, has sparked decades of speculation and intrigue.
The Eurasian wolf (Canis lupus lupus), also known as the common wolf, [3] is a subspecies of grey wolf native to Europe and Asia. It was once widespread throughout Eurasia prior to the Middle Ages . Aside from an extensive paleontological record, Indo-European languages typically have several words for "wolf", thus attesting to the animal's ...
The murder of Kim Wall, known in Denmark as Ubådssagen (transl. "The submarine case"), [2] took place on 10 August 2017, after Swedish freelance journalist Kim Wall boarded the midget submarine UC3 Nautilus, in Køge Bugt, Denmark, for a pre-arranged interview of its owner, Danish entrepreneur Peter Madsen.
The Luttra Woman, displayed in the position in which she was discovered, at the Falbygden Museum []. On 20 May 1943, whilst cutting peat in Rogestorp—a raised bog within the Mönarpa mossar [] bog complex in Falbygden near Luttra—Carl Wilhelmsson, a resident of the neighbouring Kinneved parish [], [4] discovered one of the skeleton's hands at a depth of 1.2 m (4 ft) below the surface.
The woman's grave has been on display at the Swedish History Museum in Stockholm since 1943. First in the exhibition "10 000 years in Sweden" and most recently in the exhibition "Ancient Times". During new exhibitions, the position of the woman in the grave has shifted and in recent years there has been a discussion about the position of the ...