Teuku Jacob
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Teuku Jacob | |
|---|---|
| Born | 6 December 1929 Peureulak, Aceh, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) |
| Died | 17 October 2007 (aged 77) Yogyakarta, Central Java, Indonesia |
| Alma mater | Utrecht University (Ph.D.; 1967) |
| Known for | Contributions to biological anthropology |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Paleoanthropology Paleontology |
| Institutions | Gadjah Mada University |
Teuku Jacob (6 December 1929 – 17 October 2007) was an Indonesian paleoanthropologist. As a student of Gustav Heinrich Ralph von Koenigswald in the 1950s, Jacob claimed to have discovered and studied numerous specimens of Homo erectus. He came to international prominence as a vocal critic of scientists who believed remains discovered in Flores belonged to a new species in the genus Homo, Homo floresiensis.
Teuku Jacob was born on 6 December 1929 in Peureulak, East Aceh, to parents Soeleiman and Tjut Kariman.[1] He was the youngest of three children.[2]
From childhood he attended HIS Poesaka in Peureulak in 1936 and HIS Langsa in 1938, completing his primary education in 1942. He then studied at Kokumin Gakkö in Langsa during 1942–1943, followed by Sekolah Tygakkö until 1945. After the Indonesian National Revolution, he pursued secondary education at Sekolah Menengah Tinggi Kutaraja in Banda Aceh from 1946 to 1949.[1]