Comas was born in the small town of
Alayor, Spain, located in the center of the
Menorca Island in the
Mediterranean Sea, 150 miles southeast of
Barcelona.
During this time, Spain was facing social and political changes that would shape his later work. His father was a teacher in
Menorca, and Juan Comas followed in his steps. At the age of seventeen, he received degrees in Arts and Sciences and title of
elementary teacher. Four years later, Comas received one of the highest degrees for instructors in the
Escuela Superior del Magisterio de Madrid (Rex, 1980). With his academic achievements, Juan Comas taught throughout Spain, before receiving several
pedagogical degrees from prestigious universities in the country. The academic achievements by Comas were not overlooked by the Spanish state. The
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (The High Counsel of Scientific Investigation) of Spain sent him to
Geneva to study at the Institute
J.J. Rousseau of Geneva, and perform psycho-pedagogical studies. During his time in Geneva, Comas absorbed the teaching of styles from the rest of Europe, and would later bring back with him to Spain. It was at this institute that Juan Comas began his studies in
anthropology. After publishing several articles, and working for the
Republicans in Spain, Juan Comas completed his
dissertation and defended in 1939. In 1942, under the guidance of
Eugène Pittard, Juan Comas received his
Doctoral degree in the Anthropological Sciences. Working under Pittard, Comas received much of his indoctrination into the discipline of anthropology, and more specifically, the subfield of
physical anthropology. Pittard was a Swiss anthropologist who had performed numerous investigations and published work in topics covering the
evolution and origin of humans, as well as the
races of people. In an act of great affection to his mentor, Juan Comas translated Pittard's book, The Races and History, close to thirty years after being published. In 1899 Pittard received his Doctoral of Sciences, by presenting his dissertation titled "Recherche d’anatomie comparative sur diverses séries de crânes anciens de la vallée du Rhône (Valais)" (Comparative Anatomical Research on a diverse series of ancient crania in the
Rhone Valley). As Comas was in his later life, Pittard was very involved in political activism. He published articles on the
malnutrition of
Albanians and the
maltreatment of Gypsy populations throughout Europe. It was these times under Pittard that Comas began to develop his ideas that, along with the social atmosphere of the time, would later help him form his personal
indigenismo. After the
Spanish Civil War, Comas was exiled from Spain, when the government came under the
Franco regime. Throughout the 1930s, Comas helped the Republicans fight against the
Nationals, but the conservatives took had won the war. Numerous scientists were forced to leave the country under the rule of Franco (Romero Salvadó, 2005). He implemented in his students, for however brief, a new way of observing the world through science (Rex, 1980). To those he taught Comas became a great symbol: what the modern, Spanish professor was supposed to be. In contrast to the professor at the beginning of the century, exemplified by his father, one who never delved into national politics, Comas embodied the individual as professor who was supposed to change the course of the nation for the better through political intervention in his teachings. ==Historical and physical anthropology’s disciplinary atmosphere: 1900–1950==