Thorkild Peter Rudolph Jacobsen received, in 1927, an M.A. from the
University of Copenhagen and then came to the United States to study at the
Oriental Institute of the
University of Chicago, where, in 1929, he received his
Ph.D. He was a field Assyriologist for the Iraq Expedition of the Oriental Institute from 1929 to 1937) and in 1946 became director of the Oriental Institute. He served as Dean of the Humanities Division from 1948 to 1951, as an editor of the
Assyrian Dictionary from 1955 to 1959, and as Professor of Social Institutions from 1946–1962. In 1962, Jacobsen became a professor of Assyriology at
Harvard University, where he remained until his retirement in 1974. Beyond being an expert translator, he was a brilliant interpreter whose insights led to a deeper understanding and appreciation of the institutions and normative references of Sumerian and Akkadian culture. Jacobsen retired as a professor of Assyriology at Harvard University in 1974. In 1974 he served as a visiting professor at
UCLA where he helped develop a strong Assyriology program. Jacobsen served 1993 as president of the
American Oriental Society, an organization of scholars. He was also an elected member of the
American Philosophical Society and the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was 88 years of age when he died in
Bradford, New Hampshire. ==Selected works==