Ludwig Heinrich von Jakob

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Ludwig Heinrich von Jakob (26 February 1759 - 22 July 1827) was a German economist.

He was born at Wettin, Duchy of Magdeburg; in 1777 he entered the University of Halle. In 1780 he was appointed teacher at the gymnasium, and in 1791 professor of philosophy at the university. The suppression of the University of Halle having been decreed by Napoleon, Jakob left for Russia, where in 1807 he was appointed professor of political economy at Kharkoff University (now in the Ukraine), and in 1809 a member of the government commission to inquire into the finances of the Russian Empire. In the following year he became president of the commission for the revision of criminal law, and he at the same time obtained an important office in the finance department, with the rank of counsellor of state; but in 1816 he returned to Halle to occupy the chair of political economy. He died at Lauchstadt.

Shortly after his first appointment to a professorship in Halle Jakob had begun to turn his attention rather to the practical than the speculative side of philosophy, and in 1805 he published at Halle Lehrbuch der Nationalokonomie, in which he was the first to advocate in Germany the necessity of a distinct science dealing specially with the subject of national wealth. His principal other works are Grundriss der allgemeinen Logik (Halle, 1788) ; Grundsdize der Polizeigesetzgebung und Polizeianstalten (Leipzig, 1809); Einleitung in des Studium der Staatswissenschaften (Halle, 1819); Entwurf efnes Criminalgeselzbuchs fr das russische Reich (Halle, 1818) and Staatsfinanzwissenschaft (2 vols., HaIle, 1821).


This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.