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Urip Sumohardjo

Oerip Soemohardjo
A three-quarter view portrait of General Urip Sumoharjo, the first chief of staff of the Indonesian National Armed Forces. He is wearing a peci hat, also called a songkok, and faces towards the viewer's left.
Oerip in uniform, c. 1947
Birth name Mohammad Sidik
Born (1893-02-22)22 February 1893
Purworejo, Dutch East Indies
Died 17 November 1948(1948-11-17) (aged 55)
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Buried Kusumanegara Heroes' Cemetery (7°48′10″S 110°23′2″E / 7.80278°S 110.38389°E / -7.80278; 110.38389)
Allegiance
Years of service 1914–39, 1942, 1945–48
Rank
  • Lieutenant General
  • General (posthumous)
Battles/wars Indonesian National Revolution
Awards National Hero of Indonesia

Oerip Soemohardjo ([uˈrɪp sumoˈhardʒo]; Perfected Spelling: Urip Sumoharjo, 22 February 1893 – 17 November 1948) was an Indonesian general and the first chief of staff of the Indonesian National Armed Forces. He received several awards from the Indonesian government, including the title National Hero of Indonesia in 1964.

Born in Purworejo, Dutch East Indies, Oerip exhibited leadership skills from an early age. As his parents wanted him to become a regent, after elementary school Oerip was sent to the School for Native Government Employees in Magelang. His mother died during his second year at the school, and Oerip left to undertake military training in Meester Cornelis, Batavia (modern-day Jatinegara, Jakarta). Upon graduating in 1914, he became a lieutenant in the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army; during almost 25 years of service he was stationed on three different islands and promoted several times, eventually becoming the highest-ranking Native officer in the country.

Oerip resigned from his position in about 1938 after a disagreement with the regent of Purworejo, where he had been stationed. He and his wife Rohmah then moved to a village near Yogyakarta, where they established a large garden and villa. After Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands in May 1940 Oerip was recalled to active duty. When the Empire of Japan occupied the Indies less than two years later, Oerip was arrested and detained in a prisoner-of-war camp for three and a half months. He spent the rest of the occupation at his villa.


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