Born in , Schilling was the son of a cantor and village schoolteacher and performed as a pianist at the age of ten. From 1823, he attended the
University of Göttingen, studied
theology there, and probably obtained a doctorate in philosophy. In 1826, he went to the
University of Halle, where he finished his studies. In 1830, he settled as a piano teacher in
Stuttgart and became director of the music institute founded by Franz Stöpel. He published numerous books on music and music education, in which he advocated a value-conservative-classical view of art, according to which the "perfection of mankind" The standard of all art, connected with the popular educational ideal, was that music practice and music knowledge could be learned by all, if one only applied the right system. He became best known through the
Encyclopädie der gesammten musikalischen Wissenschaften (1835–1838), which he edited and in which numerous important musicians and scholars of the time participated. In some of his writings he was already accused by his contemporaries of
plagiarism. For example, his main work
Versuch einer Philosophie des Schönen in der Musik (1838) draws on
Carl Seidel's
Charinomos. Beiträge zur allgemeinen Theorie und Geschichte der schönen Künste (two volumes, Magdeburg 1825 and 1828). In part, he also plagiarised himself. In addition to plagiarism, contemporaries also criticised factual errors and unverified adoptions from other works in Schilling's encyclopaedias. The criticisms, among others by
Heinrich Dorn and
Carl Ferdinand Becker, resulted in public polemics, which were published in the
Neue Zeitschrift für Musik edited by
Robert Schumann and in the
Jahrbüchern des deutschen National-Vereins für Musik und ihre Wissenschaften edited by Schilling. In 1839, Schilling founded the "Deutscher National-Verein für Musik und ihre Wissenschaft" (German National Association for Music and its Science) and won the
Kassel Kapellmeister Louis Spohr for the presidency. He became permanent secretary of this association and responsible editor of the
Jahrbücher des Deutschen Nationalvereins für Musik und ihre Wissenschaft, which appeared from 1839 to 1843. He fled Stuttgart on 1 April 1857, and travelled via
Liverpool to the US, where he found shelter with one of his sons. He lived first in New York, then in Canada, and finally in Nebraska, on his son's farm. For debts amounting to 150,000 florins and forgery of bills of exchange, he was sentenced on 23 December 1862 "to a penal servitude of ten years." However, extradition to Germany failed. Schilling died in
Crete,
Nebraska. == Work ==