The current Institute is a direct descendant of several institutions of the former
Kingdom of Prussia. In 1888, a formalized collection of ancient musical instruments was established at the Prussian Royal Academy of Music. By 1902, the collection had grown substantially through the financial support of
Wilhelm II. In 1919
Curt Sachs, one of the founders of the field of
organology (the study of musical instruments), was appointed the first Director of the instrument collection. In 1917, an Institute for Musicological Research was also founded under the patronage of
Prince Adolf of Schaumburg-Lippe in
Bückeburg. At the start of the
Third Reich in 1933, Sachs was dismissed and forced to emigrate by the
Nazi Party. In 1935 a new National Institute for German Music Research was founded in Berlin, led by
Max Seiffert, incorporating the old Royal College and the
Bückeburg Institute.
World War II then saw the nearly complete destruction of the Institute and the Museum. In 1943, the instruments, scores and library collections were evacuated from Berlin to protect them from
Allied bombing. Despite extensive security, the majority were lost. In January 1945, "by Decree of the
Reich Minister of Science, Education and Culture", the Institute was closed. At war's end, only 700 of the original 4,000 musical instruments survived. After the war, what remained of the Institute came under the direct control of the
West Berlin city government and a painstaking reconstruction began, with a focus on the valuable instruments collection. In 1949 it was given accommodations at
Charlottenburg Palace. On the 200th anniversary of
Johann Sebastian Bach's death in 1950, the Institute held the first chamber music concert on historic instruments. In 1962 the Institute came under the administration of the newly created
Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, and the Department for Musical Acoustics was established in 1965 through a grant from the
Fritz Thyssen Foundation. A ceremony was held to lay the foundation stone for the Institute's current building in 1979 on the
Kulturforum, which opened to the public in 1984. ==Organization==