Silke Ackermann


Silke M. Ackermann is a German museum curator and historian of science who is currently the Director of the Museum of the History of Science at Oxford University.

Education

Ackermann studied History and Oriental Languages at the University of Frankfurt in Germany. After working for the "Regesta Imperii" Project, she wrote an MA thesis on the 13th-century mathematician, astronomer and astrologer Michael Scot entitled "Michael Scot: a universal scholar of the 13th century: Sources of his life - Tradition of his works". Ackermann continued this research for her PhD which she presented in 1996, and was later published as a book. During this research, Ackermann studied History of Science at the Institute for the History of Science within Frankfurt University and acted as an assistant to Prof. David King.

Career

From 1996, Ackermann was the Curator of European and Islamic scientific instruments at the British Museum in London. In April 2005 she was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries. In 2012, Ackermann took up a professorship at the University of Applied Sciences :de:Baltic College|Baltic College in Schwerin, Germany, where she was later appointed president. From July 2013 to 2017 she was the President of the Scientific Instrument Commission. From March 2014, Ackermann has been Director of the Museum of the History of Science at Oxford University and fellow of Linacre College, taking over from the renowned and long serving Dr Jim Bennett who was succeed for 2 years by Stephen Johnston who served as the Acting Director from 2012 to 2014. She is the first ever female head of a museum at the University of Oxford.
Ackermann's research interests include the history of science of the Middle Ages and Renaissance and the Islamic World, scientific instruments, and knowledge transfer.

Works

Contributed to: