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Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities
Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften
BBAW Logo.png
Abbreviation BBAW
Formation
  • 1700 (1700) (founded)
  • 1752 (Royal Society)
  • 1918 (Prussian Academy)
  • 1992 (modern charter)
Legal status treaty
Headquarters Jägerstrasse 22/23
D-10117 Berlin, Germany
Coordinates 52°30′50″N 13°23′39″E / 52.51389°N 13.39417°E / 52.51389; 13.39417Coordinates: 52°30′50″N 13°23′39″E / 52.51389°N 13.39417°E / 52.51389; 13.39417
Official language
German
President
Martin Grötschel
Vice-Presidents
  • Annette Grüters-Kieslich
  • Christoph Markschies
Main organ
Board of Directors
Parent organization
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina
Staff
450
Website www.bbaw.de/en

The Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (German: Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften), abbreviated BBAW, is the official academic society for the natural sciences and humanities for the German states of Berlin and Brandenburg. Housed in three locations in and around Berlin, Germany, the BBAW is the largest non-university humanities research institute in the region.

The BBAW was constituted in 1992 by formal treaty between the governments of Berlin and Brandenburg on the basis of several older academies, including the historic Prussian Academy of Sciences from 1700 and East Germany's Academy of Sciences of the German Democratic Republic from 1946. By this tradition, past members include the Brothers Grimm, Wilhelm and Alexander von Humboldt, Lise Meitner, Theodor Mommsen, Albert Einstein, and Max Planck. Today the BBAW operates as a public law corporation under the auspices of the German National Academy of Sciences, and has over 300 fellows and 250 additional staff members. Its elected scientific membership has included 78 Nobel laureates.

The BBAW operates several subsidiary research centers. Projects include compiling large dictionaries; editing texts from ancient, medieval, and modern history; and editing the classical literature from diverse fields. Notable examples include Inscriptiones Graecae, the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, the German Dictionary (German: Deutsches Wörterbuch), the Ancient Egyptian Dictionary (Altägyptischen Wörterbuch), the bibliography of works by Alexander von Humboldt, and a scholarly edition of the works of Ludwig Feuerbach.


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