History of Archives Administration (LIS 170)
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historyof
archivesadministration
LIS170Tolentino, Gian; Ko, Stephen; Cortez, Nicolai;
Baroma, Claud; Necesario, Roy

Ancient archives

4000
B.C.
•Clay tablets were impressed with
cuneiforms or wedge-shaped characters.
•Mesopotamian rulers and priests
were in-charge of maintaining records in property, offering, taxes
and exchanges.
•In China, the earliest records were
made of bones and tortoise shells 2000 B.C.
700 b.c.•China’s archival materials were
changed in bamboo slips, silk and stone tablets

•In Persia, records were made of
clay, leather (royal skins), papyrus, and rolls called Daybrooks.
•Alexander the Great initiated the
use of daily journals to record court and empire events.
539
B.C.•Justinian was able to preserve the
archives of his empire and compiled the “Body of Civil Law”530 B.C.

•Rome’s first public archives, the
Aerarium509 B.C.

500
B.C.
•In Egypt, information were recorded
on leather, wooden tablets and papyrus.
•Extensive archival system was
developed in the 2nd and 3rd millenia
•City-state records were housed
inside the Metroon 410 B.C.
•Alexander the Great’s records were
burnt but were reconstructed. 330 B.C.

•Plant fibre papers were invented in
China
•When the Aerarium was destroyed
by fire, it was replaced by the Tabularium
•Han Dynasty established the Bureau
of Historiography
200 B.C.
83 B.C.
a.d. 50

The
dark and
middle
ages

•Business transactions in
and between the feudal communities were usually
exchanges made in kind.
•Government procedures
were conducted orally
and rituals and ceremonies served as
substitutes for written
records
•The new German
kingdoms of the West maintained records but
most other secular
entities did not.
•Parchment was scarce
and expensive.
6th-13th century

•The few existing
archives were used for the traditional and
administrative, religious,
legal and historical purposes.
•Charlemagne used older records to develop
his codes of law in the
8th century.
•Venerable Bede, the
noted histories, relied heavily on archival
material to write
England’s church history.

Middle ages (1066-1484)•Growth in ecclesiastical
and secular archives as more records were
created and preserved.
•Laws were codified, and
by the end of the 13th
century, evidences unsupported by written
documents were found
unacceptable.
•As the residences of the
monarchs became fixed and the scope of their
administration expanded,
secular archives grew.
•Philip II of England
created the Tresor des Chartes in Paris.

1305 1320 1400•The King of England
sent a collection of papal priveleges to the Tower
of London for
safekeeping.
•Records of the
Treasury, the Exquecher, and the Wardrobe, were
also sent to the Tower.
•The Tower of London
housed all of Britain’s Chancery records

•By the end of the Middle
Ages, archival records began to be viewed as
state properties, not as the
individual possession of an individual ruler.

From the
Renaissanceto the
French revolution

1500
•A renaissance of learning took
placed accelerated by the invention of the printing press.
•This resulted in the creation of
more libraries, manuscript collections and archival repositories.
•Archives became important sources
of historical and geographical information.
•Monarchs began to create their
own royal archival repositories.•The Sincamas repository of
Charles I of Spain became the first
well-defined distinct European archives facility. Other nations
followed suit.
1543

•The Reformation and Counter-
reformation provided stimulus to churches to collect and maintain
documents to demonstrate the
historical validity of their positions.1600
•Archives came to be regarded as
tools to legitimize claims of authority, territory and ownership.
•Nations began to centralize and consolidate their records and erect
special buildings as proof of their
country’s importance and commitment to history.

•The first guidelines for archival
administration were formulated
•Axel Oxentierna of Sweden
prepared a set of rules for Sweden
•Baldassare Bonifacio’s De Archives
discussed the history and importance of archives and provided guidelines
on how to use them.
1618
1632

•Despite these developments,
archives were still poorly organized and rules of administration were not
developed well. Access to archival
materials was restricted.

The
French REVOLUTIONand the
19th century

•French ideals of
nationalism spread through Europe due to
the French Revolution,
and led to the creation of nationwide public
archives.
•Archives were viewed
as important in order to preserve and administer
a nation’s heritage and
were made legally open to citizens.

•The French National
Assembly established the Archives Nationale for
parliamentary records
•Archives Nationale as
France’s national repository with
jurisdiction over
records of government agencies, communes,
churches, hospitals,
and universities.
•Archives Nationale
gained control over records held in districts
creating the first centrally-
directed, state-wide archives systems.
1789 1794 1796

•The Archives
Nationale

•Napoleon tried to
centralize all archives of Europe in Paris by
seizing all official and
historical records of territory
•Ideals of nationalism and
a search for national identity spread throughout
Europe and in turn,
archives flourished.
•Records were
centralized though national archives.
Nations in other
continents followed suit.
1810-
1814
•Western Europe started
developing regional archives due to the growing
number of archival
materials. In France, they were called as “Archives
Departmentales.”

•Establishment of
Historical Manuscripts Commission in England
•In the US, the American
Historical Association established the Historical
Manuscripts Commission
and the Public Archives Commission.
•Their mission was to locate and publish
historically valuable
documents.
1895
1899

•Originally, records were
arranged by subject to satisfy the needs of
scholars and
researchers.
•The French introduced
the Principle of “Respect des fonds,” meaning that
groups of documents
created by one office should be treated as a
single, unique unit and
should be preserved as such.
•The Prussian Doctrine
of “Provenance” was introduced. This means
that records should not
only be maintained according to the original
order they were created
or used as by their respective office.
1840 1890

•The first modern
archives manual containing the two
principles
aforementioned.

•Escole des Chartes
was founded in Paris
•The Institute for
Austrian Historical Research was
established in Vienna,
Austria.
•Russia began training
archivists at the St. Petersburg
Archaeological Institute.
1821 1854 1877

MODERN ARCHIVES

•Vladimir Lenin signed a decree
providing for a reorganization of Russia’s records under the
Bolshevik regime, in turn creating
the most highly centralized archival system in the world.
July 1,
1918
•The United States National
Archives was established. 1934

•Israel State Archives was
established, just one year after the formation of the country.
•National archives were formed in Uganda, Malysia, Sudan, Thailand,
and Vietnam soon after (1950s-
1960s)
1949
•The International Council on Archives was established to promote
the scholarly use of archival records
and their effective administration.1950

•The US National Archives
established regional archives branches across the country to
house federal records with primarily
regional content and interest.
•By this time, almost all 50 states of
the US had developed state archival systems, many of which are active.
1968
•ICA and UNESCO initiated a long-
term Records and Archives Management Program (RAMP) to
promote through publications the
more effective management and use of archives, particularly in
developing countries.1979
