Max Lehmann is often credited as the first archivist to write about the principle of original order, when he developed guidelines for the Prussian Privy State Archives in 1881. Original order, or the
Registraturprinzip, represented the easiest way for the Prussian archivists to maintain the complicated registry systems of the State Archives. Prior to this, many archives had organized their records according to format, content, or chronology. Many developed
chronological registers, essentially a sequential list of records that grew as they were added to the archive. This often made it difficult for archivists to process and describe records, particularly in large collections or when they were faced with arranging undated documents. The first noteworthy articulation of the practice of original order was presented in the
Manual for the Arrangement and Description of Archives (also known as
The Dutch Manual) in 1898, where, in the chapter on the arrangement of archival documents, point #16 states: "The system of arrangement must be based on the original organization of the archival collection, which in the main corresponds to the organization of the administrative body that produced it." These principles were not meant to apply to personal papers, as the Dutch Manual did not consider an individual's collection of personal papers to constitute an archive. In the first English-language manual for archive administration, published in 1937,
Sir Hillary Jenkinson argued that only "documents which formed part of an official transaction and were preserved for official reference' qualified as archives." Many, though not all, contemporary archivists, though, have changed their thinking and view personal papers as archives deserving of the same treatment as government or organizational records. == Critiques ==