Fonds
Fond is also a word for material that sticks to a pan while cooking and browns, forming the basis for many sauces.Fonds is an
archival term used to describe a collection of papers that originate from the same source.
In modern archival practice, the fonds is generally the highest level of cataloguing, and is usually used to describe the whole of the archives of an organisation or the papers of an individual. It may be divided into
sub-fonds, generally the records of different branches of an organisation or major themes within the papers of an individual. These are in turn further subdivided into
series (which may in a smaller archive come directly below a fonds without the presence of a sub-fonds), usually used for groupings of individual types of documents (
minutes, correspondence files,
deeds, etc.),
sub-series,
files, and
items. An item is the smallest archival unit, and is usually indivisible (a single volume or letter, for instance). It is technically possible to add an infinite number of
subs to the fonds, series or file, but in practice it is actually rare for more than one to be used.
The term
fonds originated in
French archival practice, but has now spread to
English-speaking countries as well. It has generally ousted the term
collection, which used to be used for this level and is now usually only used for fonds assembled, but not created, by a collector. Many archivists continue to use the word
collection informally, however.