Here at the Royal Ontario Museum we have a system in which we have the year as 
the first element, then a batch number, and then the unique identifier, 
sometimes with a further number for multiple component objects. The IT dept, 
however, likes to use the unique identifier from the database, which is just a 
number, so the curatorial types are always talking about the "Accession number" 
and the IT people are always talking about the "RID#". Curatorial resists this, 
however, as people actually remember what the numbers mean, for instance I know 
that accession number 988.117.32 would be an artefact from excavations in 
Fustat, Egypt - all the 988.117. numbers are. Similarly people can remember 
specific objects and their histories from the accession number. So personally, 
I'd have to say meaningful numbers are a good thing. On the database, however, 
any link to the main museum image bank, the web, etc is done through IT's RID#, 
so in a way, we have the both of both worlds, but as long as you make sure you 
have a meaningful number that is unique for each object, it should work without 
a meaningless number.
 
Robert Mason
 
_____________________________________________
Dr. Robert B. J. Mason (E-mail: robm at rom.on.ca; fax (416) 586-5877)
Dept of World Cultures, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen's Park, Toronto, 
Ontario, M5S 2C6, CANADA
Associate Professor, Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations, University of 
Toronto, 4 Bancroft Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1C1, CANADA
web: http://www.utoronto.ca/nmc/mason/mason.html 

>>> Bas Nederveen <B.Nederveen at rijksmuseum.nl> 8/7/2008 6:54 AM >>>
"meaningless" inventory numbers


The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam is exploring the possibility to introduce 
"meaningless" inventory numbers, i.e. plain numbers without any references to 
additional information, such as for example purchase date, department or object 
status. We would therefore like to get in contact with institutions which have 
experience in this matter. Since this matter relates to database management it 
seemed appropriate to try MCN-L.

We are particularly interested in the following:

How do you catalogue related items such as services or (photo's in) photo 
albums? These item usually have a group record and separate object records. How 
do you record relations between them?

Are you facing difficulties in daily practice if information can no longer be 
deduced from the inventory number? For example in your warehouse, while 
documenting etc. Are related object still easy to find (without immediate 
access to a computer)?

What do your inventory numbers look like?

Are you following any (inter)national standards?

Sincerely,


Bas Nederveen



Drs. B. Nederveen
Documentalist, Afdeling Collectieregistratie & Documentatie
Documentalist, Registration & Documentation Department
T +31 (0)20 67 47 230
Bezoekadres/Visitors' address
Frans van Mierisstraat 92, 1071 RZ Amsterdam
Vrijdag afwezig/Fridays absent

De Meesterwerken/ The Masterpieces
Rijksmuseum is dagelijks open van 9-18 uur. Op vrijdag van 9-20.30 uur met 
speciaal avondprogramma.
Rijksmuseum is open daily from 9 am - 6 pm. On Friday from 9 am to 8.30 pm.
www.rijksmuseum.nl<http://www.rijksmuseum.nl ( http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/ )>

_______________________________________
Rijksmuseum
Postbus/PO Box 74888, 1070 DN Amsterdam
Nederland / The Netherlands
T +31 (0) 20 6747000
F +31 (0) 20 6747001
www.rijksmuseum.nl<http://www.rijksmuseum.nl/>




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