Manager
The English word manager derives from Italian maneggiare, meaning to handle, to control, or specifically to train a horse, which itself traces to Latin manus, meaning hand. The word entered English in the sixteenth century, initially carrying its equestrian sense before gradually expanding to describe anyone who directed, controlled, or administered the efforts of others. The French manège, a training arena for horses, shares the same root.
The shift from horse-handling to people-handling was not a metaphorical accident. Early English usage of manager applied it to the direction of theatrical performances, household affairs, and eventually commercial enterprises. By the eighteenth century, the word had become firmly attached to anyone who organized the work of others within an institution. The equestrian origin faded from active awareness, but the core assumption remained, that managing means handling, and handling means control.
The twentieth century formalized management as a professional identity. Peter Drucker's 1954 work The Practice of Management argued that management was not merely an activity but a discipline, with its own principles, training, and standards of competence. By mid-century, management had become a career path, a university major, and an industry unto itself, a development that would have struck pre-industrial craftspeople as bewildering. In a guild workshop, in a farming community, in a fishing village, the idea that directing work required a separate professional class with its own vocabulary and credentials did not exist.
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16th centuryManager entered English from Italian maneggiare, meaning to handle or train a horse, via Latin manus (hand).
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18th centuryThe word became firmly attached to anyone organizing the work of others within commercial and institutional settings.
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1954Peter Drucker's The Practice of Management formalized management as a professional discipline with its own principles and training.