‘13th Century’ category posts - « Cipher Mysteries »



16 posts in 2 Pages.

Review of Christopher Harris’ “Mappamundi”…

Posted by nickpelling on Mar 20th, 2010 - 1 comment.
OK, moving straight into confessional mode, I feel more than a touch ashamed that I haven't reviewed Chris Harris' Mappamundi loooong before now. But... even though I've read it twice, I still don't really know what to say about it. Let me explain... Sticking to the knitting, it's a fairly trite starting point to note that it's an historical adventure, with ...

Roger Bacon & the Voynich Manuscript, revisited…

Posted by nickpelling on Dec 28th, 2009 - 18 comments.
When Wilfrid Voynich bought his (now eponymous) manuscript in 1912, it was accompanied by a 1665 letter from Johannes Marcus Marci to Athanasius Kircher. In that, Marci noted three things that Raphael Mnishovsky (King Ferdinand III's Czech language tutor) had told him about the strange artefact:- "that the said book belonged to Emperor Rudolf" "that [Rudolf II] presented 600 ducats to the messenger who brought ...

Voynich Manuscript – the state of play…

Posted by nickpelling on Dec 4th, 2009 - 31 comments.
For decades, Voynich Manuscript research has languished in an all-too-familiar ocean of maybes, all of them swelling and fading with the tides of fashion. But now, thanks to the cooperation between the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and the documentary makers at Austrian pro omnia films gmbh, we have for the very first time a basic forensic framework for what ...

“The Inscrutable Dr Woo Manchu” (Part 1)…

Posted by nickpelling on Oct 4th, 2009 - 2 comments.
Podcaster "thevampiresamurai" has just posted up part 1 of "The Incrutable Dr Woo Manchu", his audio story linking Sherlock Holmes, the Voynich Manuscript, Roger Bacon, Khmer shorthand, and a murdered Chinese laundryman, all being investigated by dogged cigarette-smoking private eye Carson Albion....

The Oera Linda Book: a right proper hoax, I say…

Posted by nickpelling on Apr 7th, 2009 - 10 comments.
I think you can split historical revisionists into two broad camps: (a) desperate mainstream historians looking outwards to fringe subjects for a reputation-making cash-cow book; and (b) clever writers on the fringes who appropriate the tropes and tools of history to construct a kind of literary outsider art that is (almost) indistinguishable from history. That is, revisionism is a church broad enough ...

Generic historical cipher mystery (short version)…

Posted by nickpelling on Mar 21st, 2009 - 5 comments.
"Get up, fool!", barked Guillaume Imbert, the French Grand Inquisitor. Yet the Grand Master Jacques de Molay continued to lay on the prison floor, passively resisting to the end. "OK... that was your last chance, Templar scum. Guards - crucify him, and wrap him in a shroud which his bodily fluids will seep into, leaving a ghostly imprint which will ...

Edith Sherwood’s anagram cipher…

Posted by nickpelling on Feb 17th, 2009 - 5 comments.
A new day brings a new Google Adwords campaign from Edith Sherwood (Edith, please just email me instead, it'll get the word out far quicker), though this time not promoting another angle on her Leonardo-made-the-Voynich-Manuscript hypothesis... but rather a transposition cipher Voynichese hypothesis. Specifically, she proposes that the Voynich Manuscript may ...

Other Euro Voynich books…

Posted by nickpelling on Jan 5th, 2009 - 1 comment.
Having just blogged on up-to-the-minute German Voynichiana, what of the rest of Europe? Here's a quick sampling to whet your appetite, should you ever wish to feast on such morcels... (2008) El castillo de las estrellas Enrique Joven [mentioned here] Having worked with Enrique recently (he generously translated my History Today telescope article so that it could appear in Astronomia magazine), I'm ...

Voynich Manuscript and David Hockney…

Posted by nickpelling on Oct 21st, 2008.
Reading through the revised (2006) edition of David Hockney's "Secret Knowledge: Rediscovering the lost techniques of the Old Masters", I was a little surprised to come across (p. 235) a brief mention of the Voynich Manuscript. In his section on "Secrecy" textual sources, Hockney quotes the introductory passage from William Romaine Newbold's (1928) "The Cipher of Roger Bacon" where Newbold asserts that during the years ...

John Matthews Manly’s papers…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 27th, 2008.
One of the major figures in the early 20th century history of the Voynich Manuscript was John Matthews Manly, the man who definitively debunked Newbold's strange micrographic cipher claims. During the First World War, Manly worked in the US Military Intelligence Division, and left in 1919 having attained the rank of Major. After that, he put most of his time ...