‘Georg Baresch’ category posts - « Cipher Mysteries »



Voynich chicken scratches…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 20th, 2010 - 13 comments.
As a Voynich Manuscript marginalia cognoscente, I'm always alert for new angles on the various incidental marks apparently added by its later owners. So, when Tim Tattrie left a comment about the "chicken scratch" marginalia on my recent Voynich-frontiers-circa-2010 post, I thought it was probably time to revisit them here. Tim's query was whether anyone had pursued the initials scribbled ...

A Beautiful Infinity…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 18th, 2010 - 4 comments.
There are colours in my eyes, history flickering and sputtering as a beautiful infinity reaches out to hold my bloodsoaked hand... * * * * * * The Brazilian girl's plan is stone-cold in its vision, fractal in its detail, awesome in its thinking. Yes, the organizers have put the necessary overnight protection squad in place: but the two guards merely ...

Thoughts on Johann Adam Schall von Bell…

Posted by nickpelling on Apr 24th, 2010 - 6 comments.
Fifteen hours in the air coming back from Taiwan (even if it was ultimately to the wrong airport) does lead you to click through all (and I really do mean all) the listings on China Airlines' seatback audio/video on demand gizmo. And so it was that I listened to Eminem's 2009 album Relapse (Bagpipes in Baghdad, etc), and watched not only ...

Roger Bacon & the Voynich Manuscript, revisited…

Posted by nickpelling on Dec 28th, 2009 - 24 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 ...

Jesuit libraries and archives…

Posted by nickpelling on Oct 19th, 2008 - 2 comments.
Following on from Philip Neal's translations, I wondered to myself: what might be lurking in Jesuit archives (specifically to do with Jacobus de Tepenecz / Sinapius)? And so I thought I'd have a quick snoop... For Jesuitica in general, sjweb.info has a useful list of Jesuit archives, of which the big three are (1) Georgetown University's numerous ...

New translations…

Posted by nickpelling on Oct 17th, 2008 - 4 comments.
Back in May this year, I suggested to my friend Philip Neal that a really useful Voynich research thing he could do would be to translate the passages relating to Jacobus Tepenecz (Sinapius) that Jorge Stolfi once copied from Schmidl's (1754) Historiæ Societatis Jesu Provinciæ Bohemiæ (though Stolfi omitted to the section III 75 concerning Melnik) from Latin. The ...

"Voynich Manuscript": two words, two lies?

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 24th, 2008.
While writing my MBA dissertation a few years ago, I spun off a short paper called "Justified True Belief: Three Words, Three Lies?", where the abstract explained its title:- Cornelius Castoriadis once famously described the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics as “four words, four lies”: here, I examine each of the three words of “justified true belief” in turn to ...

Czech Voynich theory…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 19th, 2008.
My fellow Voynich old-timer Jan Hurych has long been interested in various Prague-linked research strands: after all, Prague was home to the first three properly-documented owners of the Voynich Manuscript (Jacobus de Tepenecz, Georg Baresch, and Johannes Marcus Marci), as well as its most illustrious claimed owner (Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II). It is certainly true that Rudolf's interests and obsessions ...

Did any Voynich pages go missing?

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 7th, 2008.
When the Voynich Manuscript misdecipherer William Romaine Newbold died, his friend & colleague Roland Grubb Kent decided to bring all his late friend's notes together into a book: this was published in 1928 by the University of Philadelphia Press under the title "The Cipher of Roger Bacon". If you'd like your own copy, Kessinger sell a modern print-on-demand reproduction of ...

Yet more on Dan Burisch…

Posted by nickpelling on Jun 7th, 2008.
As ever, the Dan Burisch story (which I blogged about here and then here) continues: in an earlier round of the RPG, Burisch apparently (according to Arizona-based "7Vials" in this post) revealed that the secret held by the Voynich Manuscript "detailed the spontaneous creation of DNA through the use of sound." OK... though I have to admit ...