‘John Manly’ category posts - « Cipher Mysteries »



Edith Rickert, revisited…

Posted by nickpelling on Jul 24th, 2010.
The century since Wilfrid Voynich unearthed his now-eponymous manuscript has seen many groups of codebreakers take a tilt at its cryptographic windmills. The most famous of these was William Friedman's "First Study Group" of WWII cryptologists: but I've recently become interested in finding out to what degree WWI codebreakers tried to get in on the act. Those were the halcyon days ...

Square #1 & wife #8…

Posted by nickpelling on Feb 23rd, 2010 - 17 comments.
I remember when I first saw the "Roger Bacon Manuscript": Wilfrid Voynich brought it with him to Philadelphia for his lecture back in 1921 - my old friend Bill Newbold was there, taking in every word, nodding like the crazy-but-brilliant spiritualist and Antioch-obsessed nutter he was. So it just had to be Bacon behind it all, right? I sat at the ...

The latest date for the Voynich Manuscript…

Posted by nickpelling on Oct 8th, 2009 - 3 comments.
In 1931, John Matthews Manly (who was very sharp, both historically and cryptologically) pointed out that the Voynich quire numbers were written in a 15th century hand - you can tell this from the characteristic '4's, '5's, and '7's. To be precise, even though a fair few of the VMs quire numbers appear to have been added later (most obviously the ...

Edith Rickert’s & Margaret Rickert’s papers…

Posted by nickpelling on Apr 24th, 2009.
As a brief follow-up to yesterday's post on Edith Rickert, I wondered whether her papers might be in the University of Chicago archives - and indeed here they are. For any Voynich researcher who just happens to be passing by, you might consider looking through Box 1 Folder 8 (for correspondence) and Box 10 Folder 13 (for photographs of her family ...

Edith Rickert and the Voynich Manuscript…

Posted by nickpelling on Apr 23rd, 2009 - 2 comments.
An off-blog email exchange about the Grolier Club (where Wilfrid Voynich's estate bequeathed eight boxes of papers relating to his book business in America) nudged my memory about a minor player on the 20th century Voynich stage... When Voynich researcher Richard SantaColoma visited the Grolier Club back in May 2008, he trawled through these boxes (Box 6 in particular) for anything unexpected: ...

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 ...

More Dan Burisch Voynichification…

Posted by nickpelling on Jun 27th, 2008.
It used to be the case that Google could find hardly anything connecting Dan Burisch and the Voynich Manuscript apart from my postings here: but now there are over 50 hits. Some of these, such as this one, are from people on the inside of the labyrinth/RPG: these tend to throw yet more sand in the face of anyone ...

Voynich and PhD people…

Posted by nickpelling on Jun 14th, 2008 - 3 comments.
I recently stumbled upon an active Voynich researcher I'd never heard of: Angela Catalina Ghionea (note that, even though Internet Explorer throws up lots of warnings for her website, it's basically OK), who is a teaching assistant and 3rd year PhD student in the History Department at Purdue University. She's "currently focused on the most mysterious manuscript in the world, ...

Thorndike on the Voynich Manuscript!

Posted by nickpelling on Jun 5th, 2008.
I've often wondered what Lynn Thorndike thought of the Voynich Manuscript: after all, he (his first name came from the town of Lynn, Massachusetts) lived from 1882 to 1965, and continued to publish long after his retirement in 1950, and so was active before, during and after the 1920s when Wilfrid Voynich's cipher manuscript mania/hype was at its ...

Introduction to the Voynich Manuscript…

Posted by nickpelling on Feb 10th, 2008.
Every few days, I get asked to recommend a good introduction to the Voynich Manuscript (the 'VMs' for short). But each time this happens, my heart sinks a little: given the size and scope of historical research you'd need to have to properly grasp the subject, it's a bit like being asked to recommend a good 5-page encyclopaedia. Or rather, ...