Featuring
rudimentary depictions of plants illustrated in aged colors and written
in a language system that has yet to be deciphered, The Voynich
Manuscript is the world’s most mysterious book.
It
is very likely that Emperor Rudolph acquired the manuscript from the
English astrologer John Dee (1527-1608). Dee apparently owned the
manuscript along with a number of other Roger Bacon manuscripts”. The
book remained in Voynich’s possession from 1912 to 1969, before being
added to the collection at Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and
Manuscript Library Apart from the undecipherable text, Voynich’s
manuscript contains colorful botanical illustrations which are very
similar to what we know from modern science, but which do not entirely
resemble any distinguishable plant. There are also other cosmological
and astrological depictions, as well as some drawings of unclad women
bathing together in small receptacles.
This
has led some scientists to believe that the book is sectioned into
several chapters including: botanical, astrological, medical,
biological, cosmological and pharmaceutical. Despite several attempts
to decipher the manuscript, the meaning of the text itself or the the
lovely unclad ladies remain a mystery to this day.
Throughout
the years, many people considered the book a hoax, the work Voynich
himself, since he had the necessary knowledge to reproduce such a relic
after collecting antique books all his life, but Dr Marcelo Montemurro
from the University of Manchester and Dr Damian Zanette from the Centro
Atómico Bariloche e Instituto Balseiro, , Argentinawho studied the
manuscript extensively, contradict the disbelievers.
They
claim that “the semantic networks we obtained clearly show that related
words tend to share structure similarities, which also happens to a
certain degree in real languages,” and that “it’s unlikely that these
features were simply ‘incorporated’ into the text to make a hoax more
realistic, as most of the required academic knowledge of these
structures did not exist at the time the Voynich manuscript was
created.” The book consists of around 170,000 glyphs, usually separated
from each other by narrow gaps. The two researchers were able to
distinguish an alphabet of 20-30 glyphs, with very few exceptions - a
few rarer characters that occur only once or twice each.
Thanks
to a wonderful invention called the internet, there are now thousands
of people around the world looking over photographed pages of the
Voynich manuscript trying to make sense of it and discussing different
theories. Crowd-sourcing is a very good idea, but considering some of
the brightest minds in history have tried and failed to unravel its
mystery there is very little hope anyone ever will. “There must be a
story behind it, which we may never know,” Dr Montemurro himself admits.
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