The worlds most mysterious book Stephen Bax

Deep inside Yale University’s Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library

lies the only copy of a 240-page tome.

Recently carbon dated to around 1420,

its vellum pages features
looping handwriting

and hand-drawn images seemingly
stolen from a dream.

Real and imaginary plants,

floating castles,

bathing women,

astrology diagrams,

zodiac rings,

and suns and moons with faces
accompany the text.

This 24x16 centimeter book
is called the Voynich manuscript,

and its one of history’s biggest
unsolved mysteries.

The reason why?

No one can figure out what it says.

The name comes from Wilfrid Voynich,

a Polish bookseller who came across
the document at a Jesuit college

in Italy in 1912.

He was puzzled.

Who wrote it?

Where was it made?

What do these bizarre words
and vibrant drawings represent?

What secrets do its pages contain?

He purchased the manuscript from
the cash-strapped priest at the college,

and eventually brought it to the U.S.,

where experts have continued to puzzle
over it for more than a century.

Cryptologists say the writing has all
the characteristics of a real language,

just one that no one’s ever seen before.

What makes it seem real is that
in actual languages,

letters and groups of letters appear
with consistent frequencies,

and the language in the Voynich manuscript

has patterns you wouldn’t find
from a random letter generator.

Other than that, we know little more
than what we can see.

The letters are varied
in style and height.

Some are borrowed from other scripts,
but many are unique.

The taller letters have been named
gallows characters.

The manuscript is
highly decorated throughout

with scroll-like embellishments.

It appears to be written by two
or more hands,

with the painting done
by yet another party.

Over the years, three main theories
about the manuscript’s text have emerged.

The first is that it’s written in cypher,

a secret code deliberately designed
to hide secret meaning.

The second is that the document is a hoax

written in gibberish to make money
off a gullible buyer.

Some speculate the author
was a medieval con man.

Others, that it was Voynich himself.

The third theory is that the manuscript
is written in an actual language,

but in an unknown script.

Perhaps medieval scholars were attempting
to create an alphabet

for a language that was spoken
but not yet written.

In that case, the Voynich manuscript
might be like the rongorongo script

invented on Easter Island,

now unreadable after the culture
that made it collapsed.

Though no one can read
the Voynich manuscript,

that hasn’t stopped people from guessing
what it might say.

Those who believe the manuscript
was an attempt to create

a new form of written language

speculate that it might be an encyclopedia

containing the knowledge
of the culture that produced it.

Others believe it was written by
the 13th century philosopher Roger Bacon,

who attempted to understand
the universal laws of grammar,

or in the 16th century by the
Elizabethan mystic John Dee,

who practiced alchemy and divination.

More fringe theories that the book was
written by a coven of Italian witches,

or even by Martians.

After 100 years of frustration,

scientists have recently shed a little
light on the mystery.

The first breakthrough
was the carbon dating.

Also, contemporary historians have
traced the provenance of the manuscript

back through Rome and Prague
to as early as 1612,

when it was perhaps passed
from Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II

to his physician, Jacobus Sinapius.

In addition to these
historical breakthroughs,

linguistic researchers recently proposed
the provisional identification

of a few of the manuscript’s words.

Could the letters beside these seven
stars spell Tauran,

a name for Taurus,

a constellation that includes the seven
stars called the Pleiades?

Could this word be Centaurun
for the Centaurea plant in the picture?

Perhaps, but progress is slow.

If we can crack its code,
what might we find?

The dream journal of
a 15th-century illustrator?

A bunch of nonsense?

Or the lost knowledge
of a forgotten culture?

What do you think it is?

在耶鲁大学拜内克
珍本和手稿图书馆的深处

,有一本 240 页的巨著的唯一副本。

最近的碳可以追溯到 1420 年左右,

它的牛皮纸页面上有
循环的笔迹

和手绘图像,似乎是
从梦中偷来的。

真实与虚构的植物、

漂浮的城堡、

沐浴的女人、

占星图、

十二生肖戒指、

有面孔的太阳和月亮都
伴随着文字。

这本 24x16 厘米的书
被称为伏尼契手稿

,它是历史上最大的
未解之谜之一。

之所以?

没有人能弄清楚它在说什么。

这个名字来自波兰书商威尔弗里德·伏尼契 (Wilfrid Voynich),他于 1912 年在意大利

的一所耶稣会学院偶然发现了这份文件

他感到很困惑。

谁写的?

它是在哪里制作的?

这些奇异的文字
和充满活力的图画代表着什么?

它的页面包含哪些秘密?

他从
大学里手头拮据的牧师那里购买了手稿,

并最终将其带到了美国,

一个多世纪以来,专家们一直在为它困惑。

密码学家说,这种文字
具有真实语言的所有特征,

只是一种前所未有的语言。

使它看起来真实的是,
在实际语言中,

字母和字母组
以一致的频率出现,

而伏尼契手稿中的语言

具有您无法
从随机字母生成器中找到的模式。

除此之外,我们所知道的
只是我们所看到的。

字母
的样式和高度各不相同。

有些是从其他脚本中借来的,
但许多是独一无二的。

较高的字母被命名为
绞刑架字符。

手稿
通篇装饰精美,饰

有卷轴状装饰。

它似乎是由两个
或更多的人写的,

而这幅画是
由另一方完成的。

多年来,
出现了关于手稿文本的三种主要理论。

首先是它是用密码编写的,这是

一种故意设计
用来隐藏秘密含义的密码。

第二个是该文件是用胡言乱语编写的骗局,目的是

从易受骗的买家那里赚钱。

有人推测作者
是一个中世纪的骗子。

其他人则认为是伏尼契本人。

第三个理论是手稿
是用一种实际的语言写成的,

但用的是一种未知的文字。

也许中世纪的学者们正试图

为一种说出来但还没有写出来的语言创建一个字母表

在那种情况下,伏尼契手稿
可能就像在复活节岛上发明的 rongorongo 脚本一样,在

导致它崩溃的文化之后现在无法阅读。

虽然没有人能读懂
伏尼契手稿

,但这并没有阻止人们
猜测它可能会说什么。

那些认为这份手稿
是试图创造

一种新的书面语言形式的人

推测它可能是一本

包含产生它的文化知识的百科全书。

其他人认为它是
13 世纪哲学家罗杰·培根 (Roger Bacon) 写的,

他试图理解
语法的普遍规律,

或者是 16 世纪
伊丽莎白时代的神秘主义者约翰·迪 (John Dee) 写的,

他练习了炼金术和占卜。

更多的边缘理论认为这本书是
由一群意大利女巫,

甚至是火星人写的。

在经历了 100 年的挫折之后,

科学家们最近
对这个谜团有了一点了解。

第一个突破
是碳测年。

此外,当代历史学家已将
手稿的出处

追溯到罗马和
布拉格,最早可追溯到 1612 年,

当时它可能
由神圣罗马帝国皇帝鲁道夫二世

传给他的医生雅各布斯·西纳皮乌斯。

除了这些
历史突破之外,

语言学研究人员最近还提议

对手稿中的一些单词进行临时识别。

这七颗星旁边的字母是否可以
拼写 Tauran(

金牛座的名字),

这个星座包括被
称为昴宿星团的七颗星?

这个词可能
是图片中 Centaurea 植物的 Centaurun 吗?

也许吧,但进展缓慢。

如果我们能破解它的密码,
我们会发现什么?

15 世纪插画家的梦想日记?

一堆废话?

还是对
被遗忘的文化失去的知识?

你认为那是什么?