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The Voynich Manuscript has been reliably dated to mere decades before the invention of the printing press, so it's likely that its peculiar blend of plagiarism and curation was a dying format.
Today, the Voynich Manuscript, as it became known, is kept in Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Scholars have pored over its content for over a century, but no one has ...
The Polish-American bookseller Wilfred M. Voynich—after whom the manuscript is now named—purchased it in 1912. Voynich moved to the U.S. in 1919, hoping to sell the manuscript for a large sum.
It passed through various hands, until Voynich purchased the manuscript from the Jesuit College near Rome, and in 1969 it was given to the Yale Library by H. P. Kraus, who purchased it from ...
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Why No One Can Decode the Voynich ManuscriptDelve into the centuries-old mystery of the Voynich Manuscript a cryptic book written in an unbreakable code with unknown ...
The Voynich Manuscript’s earliest known probable owner is Carl Widemann, a physician and alchemist based in Augsburg, Germany, who was also a collector and book dealer.
The Voynich Manuscript has long baffled scholars—and attracted cranks and conspiracy theorists. Now a prominent medievalist is taking a new approach to unlocking its secrets.
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Multispectral imaging of the Voynich Manuscript - MSNDetails of several images were published on pp. 31-32 of The Voynich Manuscript (ed. Raymond Clemens), and a few have been explored by Voynich researchers (here and here, for example), but the ...
The manuscript was named after Wilfrid Voynich, an antique bookseller who bought the text in 1912. Ever since then, there have been various attempts to decipher its meaning, with some suggestions ...
The Voynich Manuscript is decoded by an Renaissance Expert in Vienna. Discovery were made alongside about Switzerland, the Habsburgs and the Swiss Guards in the Vatican! Davos and St. Stephen’s ...
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