by Jojo Dong

The Voynich Manuscript is one of the most puzzling mysteries in the history of cryptography. First presented to the public by Wilfrid Voynich in 1912, the manuscript is filled with bizarre symbols and delicate drawings. Carbon dating has placed the creation of the book in the fifteenth century. Since then, the manuscript has travelled a long way, and is now housed in the Yale Beinecke Library. It’s believed that the manuscript is written in a lost language to preserve a civilization, or in ciphers to record some scientific findings. Till this day, none of the speculations revolving the Voynich Manuscript has be proven.

Voices:

Host: Jojo Dong

Fellow Host: Zinnie Zhang

Voice of Elizabeth Friedman: Olivia Donofrio

Male Voice: Long Than

 

Music:

www.royaltyfreemusicforfree.com:

  • Dreamy Ambient Background Music
  • In Another Life

www.orangefreesounds.com:

  • Magic Music Loop
  • Wooden Door Opening Sound Effect
  • Page Turn Sound Effect
  • Calming Harp Music

 

References:

Researchers Claim to Crack the Voynich Manuscript Using AI, But Experts Are Skeptical, Mentalfloss, retrieved from http://mentalfloss.com/article/527744/researchers-claim-crack-voynich-manuscript-using-ai-experts-are-skeptical

AI didn’t decode the cryptic Voynich manuscript — it just added to the mystery, The Verge, retrieved from https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/1/16959454/voynich-manuscript-mystery-ai-decoded-debunked

Mysterious Voynich Manuscript Reborn in Facsimile Edition, YaleNews, retrieved from https://news.yale.edu/2016/10/31/mysterious-voynich-manuscript-reborn-facsimile-edition

The Voynich Manuscript: An Elegant Enigma, D’Imperio, 1978

The Pleasures of Incomprehensibility, The Paris Review, LaPointe, retrieved from https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2016/12/01/the-pleasures-of-incomprehensibility/

To Crack the Voynich Code, University of Arizona, retrieved from https://www.arizona.edu/news/2011/05/crack-voynich-code

Image:

Page from the Voynich Manuscript, Wikimedia Commons