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- Date: Thu, 2 Jan 92 14:19:38 EST
- From: jbaez@math.mit.edu
-
- Voynich Bibliography
- compiled 1/2/92 by
- John Baez
-
- This is a slightly annotated bibliography on the Voynich manuscript,
- compiled from a variety of sources, especially members of the Voynich
- mailing list, who should not feel slighted by the fact that I won't
- usually cite them by name, even when I steal their text word-for-word.
-
- ----------------
- First, and most important, is the manuscript itself. This is in the Beinecke
- Rare Book Library at Yale University. The work of previous Voynich
- scholars accompanies the manuscript. They apparently will sell copies,
- although I have not succeeded in obtaining one yet. Their catalog
- number for the original is MS 408, ``The Voynich `Roger Bacon' Cipher
- MS''. The person in charge is
-
- Robert Babcock
- 1603a Yale Station
- New Haven, CT 06520
-
- but please don't flood him with requests: I will post when I am able to
- reach him, after January 2, 1992.
-
- The British Museum also has a photocopy of the MS donated to them by
- John Manly circa 1931. They apparently lost it until
- 12 March 1947, when it was entered in the catalogue (without
- cross-references under Voynich, Manly, Roger Bacon or any other useful
- keywords...)
-
- It appears as ``MS Facs 461: Positive rotographs of a Cipher MS (folios 1-56)
- acquired in 1912 by Wilfred M. Voynich in Southern Europe.'
- Correspondance between Newbold, Manly and various British Museum experts
- appears under ``MS Facs 439: Leaves of the Voynich MS, alleged to be in
- Roger Bacon's cypher, with correspondence and other pertinent material''
- See John Manly's 1931 article in Speculum (see below) and Newbold's book
- for what the correspondance was about. There are also a number of press
- cuttings.
-
- Both of these in are in the manuscript collection, for which special
- permission is needed in addition to a normal British Library reader's pass.
-
- -------------
- The most useful book on the Voynich manuscript is that by D'Imperio,
- first published by the NSA, and reprinted by Aegean Park Press;
- apparently it is out of print, but velo-bound xerox copies may be
- purchased (see below). This is essential reading for anyone seriously
- interested in the Voynich, and those who fail to read are doomed to
- repeat her work. IN PARTICULAR, HER BIBLIOGRAPHY IS AN ESSENTIAL
- COMPLEMENT TO THIS ONE. The NSA version is as follows:
-
- AUTHOR D'Imperio, M. E.
- TITLE The Voynich manuscript : an elegant enigma / M. E. D'Imperio.
- CITATION Fort George E. Mead, Md. : National Security Agency/Central Security
- Service, 1978. ix, 140 p. : ill. ; 27 cm.
- NOTES Includes index. Bibliography: p. 124-131.
-
- The Aegean Park Press version has the same title. They may
- be reached at Aegean Park Press, P. O. Box 2837, Laguna Hills CA
- 92654-0837, or by calling 1-800-736-3587. Wayner Barker, who works
- there, says that certified Voynich Mailing List members can get 20% off the
- list price, "which he forgot but declared to be $24.80." Add $2
- shipping and handling. This discount applies to anything in their
- inventory, in particular: "Solution of the Voynich Manuscript: A
- Liturgical Manual for the Endura Rite of the Cathari Heresy, the Cult of
- Isis," by Leo Levitov. But see Jacques Guy's negative review of this
- purported solution in the file "levitov." Apparently this book is also
- reviewed in Cryptologia XII, 1 (January 1988).
-
- Another basic source is
-
- AUTHOR Brumbaugh, Robert Sherrick, 1918-
- TITLE The most mysterious manuscript : the Voynich "Roger Bacon" cipher
- manuscript / edited by Robert S. Brumbaugh.
- CITATION Carbondale : Southern Illinois University Press, c1978. xii, 175 p.
- : ill. ; 22 cm.
-
- This is a collection of articles, including the author's own (not very
- creditable) claimed "solution" of the problem. It has about a dozen
- plates of the manuscript. To find a given page of the Voynich, by the
- way, your best bet at present is to consult the file "foliation."
-
- What may be another basic source is
-
- AUTHOR John H. Brigadier Tiltman
- TITLE The Voynich Manuscript: "The Most Mysterious Manuscript in
- the World"
-
- apparently available in the Dumbarton Oaks Garden at Harvard, under HORT
- 638.H4T5. I will track this down.
-
- A historically important book, in that it brought the Voynich manuscript
- into the limelight, is
-
- AUTHOR Newbold, William Romaine
- TITLE The Cipher of Roger Bacon
- CITATION Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press: edited with
- foreword and notes by Prof. Roland Grubb. 1928.
-
- Beware that most of his claims have been discredited. Other books
- referring to the Voynich are:
-
- TITLE Thirty-five manuscripts : including the St. Blasien psalter, the
- Llangattock hours, the Gotha missal, the Roger Bacon (Voynich)
- cipher ms.
- Catalogue ; 100
- 35 manuscripts.
- CITATION New York, N.Y. : H.P. Kraus, [1962] 86 p., lxvii p. of plates, [1]
- leaf of plates : ill. (some col.), facsims. ; 36 cm.
- NOTES "30 years, 1932-1962" ([28] p.) in pocket. Includes indexes.
- SUBJECT Manuscripts Catalogs.
- Illumination of books and manuscripts Catalogs.
-
- AUTHOR Bennett, William Ralph
- TITLE Scientific and Engineering Problem Solving with the Computer
- PUBLISHER Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ
- YEAR 1976
-
- AUTHOR Kahn, David
- TITLE The Codebreakers
- PUBLISHER Macmillan
- YEAR 1967
-
- AUTHOR Poundstone, W.
- TITLE Labyrinths of Reason
- PUBLISHER Doubleday, New York
- YEAR 1988
-
- --------------
- Journal articles include:
-
- Brumbaugh, Robert S., The Voynich 'Roger Bacon' Cipher Manuscript: Deciphered
- Maps of Stars, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol.
- 39, pp. 139-150, 1976.
-
- Friedman, Elizabeth Smith, ``The Most Mysterious Manuscript'' Still
- Mysterious, Washington Post, August 5, Section E, pp. 1,5, 1962.
-
- Manly, John Matthews, Roger Bacon and the Voynich MS, Speculum VI, pp.
- 345-391, 1931.
-
- O'Neill, Hugh, Botanical Remarks on the Voynich MS, Speculum XIX, p.126, 1944.
-
- Zimanski, C., William Friedman and the Voynich Manuscript, Philological
- Quarterly, 1970.
-
- Guy, J. B. M., Statistical Properties of Two Folios of the Voynich
- Manuscript, Cryptologia, XV, number 4, pp. 207-218, July, 1991.
-
- Guy, J. B. M., Letter to the Editor Re Voynich Manuscript, Cryptologia,
- XV, number 3, pp. 161-166, 1991.
-
- Jacques Guy summarized his analysis in Cryptologia as follows:
-
- "I transcribed the two folios in Bennett's book and submitted them to
- letter-frequency counts, distinguishing word-initial, word-medial,
- word-final, isolated, line-initial, and line-final positions. I also
- submitted that transcription to Sukhotin's algorithm which, given a text
- written in an alphabetical system, identifies which symbols are vowels and
- which are consonants. The letter transcribed CT in Bennett's system came
- out as a consonant, the one transcribed CC as vowel. Now it so happens
- that CT is exactly the shape of the letter "t" in the Beneventan script
- (used in medieval Spain and Northern Italy), and CC is exactly the shape
- of "a" in that same script. I concluded that the author had a knowledge
- of that script, and that the values of CT and CC probably were "t" and
- "a". There's a lot more, but more shaky."
-
- -------------
- There is much interest in John Dee's possible role in the Voynich
- mystery. This role, for which there is no solid evidence, was first
- hypothesized by Voynich. Relevant works are:
-
- British Museum (now Library):
- 1) Harleian MS. 1879, arts. 1, 5, and 6. `Catalogus codd. MSS. numero plus
- minus 230, iam olim ut videtur, in Biblioteca Joannis Dee M. D.
- conservatorum'; catalogue of Dee's printed books; catalogue of Dee's
- manuscripts. The last two items are dated 6 September 1583 and are in Dee's
- handwriting.
- 2) Peter French's book (see below) lists the BM's Sloane MS 3189, the
- ``Liber mysteriorum sextus et sanctus'' as being in Kelley's hand.
-
- More widely available:
-
- 1) The Private Diary of Dr. John Dee and The Catalogue of his Library of
- Manuscripts, from the Original Manuscripts in the Ashmolean Museum at
- Oxford, and Trinity College Library, Cambridge, edited by James Orchard
- Halliewell, Esq. F.R.S., Hon. M.R.I.A., &c. &c. &c, Printed for the
- Camden Society by John Bowyer Nichols and Son, Parliament Street, London, 1842.
-
- 2) Christopher Whitby, John Dee's Actions With Spirits 25 December 1581 to
- 23 May 1583, Garland Publishing Co., NY & London 1988, ISBN
- 0-8240-6399-6. One reader says: "It's got a lot of detail on Enochian,
- and includes Kelly's discovery of the cipher manuscript -- they
- occasionally called it the Book of St. Dunstan, or something to that
- effect..."
-
- 3) R. J. Roberts and Andrew G. Watson, John Dee's Library Catalogue, The
- Bibliographical Society.
-
- 4) Peter French, John Dee, the World of an Elizabethan Magus
- Routledge, 1972?, reprinted by Dorset Press, 1989, as ISBN
- 0-88029-445-0.
-
- 5) Nicholas H. Clulee, John Dee's Natural Philosophy: Between Science and
- Religion, Routledge, London, 1988; ISBN 0-415-00625-2 (hardbound),
- 0-03122-2 (paperbound), xiv+347, index, bibliography.
-
- 6) Meric Casaubon, True and Faithful Relation, Askin Publishers, 1974.
- (A modern reprint of a account of Dee's doings published by Casaubon in
- London in 1659, with the title "A True and Faithful Relation of what passed for
- many years between Dr. John Dee... and some Spirits".)
-
- 7) Donald Clarence Laycock, The Complete Enochian Dictionary - A Dictionary
- of the Angelic Language as revealed to Dr John Dee and Edward Kelley,
- Askin Publishers, London, 1978. Jacques Guy recently posted a review
- of this book.
-
- 8) Frances Yates, Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition, University
- of Chicago Press, 1964.
-
- --------------
- Johannes Trithemius's "Steganographia" (steganography = secret writing)
- was an early and influential book about codes, etc.. A modern edition
- exists, trans. by Fiona Tait ansd Christopher Upton, Edinburgh: Magnum
- Opus Hermetic Sourceworks, 1982.
-
- -------------
- A modern manuscript written in an "indecipherable code," probably an
- elaborate practical joke, might be worth comparing to the Voynich. On
- the back of the title page is the following information:
-
- "Serafini, Luigi.
- Codex Seraphinianus.
-
- 1. Imaginary Languages. 2. Imaginary societies.
- 3. Encyclopedias and Dictionaries-- Miscellanea.
-
- I. Title.
- PN6381.S4 1983 818'.5407 83.-7076
- ISBN 0-89659-428-9
-
- First American Edition, 1983.
- Copyright (c) 1981 by Franco Maria Ricci. All rights reserved
- by Abbeville Press. No part of this book may be reproduced...
- without permission in writing from the publisher. Inquiries should
- be addressed to Abbeville Press, Inc., 505 Park Avenue, New York
- 10022. Printed and bound in Italy."
-
- According to one reader:
-
- "The book is remarkable and bizarre. It *looks* like an encyclopedia
- for an imaginary world. Page after page of beautiful pictures
- of imaginary flora and fauna, with annotations and captions in
- a completely strange script. Machines, architecture, umm, 'situations',
- arcane diagrams, implements, an archeologist pointing at a Rosetta stone
- (with phony hieroglyphics), an article on penmanship (with unorthodox
- pens), and much more, finally ending with a brief index.
-
- The script in this work looks vaguely similar to the Voynich orthography
- shown in Poundstone's book (I just compared them); the alphabets
- look quite similar, but the Codex script is more cursive and less
- bookish than Voynich. It runs to about 200 pages, and probably
- ought to provide someone two things:
- - a possible explanation of what the Voynich manuscript is
- (a highly imaginative work of art)
- - a textual work which looks like it was inspired by it and might
- provide an interesting comparison for statistical study."
-
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