#s the best code brea"ers, using powerful computers, were unable to decipher the code, it did not appear li"ely that I could brea" the code. *ater in my studies I had to modify some of the 1V# correlations. I initially used Rene 2andbergen3s basic 1V# characters &i) as a starting point to correlate the VM letters with the 1nglish alphabet, while ta"ing into account that the Italian alphabet only uses / letters. medieval Italian, so I have assumed the VM language to be Italian. ecipher the code I f *eonardo da Vinci was the author of the VM, he would have used the language of ante, i.e. 0orrelate the Voynich alphabet with the modern 1nglish alphabet !. etermine the language used in writing the manuscript /. +sing this premise I proceeded to consider what would be reuired to decode this manuscript and reached the following conclusions. #s I showed in a previous paper on my $ebsite, The Voynich Manuscript, was the author left handed%, Roger Bacon could not have written this manuscript and I suggested that a young &around ' to ( years old) *eonardo da Vinci was a li"ely author. This is probably due to the initial error made by Voynich and his followers attributing the authorship of the manuscript to Roger Bacon, the !th century British scientist, mon" and scholar. A ll attempts over the past century to decode this mysterious manuscript have met with failure. This code, that has been confusing scholars for nearly a century, is therefore not as complicated as it first appears. The Voynich Manuscript Decoded 1/10 The Voynich Manuscript Decoded? I give examples to show that the code used in the Voynich Manuscript is probably a series of Italian word anagrams written in a fancy embellished script.
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