100-Year-Old Hoax May Be 600-Year-Old Code

UK researchers find new patterns in mysterious manuscript
By Ruth Brown,  Newser Staff
Posted Jun 22, 2013 5:26 PM CDT
100-Year-Old Hoax May Be 600-Year-Old Code
The Voynich manuscript   (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University)

Many people believe that the Voynich manuscript—a book found in 1912 written in an unknown language with images of plants and astronomy—is a hoax. Cryptographers, mathematicians, and linguists have been trying to decipher the supposedly 15th-century text found by book dealer Wilfrid Voynich in 1912 for 100 years, with many deducing it's just a nonsense language fabricated by Voynich himself. But a new study has found the words may hold a real message after all, the BBC reports.

"It's not easy to dismiss the manuscript as simple nonsensical gibberish, as it shows a significant [linguistic] structure," says study author Marcelo Montemurro, a theoretical physicist at the University of Manchester. Montemurro used computers to analyze the text, finding the semantic patterns were similar to known languages, but in a way he says Voynich couldn't have known about in 1912 to make the language look "real." But although they have found the pattern, what the words actually say remains a mystery. "There must be a story behind it, which we may never know," he says. (More code breakers stories.)

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