The Voynich Ninja

Full Version: A new solution, to be presented in Friuli
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Pages: 1 2 3
Thanks for posting the image - I've been scouring the internet looking for it, since it is referenced in the article. I don't find the comparison very compelling, to be honest.
(12-06-2024, 11:23 AM)Aga Tentakulus Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Yup.
When I read and see something like that, my credibility shrinks to zero.
Of course it's not a caption. It's text from the other side, because the parchment is missing.

Aga, do you know where she got that picture?  Did she find another that similar manuscript, because the picture is not identical with the VM.  Even if there was another manuscript with similar writing, that does not mean that the language is High German, because Friuli in the Middle Ages was also Slovenia speaking region.
Yes, of course. Sorry. The link of the picture and text.
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.

You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
centre / bottom
I believe the presentation was yesterday, right?
Does anyone have any news on this? It’s a wrap?
Has anyone got a verdict on the theory?
As I wrote elsewhere, I find the incunable that is referenced in the announcement, and which undoubtedly has nothing to do with the Voynich MS, by itself more interesting that this solution.

Here is a page about it, in Italian:
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
Google can be asked to translate it, I'm sure.
I'm not very convinced by Eleonora Matarrese's findings.
(12-06-2024, 10:18 AM)Pepper Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I don't know Italian so I'm reading a dodgy Google transalte of the article. Am I right that this sounds like a Nick Pelling block paradigm? Matarrese is saying the 1486 manuscript has some of the same text as the VMS?

Hi to everybody, I'm italian, here to understand and help. 
I was attracted by Voynich 'affaire' when studying -and organizing some events about - Castel del Monte. Two engeneers friends of mine, one from Bari -again... Matarrese is a typical surname from that city, and she is from Bari, even if she starts her interpretation from the quite far Carnia, in the eastern Alps- and one from Taranto, some years ago imagined a link between Castel del Monte and the manuscript.

You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.

So, recenlty I heard about Matarrese's claim and... here I am. 
Please ask if you need some translation.
Regards.
(18-06-2024, 01:34 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.As I wrote elsewhere, I find the incunable that is referenced in the announcement, and which undoubtedly has nothing to do with the Voynich MS, by itself more interesting that this solution.

Here is a page about it, in Italian:
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
Google can be asked to translate it, I'm sure.

Elena Matarrese writes there are some 'glossae' on the 'Gart', written by hand - it was common in the past, just think to Accursio's 'Magna glossa' - that in her opinion look like very much to the letters in Voynich's book.
(12-06-2024, 01:01 PM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
Google translation Wrote:Furthermore, at the entrance to the Carnico Museo there is part of a framed fresco which illustrates the town of Tolmezzo in the 15th century with the castle, walls and towers, a watercourse around it and four female figures in the foreground. The central figure – with a veil and a crown, naked and close to the watercourse with a globe in her hand – recalls both one of the figures of folio 57v and one of the female figures in the so-called “treatise on waters”.



Source: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. @ 24:50


Comparison between those two... ??
Pages: 1 2 3