26-11-2025, 12:50 AM
(25-11-2025, 08:41 AM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(25-11-2025, 08:20 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Yes, I think so. The name is usually just given as 'Viola'.
Viola odorata is the common violet. Viola tricolor is the pansy (forget-me-not).
Viola odorata (or at least the current garden variety) usually grows in compact clusters of roundish leaves,close to the ground. Viola tricolor grows taller and has elongated leaves, with one sharpish point near the ground and multiple sharpish points higher up.
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. is almost surely Viola tricolor, because of the shape of the leaves and flowers. Except that the flowers are upside-down...
The scientific name Viola was taken from the common name "violet" or "viola" for the odorata species. I don't think that common name was ever used for any other species, including tricolor. Only modern botanists know that the pansy is a Viola too.
Let's look at this a bit more.
One difference between the viola illustrations in the Tractatus de Herbis and in the Voynich MS is that the former has the name 'viola' written near them, while in the Voynich MS we don't have this (yet).
I do not know whether the text in the Tractatus provides further details about which particular type of viola is meant. It may well do that, and maybe someone can say something about that.
However, the second largest difference is in the shapes of the leaves. So I agree that the ones in Tractatus look more like those of viola odorata and the ones in the Voynich MS look more like viola tricolor.
There is a third aspect, which is related to the colours. Here, I think we have good reason to be very cautious. Without having to assume that the colours were added much later by someone who did not know what to use, it is clear that the colour palette is very unusual. Most obvious is that there is far too much blue.
It would be a fundamental logical error to say on the one hand that colours cannot be relied upon in general, but at the same time, when they happen to match, to say that this match is usable evidence.
(I hope I phrased that in an understandable way).
This problem is not limited to the colours.
The vast majority of plants in the MS cannot really be identified. Numerous cases have been called either impossible, or rather composites of parts from different plants.
At the same time, I am of the opinion that the person (or persons) who drew the plant outlines, was quite capable of doing this. There are many details that are entirely realistic. It is completely different from the quality of the human figures. I'd like to hear from others how they see this. I'm a bit lazy right now to create many clips of these drawings to make this point clearer, but I might do it later.
This is a bit of a contradiction. Someone, who was apparently capable of drawing plants, did not manage to draw many realistic plants.
One possible explanation for this is that he was working from written descriptions. He put the plants together from elements he had seen. (Again, I can refer to the description of 'Musa' - the banana plant - in the Tractatus de Herbis, which is wrong, and was created in exactly this manner).
However, there can be other explanations, for example that they were never intended to represent real plants. The whole book may have been a medieval hoax.
Regardless of this uncertainty, the same problem remains. The majority of plants cannot be positively identified, so when there is an occasional good match, how can we use this good match as evidence?
While I don't want to ignore the medieval hoax option, I find the case of drawings from written descriptions more interesting. In that case, the 'artist' could well have seen the word viola in the text, and drew the type of viola he had seen in the field.
