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Image 181 is interesting vs VMS f33v.
[
attachment=14352]
The bottom left corner of the ms. B.V.24 is similar to the roots of the VMS f33v.
It is labelled as
hba stela (star herb).
I had never seen this manuscript and I agree it is very voynich-esque.
I think that the plant roots and the colour annotations are the most interesting connection, especially little things like this [
attachment=14373] (perhaps Marco could tell us what this means?).
I personally think that the VMS had more colour annotations and general writing within the roots and leaves (like this manuscript) before much of it was painted over.
There are also some large red capitular which appear in combination with the smaller more common pilcrows, like that of VMS f1r.
[
attachment=14374]
Do we have a more concrete date than 15th century for this MS? Do we know which tradition this manuscript is taking its plants from?
(26-02-2026, 09:34 AM)Skoove Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(perhaps Marco could tell us what this means?).
It's "v'de ciaro" = verde ciaro, "light green" in Venetian dialect ("verde chiaro" in Italian)
EDIT: it's scan image #34
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Login to view. Good find, there are many more similarities in the book! This could be exciting!
Quite similar to Voynich. Could really compete in "bad quality manuscripts" category
And it has even a spell/charm on the last page, just like Voynich:
[
attachment=14384]
nazaron + vinu puzu
nitzu(m) + bolus armenicus
What ya saying dude?
I don't speak Latin but "bolus" seems to mean "strike of luck" which would fit
bolus
1 throw of dice
2 hard piece of luck
3 choice bit
4 (fish net) catch, haul, profit
However "bolus armenicus" is a kind of clay used in medicine: You are not allowed to view links.
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Gemini say it could mean in garbled language:
By the power of the Nazarene (+), take pure wine, mix with saltpeter and Armenian clay