ReneZ > 29-10-2017, 08:44 AM
Helmut Winkler > 29-10-2017, 10:57 AM
doranchak > 29-10-2017, 11:35 AM
(29-10-2017, 05:54 AM)Diane Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Doranchak
I expect you know that Nick Pelling, a researcher and cryptologist who has studied the VMS for almost twenty years, providing much original commentary and so on, has also been interested in the zodiac ciphers.
His posts at ciphermysteries.com should give you a fairly solid ground from which to advance any new ideas you may have. Nick not only provides his own thoughts, but links to the work of earlier researchers, or those whose opinions agree with or differ from his own.
Hope the talk goes well.
doranchak > 29-10-2017, 11:46 AM
proto57 > 30-10-2017, 06:33 PM
(29-10-2017, 08:44 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view."Rich makes the inexplicable (because completely opposite to the truth) statement that Yale/Beinecke are reluctant to do forensic investigations of the MS."
ReneZ > 30-10-2017, 07:10 PM
davidjackson > 30-10-2017, 07:56 PM
asmask > 31-10-2017, 01:40 AM
(29-10-2017, 08:44 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Rich makes the inexplicable (because completely opposite to the truth) statement that Yale/Beinecke are reluctant to do forensic investigations of the MS.
(30-10-2017, 07:10 PM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I read that line in the presentation that was linked here a few messages earlier.
The page with the "red flags" point 8:
"8. There is a reluctance to produce, and/or test, original"
ReneZ > 31-10-2017, 07:14 AM
asmask > 31-10-2017, 04:33 PM
(31-10-2017, 07:14 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.More importantly, he did show this MS around quite a lot.
Singer reports seeing the MS in the hands of the book dealer Baer of Frankfurt, which may have been in 1912 or even 1911. (Singer only traveled to Frankfurt in the years 1911-1914, and one of the Baer brothers started a shop in London in 1911).
Millicent Sowerby, who was working in Voynich's shop in London from end 1912 to 1914 (from memory) reports how visitors would come to this shop to admire his recent acquisitions, especially the famous Roger Bacon cipher.
After Voynich moved to the US in 1914, he started a road tour, showing the most important items of his collection. The Roger Bacon cipher MS was one of the stars in these events. The first were in Princeton University and in New York city. The best known (and best documented) event was at the Art institute in Chicago (Oct. 1915), followed by the University of Michigan (early Nov.), the University of Illinois (mid Nov.), the Albright Art Gallery in Buffalo (mid Dec.) and other museums.
He repeated this later (1917 I believe).