Morten St. George > 10-04-2018, 02:17 AM
Koen G > 10-04-2018, 03:02 AM
(10-04-2018, 02:17 AM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I feel like Galileo trying to explain to the Inquisition that he saw four moons around the planet Jupiter and that they really exist.
-JKP- > 13-04-2018, 05:25 PM
Morten St. George > 15-04-2018, 10:57 PM
(13-04-2018, 05:25 PM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.This question is specifically for Morten St George (please don't jump in and answer it for him).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSG, this text snippet is from a late 14th, early 15th-century manuscript with the same subject matter as the VMS and is placed next to a drawing. There is a large drawing on each page and labels similar to this by each one. It is the same script style as folio 116v. The original labels are added in red and these are underneath, and were probably added in the early to mid-15th century.
Without cheating and asking someone to help you, tell me what this says. It's not difficult if you are familiar with 15th-century script:
Morten St. George > 16-04-2018, 07:27 PM
(13-04-2018, 05:25 PM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.This question is specifically for Morten St George (please don't jump in and answer it for him).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MSG, this text snippet is from a late 14th, early 15th-century manuscript with the same subject matter as the VMS and is placed next to a drawing. There is a large drawing on each page and labels similar to this by each one. It is the same script style as folio 116v. The original labels are added in red and these are underneath, and were probably added in the early to mid-15th century.
Without cheating and asking someone to help you, tell me what this says. It's not difficult if you are familiar with 15th-century script:
Morten St. George > 16-04-2018, 07:40 PM
(26-03-2018, 07:59 AM)VViews Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(26-03-2018, 03:14 AM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Sadly, my most important theories never came up for discussion. These concern the VMS encryption. I theorize that
1. the red-star passages of the recipes section encrypt 161 verses of prophetic text. The underlying language is sixth-century Latin. One distinction with classical Latin would be an expanded vocabulary with more words borrowed from Greek.
Morten St George,
I have already shown to you that your count is incorrect.
There are 163 red stars, not 161, AND keep in mind that we are missing four pages (f109r&v, 110r&v) which puts the original total even higher, probably around 210 based on the average 7 per page.
nablator > 17-04-2018, 10:42 AM
(16-04-2018, 07:40 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.page 111r = 8 red stars
Morten St. George > 18-04-2018, 07:07 PM
(17-04-2018, 10:42 AM)nablator Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(16-04-2018, 07:40 PM)Morten St. George Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.page 111r = 8 red stars
Not 9 ?
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
By the way, why do you insist on 161, exactly? It's not as if there were only 39 quatrains in the Centuries of Nostradamus that could be linked somehow to some lines in Shakespeare's and Marlowe's works... some common vocabulary, yes, but what else should be expected from such a large corpus? So where did the idea of 161 prophetic verses come from, 35 years ago, somewhere else?
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
"Les corrélations sont apparemment sans fin." (The correlations are apparently endless.)
You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
39 prophecies of the Kabbalah identified in Nostradamus
Morten St. George > 19-04-2018, 01:32 AM
(07-04-2018, 10:46 PM)-JKP- Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I suggest you read the threads on this. This specific phrase is closer to German (or old Yiddish) than any other language.
so is German (it's similar to "so" in English)
nim is German (this was a common way to spell it in certain areas in the Middle Ages, now it is spelled nimm and means to take)
gaf means gave in lowland Medieval German, gas can have a number of interpretations, one being "goose"
mich is "me/to me" in German. Some have also suggested it might be short for "milch" for "milk" in German and that is reasonable as consonants were sometimes dropped from words if the word was pronounced that way.
In other words, depending on how gas/gaf is interpreted (as "f" or as "s") it might mean he gave it to me to take (in corrupted grammar typical of a foreign speaker), or so take goose milk (which might be a remedy connected with an incantation).
-JKP- > 19-04-2018, 03:15 AM