DONJCH > 11-06-2018, 12:21 PM
nablator > 11-06-2018, 02:18 PM
DONJCH > 11-06-2018, 04:24 PM
-JKP- > 11-06-2018, 08:35 PM
(11-06-2018, 12:21 PM)DONJCH Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....
While I have your ear: you say there are 3 variations of EVA-m type characters resembling -cis, -tis, and -ris.
Are these covered by Extended EVA characters 166 and 174 or are they something else again?
Quote:What do you think of these as possible precursors to EVA T?
I just cannot come to terms with our elegant tall gallows arising from a little squashed fly like tis etc!
I'd rather go with Pi actually.
-JKP- > 11-06-2018, 09:22 PM
Koen G > 11-06-2018, 10:12 PM
Antonio García Jiménez > 12-06-2018, 09:10 PM
-JKP- > 12-06-2018, 09:18 PM
(12-06-2018, 09:10 PM)Antonio García Jiménez Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I appreciate very much your work. It is true because I know what it is to read hours and hours so many medieval masnucripts looking for some clues. I want to tell my experience: At the National Library of Spain where I work, during months I was looking into dozens of manuscripts, most written in Latin, and I realized that some letters were similar to the glyphs of the Voynich. I thought that would end up finding the solution. But one day, I closed the book that I had in my hands and I told me myself: Many learned men were familiar with manuscripts and scribal conventions in the Court of Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor, in the XVII century and they didn't find anything. I thought that if they couldn't decipher a manuscript from the XV century, I won't do it in the XXI century.
And suddenly there is light. I thought: they sent the Voynich to Kircher because suspected that the text was a language like hieroghyphs, something visual rather than phonetic, and Kircher believed to have deciphered the egiptian hieroglyphs.
DONJCH > 13-06-2018, 05:45 PM
MarcoP > 13-06-2018, 06:33 PM
(09-06-2018, 10:16 PM)Koen Gh. Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.So I just decided to open a random manuscript - You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. - and was able to find the following correspondent glyphs. Mostly the ones in the "final abbreviations" category.
Would the following conclusions be correct?
What I mean with (4) is that in a "flowy" hand like the one below (early 15thC Spanish) you'll get the abbreviations and flourishes but not really the benches as they appear in the VM.
- EVA-l is rare as a non-numeral.
- EVA g, m, s, y, n are not particularly rare and generally used for abbreviating.
- Benches are not particularly rare and are generally ligatures.
- It's harder to find regular use of (2) ánd (3) in the same manuscript? (this is just from my very limited experience).
- Gallows still lack a decent parallel that coincides with (2) and (3).