Hello, for some time I have been interested in the Voynich because of its symbolic value, which made me think of various theories, for me the most plausible (I admit controversy) is the one that is a book that talks about "energy" because according to me this idea would fit with the content, I assumed this when I thought that the author had no intentions of stacking papers and putting a cliche on it, nor do I think that he talks about a specific subject like a herbarium or something like that but rather a kind of "gospel", I think that someone was trying to create something of a universal instance, a kind of role in the world, so it is in theory a religious book, I also realized that this book mixes Christian ideas with other obviously heretical ones but it has a pre-Renaissance style so the book is deeply spiritual. There are parts of the book that fit with medieval representation of Venus, eg: Scene With Venus From the Fifteenth Century Lombard Manuscript De Sphaera, if we take this and energy into account we could associate muses and lares. Lares seem to be very typical in astrological charts. And the muses appear in a photograph, despite my high speculation I grouped all these thoughts and notes in a kind of blog, clearly this content is full of nonsense and gibberish but I think they serve as a good starting point for anyone to address the line I mentioned. The blog in question is You are not allowed to view links.
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Login to view. , but the point of this comment in the forum is that I came to the conclusion that the book was written or is related to the kingdom of Castile in Spain in those years, in fact I take for granted that the Voynichese language is based on Latin, and this Voynichese language is surely closer to Spanish than any other ... when I made this appreciation and investigated along that line I came to a particular place where I in my controversy have identified with the city of Ávila Spain .. in fact I am convinced that the place described in the book is nothing more than this city, with its wall and etc. but to make this even stranger I think the author could be "Áviles", why do I say this? I came to this conclusion by other means but the tests that gave me more certainties were the following, the text has a writing similar to these images:
but the most intriguing is the following:
"Perpetual Law of Castilla":
Now draw your own conclusions. If this is correct, then what the girl is holding and what is written below could be the word "clover" (trébol):
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Saludos