Hello everyone,
I’m a newcomer to Voynich studies, but I’d like to share a hypothesis I developed after closely examining publicly available images of the manuscript. Please keep in mind I’m not a specialist — this is just an idea from an outsider's perspective — but I’d sincerely appreciate any feedback.
My hypothesis is that the manuscript may be centered around
beekeeping, with symbolic and possibly sacred aspects attached to bees.
Here’s a brief summary of my reasoning:
- The botanical pages could represent either plants grown near beehives or flowers favored by bees for nectar. In some drawings, the roots seem exaggerated — possibly indicating how “attractive” the plant is to bees (e.g., stronger roots = more nectar?).
- Many of the female figures might represent bees — particularly worker bees or queens — often depicted immersed in fluid, holding objects (perhaps pollen or tools), or emerging from pipes (perhaps hive entrances).
- The spiral or rosette diagrams might be stylized cross-sections of hives, showing their inner structure or seasonal changes.
- The astronomical sections might represent the cycle of queen production, honey storage patterns, or symbolic relationships between bees and celestial patterns — such as star positions during swarming.
- The lack of realistic depiction in many plants could reflect a bee’s visual world (colors from above vs. below, petal symmetry, etc.), not a human herbalist’s.
This hypothesis may also offer explanations for:
- Why some women are crowned or veiled (perhaps symbolizing queens),
- Why the text is written so carefully (a sacred or secret manuscript about bees?),
- Why there is only one copy (a ritual or private use?).
Of course, I can’t interpret the script, and I realize this is speculative. But I found it interesting that so many otherwise disconnected elements can align under a beekeeping framework.
Thanks so much for your time — and I’d be grateful for your thoughts, corrections, or even counterexamples!
By the way, I'm not a native English speaker, so I apologize for any awkward phrasing or mistakes.