VViews > 17-04-2016, 09:21 AM
Koen G > 17-04-2016, 09:43 AM
VViews > 17-04-2016, 10:27 AM
Koen G > 17-04-2016, 10:36 AM
(17-04-2016, 10:27 AM)VViews Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Koen Gh,
you have started another thread about your snake and lighthouse comparison, so I didn't realize that you really also wanted it addressed in here. So now there are two threads discussing your blog post...?
Anton > 17-04-2016, 01:42 PM
Quote:I see the script as a late addition, which may have been devised by the people copying - or in that case, transcribing - older sources into MS Beinecke 408.
MarcoP > 17-04-2016, 03:45 PM
(17-04-2016, 09:01 AM)Koen Gh. Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I agree that non-European is a problematical term. Let me phrase it more unambiguously.
This is a statement I would agree with, while many people won't: "The manuscript's contents is not the product of Latin-European culture, apart from a thin layer of medieval veneer in some places, like in the nymph sections. Instead, it is the result of a series of copies from assembled ancient sources, added in various places and times, only reaching mainland Europe close to the manuscripts' being manufactured.".
Am I wrong in assuming that such statements are met with a large amount of skepticism? Am I really assuming too much?
Want to see this in action? I'll just reproduce two images from my last post here, in which I tried to summarize some possibly Alexandrian imagery on one and the same page: a vessel top adorned with the shape of the Lighthouse (Pharos), and a cobra wearing a symbol of the pharaoh (which was still in use in Greco-Roman Egypt).
The reactions will be one of the following:
- *awkward ignoring*
- "You are crazy as a person!"
- "Yes, but it's a German snake!"
- "The artist drew this cobra, symbol of Egypt, wearing another symbol of Egypt on its head, by accident!"
Let's see which one it is this time
These are found on the same sheet:
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Anyway. Instead of discussing semantics, I would like to know what concrete evidence there is to see the entire manuscript as mainly a Latin-European creation, "the work of one 'brain'" to quote your site, and to dismiss hypotheses that earlier strata still lay at the basis of the manuscript's imagery, indeed still representing the bulk of its contents.
Anton > 17-04-2016, 04:13 PM
Koen G > 17-04-2016, 04:16 PM
MarcoP > 17-04-2016, 04:37 PM
(17-04-2016, 04:16 PM)Koen Gh. Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Marco, I didn't know the parallel with the Pharos was proposed before. Do you have links to all these hobbyists?
Quote:I used the picture of the reconstruction because it provided a clean, schematic view. I did, of course, confirm that the general structure of the proposed reconstruction was consistent with:
- That on relevant contemporary sources like these 2nd c. CE Alexandrian coins:
Especially the coin on the right clearly shows the same three-tier structure as the Voynich Pharos.
Quote:Of course I also saw the Arab source you quote. That is also relevant, in that it shows how the Pharos was depicted by those less familiar with it. In other words, if I want to argue the VM Pharos was first drawn by someone in Greco-Roman Alexandria, I have modern experts as well as first hand contemporary sources on my side. While you were doing my work for me, you failed to include the most relevant sources: those made by people who saw the Pharos every day.
VViews > 17-04-2016, 04:45 PM