Naked ladies in the Voynich manuscript
Fascinating article in The Economist about the Voynich manuscript.
The Voynich manuscript, once owned by Emperor Rudolph II in 16th-century Bohemia, is filled with drawings of fantastic plants, zodiacal symbols and naked ladies. Far more intriguing than its illustrations, however, is the accompanying text: 234 pages of beautifully formed, yet completely unintelligible script.
Modern scholars have pored over the book since 1912, when Wilfrid Voynich, an American antiquarian, bought the manuscript and started circulating copies in the hope of having it translated. Some 90 years later, the book still defies deciphering. It now resides at Yale University.
The manuscript is written in “Voynichese”, which consists of strange characters, some of which look like normal Latin letters and Roman numerals. Some analysts have suggested that Voynichese is a modified form of Chinese. Others think it may be Ukrainian with the vowels taken out. But Voynichese words do not resemble those of any known language. Nor is the text a simple transliteration into fanciful symbols: the internal structure of Voynichese words, and how they fit together in sentences, is unlike patterns seen in other languages.
You're probably saying to yourself, "wow, what an intriguing historical puzzle and . . . what was that about the naked ladies again?" Voynichinfo.com collects images from the Voynich manuscript from various sources, including all available color images. Some hot medieval hoax smut on page 75r, page 78r, page 82r and pages 83v-84r.
Elsewhere, Voynichologist Jorge Stolfi addresses an arcane question: are the nymphs with the prominent bellies supposed to be pregnant? "IMHO, that conclusion is unwarranted. A 'beer tummy' apparently was part of the early 1500's ideal of female beauty (at least in Northern Europe)." He reproduces a contemporary engraving to illustrate that theory.