The Ancient Book No One Alive Can Read: The Voynich Manuscript

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июн 2024
  • The Ancient Book No One Alive Can Read: The Voynich Manuscript
    Go here bit.ly/3TOQ4Kx to grab your FREE eBook on using ancient knowledge to manifest your greatest desires.
    In this video, we are going to dive into the world's most mysterious ancient book - The Voynich Manuscript.
    Imagine stumbling upon an ancient tome, its pages filled with enigmatic symbols and strange illustrations-plants that defy botanical classification, astrological charts with unfamiliar constellations, and old forgotten recipes that seem to hold the secrets of alchemy. This is no fiction; this is the mysterious Voynich Manuscript. Named after the Polish book dealer who brought it into the spotlight, and now resting within the vaults of Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, this mysterious book is a linguistic labyrinth that still cannot be translated.
    What hidden knowledge could it contain? Who wrote it and why? Could finding its secrets change our understanding of history, science, or even the mystical world?
    SUBSCRIBE for more documentaries: / @secretorigins9346
    The Voynich Manuscript is a one-of-a-kind book from the 1400s that has puzzled people for years. It's full of bizarre drawings, from plants that don't match anything we know to tiny figures using strange machines. The text is even more mysterious, written in a language with its own unique alphabet and rules that no one has been able to understand for sure, though some say they have.
    This book is probably one of the most talked-about in history, with endless theories about what it means, where it came from, and why it was made. Officially called Beinecke MS-408, it got its more famous name from Wilfrid Voynich, a collector who bought it in 1912. Now, it's kept at Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library and is hardly ever shown to the public. However, you can see a digital copy online.
    If you ever get the chance to see it in person, it might seem small and worn out. But inside, it's packed with fascinating drawings-of mysterious plants, star maps, and women in strange poses. The book's filled with writing that fits around these pictures. But here's the kicker: no one can read it.
    #voynichmanuscript #documentary #secretorigins

Комментарии • 30

  • @secretorigins9346
    @secretorigins9346  2 месяца назад

    Go here bit.ly/3TOQ4Kx to grab your FREE eBook on using ancient knowledge to manifest your greatest desires.

  • @ZoltanHoppar
    @ZoltanHoppar 3 месяца назад +4

    It is already decoded, and deciphered. In origin this is from Italy, used by italian nobles. The content is basically the making of porcelain that has been sold to TR in exchange of settling.

    • @Auxius.
      @Auxius. 3 месяца назад +1

      After a little digging, it is decoded. Crowe F. The Voynich Manuscript: Decoded. J His Arch & Anthropol Sci. 2022
      Turns out it had it's origins in arabic, fascinating. The contents are how to escape the underworld as a cathar, presented in this study.

    • @OnlineElvis
      @OnlineElvis 3 месяца назад +3

      ​@@Auxius.I read his paper. Interesting analysis indeed. Although, I find it odd, that the book would be about souls traversing into the underworld and to the heaven. He implies that the women are dead, and they represent priestesses. Were the women in southern france that white, or is it just because they're supposedly dead and pale?
      The text is typically repetitive, what makes me think that it is written in a poetic form, like a song that has repetitive phrases. The look and the amount of women makes me think think that the authors might have been nordic women. The pagans were burned if they wrote anything in any unofficial language of literature, and if they wrote anything about pagan beliefs. The language could be an extinct dialect of finnish, written in a time when using that language was oppressed by the church. The women are bathing in a cave that has green water, which kind of places exist in northern europe. I can't see why anyone would exclude northern europe from possible places of origin for the voynich manuscript.

    • @Auxius.
      @Auxius. 3 месяца назад +2

      @Elvis I've downloaded the full book. I find it strange 70% is about herbs, then a hard shift into underworld/stars related subjects. This kind of makes me question if what they translated in the study is actually accurate. Considering they started out with translating were constellations/stars that have mixed greek/arabic name origin, they could have started off on the wrong foot thinking all is arabic while only those specific words were. Considering your other comment, if you look at the Bayeux tapestry or any other amateur medieval artwork, you will find most are depicted off white with sometimes a hint of blush. The paper describes Cathar scripts were destroyed by the church, I do think this book is a remnant of something pagan/heathen. I'm sure some person someday will open this book and understand what's up.

    • @xbemos
      @xbemos 3 месяца назад +2

      I like how y’all say it’s decoded.
      We can’t even decide all of the old testament scrolls properly from old Hebrew because the Lang was lost by the time they started writing it down in like 30 AD.
      I’m sure they’ve given us the correct information on the decode though. Why would any one hide anything?

    • @xbemos
      @xbemos 3 месяца назад +1

      @@OnlineElvisyour explanation and decipher makes a lot more sense than any I’ve read.
      I’m a European woman w keen eyes on the history of our people.
      The pools reminded me of cinotes(my spelling is off) the pools in Mexico the Mayans called the entrances under world. No doubt these do exist in the European areas you speak of.
      The 1400s would have been when women were being burned for being witches as well. The more details all start to unpack in the minds eye. Everything you speak of adds up.

  • @ceopresident496
    @ceopresident496 3 месяца назад +3

    They didn't put that through ai yet?

  • @tusjpennywise7635
    @tusjpennywise7635 3 месяца назад +1

    I believe that the book is a proof of parallel universes as i believe the only logical explanation of its origin and no1 can decipeher it and of course all the unknown plants and so on the book originates from a different univers or maybe from inner earth. Who knows

  • @rUsHiSm
    @rUsHiSm Месяц назад

    *Written By A Psychotic Genius & Will Only Be Deciphered By One.*

  • @ceopresident496
    @ceopresident496 3 месяца назад +1

    That's probably from Atlantis or Antarctica.

    • @motownbiker92
      @motownbiker92 3 месяца назад +5

      I agree with your Atlantis hypothesis, Critias speaks of the special baths of Posiedonius capital city of Atlantis as well as fruits of the earth. Perhaps Athanasius Kircher, the Jesuit scholar who studied a huge range of subjects, from volcanoes to ancient Egypt to flying dragons. Kircher straddled the world between pre- and post-Enlightenment scholars, relying more on ancient texts than on experimentation in his research. (In one book, he made meticulous diagrams that addressed whether the Tower of Babel could have reached the moon.)
      In 1664, Kircher decided to create a map of Atlantis. As his biographer John Edward Fletcher explains, the idea behind the map was to validate a (weird) larger theory about the Earth: "In medieval thought, the Earth had a soul and a body," Fletcher writes. "The sea, with its tides, flowed into the body of the Earth and out again, like water in the gills of a fish."
      If the Earth had a body, Kircher reasoned, then it needed a skeleton to protect itself, and he figured mountain ranges could serve that purpose. For Earth's skeleton to be complete, certain submerged mountain systems had to be included, and there were spots along many meridians where it made sense to put an island. All that led Kircher to resurrect the myth of Atlantis as proof of his theory.
      Kircher's map gave Atlantis "scientific" credibility. And so perhaps he created the manuscript to accompany the map he created depicting Atlantis. It seems possible that he was creative enough to invent a fictitious language and manuscript as well. Or maybe its one of his books describing the societies of the hollow earth.

    • @secretorigins9346
      @secretorigins9346  3 месяца назад +2

      Could be

  • @spacemanonearth
    @spacemanonearth 3 месяца назад +2

    Is clear, if no one can read it, then it is worthless & pointless. There are other texts that can be translated and are available for free on the internet that tell us all of the important aspects of our existence as well as who and what we are, why we are here on earth, where we came from, and many other details. So why should one even care about this book until someone translates it. No idea

    • @secretorigins9346
      @secretorigins9346  3 месяца назад

      What if it contains secret knowledge?

    • @Auxius.
      @Auxius. 3 месяца назад +1

      Asking the internet to translate something is the first step to getting it translated right? .. also, even without translation, it's a part of our collective history and someone went through a lot of trouble trying to convey something, all of which to me holds great value.

  • @MyTopCollections
    @MyTopCollections 3 месяца назад

    I feel this book has to do with women, fertility, reproduction information. I saw in one of the images a drawing of a woman’s ovaries. But who knows.

  • @katgibbs-mccoy4947
    @katgibbs-mccoy4947 3 месяца назад

    The book was written in old Serbian, aka, Yugoslavian--Slavic, not Italian; and is a book on herbs, etc..

    • @Auxius.
      @Auxius. 3 месяца назад

      The book is written in old Dutch, -Frisian to be exact, not old Serbian. However I proceed not to give any evidence, cya!

    • @katgibbs-mccoy4947
      @katgibbs-mccoy4947 3 месяца назад

      @@Auxius. Thanks, for your input. It is a complicated subject because of all the dialects, but first and foremost it was related as well to old Saxon--old English. It becomes clear when one goes back to old English--Anglo Saxon which was Greek. Greek is an old Slavic - Gaelic language. In other words it is an old Celtic /Gaelic language. The Slavs call themselves Celto-Slavs. The forebears of the Greeks were the ancient Celts according to Herodotus. The Greek language is Slavic along with Serbian and Croatian, Russian and many other branches. There ae so many languages routing from this language tree, which many are almost unrecognisable because of lack of use. But there are still many Frisian speakers; but many more Serbian speakers who understand the older versions of their languages. 🙂

    • @Auxius.
      @Auxius. 3 месяца назад

      @@katgibbs-mccoy4947 The Frisian bit was meant to incite you into giving evidence to your claims. I think your idea it is old Serbian on the basis of it being unrecognizable, and old Serbian speakers still recognize it, is a very small amount of evidence to confidently say what language this book is :-), especially because old Serbian definitely is not reminiscent to this (evidenced by my quick google search, 'old serbian writing 1400').
      To me it still looks like gibberish, or the most efficient language i've ever seen- due to the obvious repetition of words. Someone pointed out the repetition could be it's written in a song or poem style, but I do not think a person would write a whole book describing plants, women and stars in song/poem, it would defeat it's own purpose of trying to convey info which it obviously wants to :-). All I can think of is one of our ancestors is slapping his or her face in heaven saying "I should've written it in literally any other language :-(".