Deep inside Yale University's Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
lies the only copy of a 240-page tome.
Recently carbon dated to around 1420,
its vellum pages features looping handwriting
and hand-drawn images seemingly stolen from a dream.
and suns and moons with faces accompany the text.
This 24x16 centimeter book is called the Voynich manuscript,
and its one of history's biggest unsolved mysteries.
No one can figure out what it says.
The name comes from Wilfrid Voynich,
a Polish bookseller who came across the document at a Jesuit college
What do these bizarre words and vibrant drawings represent?
What secrets do its pages contain?
He purchased the manuscript from the cash-strapped priest at the college,
and eventually brought it to the U.S.,
where experts have continued to puzzle over it for more than a century.
Cryptologists say the writing has all the characteristics of a real language,
just one that no one's ever seen before.
What makes it seem real is that in actual languages,
letters and groups of letters appear with consistent frequencies,
and the language in the Voynich manuscript
has patterns you wouldn't find from a random letter generator.
Other than that, we know little more than what we can see.
The letters are varied in style and height.
Some are borrowed from other scripts, but many are unique.
The taller letters have been named gallows characters.
The manuscript is highly decorated throughout
with scroll-like embellishments.
It appears to be written by two or more hands,
with the painting done by yet another party.
Over the years, three main theories about the manuscript's text have emerged.
The first is that it's written in cypher,
a secret code deliberately designed to hide secret meaning.
The second is that the document is a hoax
written in gibberish to make money off a gullible buyer.
Some speculate the author was a medieval con man.
Others, that it was Voynich himself.
The third theory is that the manuscript is written in an actual language,
Perhaps medieval scholars were attempting to create an alphabet
for a language that was spoken but not yet written.
In that case, the Voynich manuscript might be like the rongorongo script
now unreadable after the culture that made it collapsed.
Though no one can read the Voynich manuscript,
that hasn't stopped people from guessing what it might say.
Those who believe the manuscript was an attempt to create
a new form of written language
speculate that it might be an encyclopedia
containing the knowledge of the culture that produced it.
Others believe it was written by the 13th century philosopher Roger Bacon,
who attempted to understand the universal laws of grammar,
or in the 16th century by the Elizabethan mystic John Dee,
who practiced alchemy and divination.
More fringe theories that the book was written by a coven of Italian witches,
After 100 years of frustration,
scientists have recently shed a little light on the mystery.
The first breakthrough was the carbon dating.
Also, contemporary historians have traced the provenance of the manuscript
back through Rome and Prague to as early as 1612,
when it was perhaps passed from Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II
to his physician, Jacobus Sinapius.
In addition to these historical breakthroughs,
linguistic researchers recently proposed the provisional identification
of a few of the manuscript's words.
Could the letters beside these seven stars spell Tauran,
a constellation that includes the seven stars called the Pleiades?
Could this word be Centaurun for the Centaurea plant in the picture?
Perhaps, but progress is slow.
If we can crack its code, what might we find?
The dream journal of a 15th-century illustrator?