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Iona, Inner Hebrides, Scotland by Christopher Swan
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On this day:
VOYNICH MANUSCRIPT: MOST MYSTERIOUS MANUSCRIPT IN THE WORLD
On August 19, 1666, the rector of Prague University sent a letter and a manuscript to one of his former students, the Jesuit scholar Athanasius Kircher. The manuscript had lain forgotten in the monastery library in Frascati, Italy, for 250 years. It was obtained by Wilfred Voynich in 1912 and went on to be dubbed "the Most Mysterious Manuscript in the World."
Christened the Voynich, the six-by-nine-inch parchment codex appears to be a straightforward book. It is, however, over two hundred pages written in a code or unknown language that has never been deciphered. The text is elaborately illustrated with colored drawings of unknown plants and the sun, moon, and stars. Depictions of tiny naked women also frolic over the pages.
First appearing in history in 1586, the book was purchased for a then-outrageous sum of 600 ducats by the Holy Roman emperor, Rudolf II of Bohemia. One of the most eccentric European monarchs of the era, Rudolf collected dwarfs, had a regiment of giants in his army, and entertained all manner of magicians and alchemists. It has been suggested that the Voynich manuscript is the work of Roger Bacon, a famous English monk and scientist, and that it made its way to Prague via John Dee, a famous occultist of the time.
From dating of the vellum, pigments, calligraphy, and drawings, the manuscript is judged to be from the late thirteenth century. It has been labeled as everything from an illustrated herbal, to an alchemical treatise written in code to protect the contents, to an elaborate hoax. Its contents are roughly thought to be divided into sections of astronomy/astrology, biology, cosmology, pharmaceuticals, and recipes. After Voynich's widow died, the manuscript was sold to a book dealer and then donated to Yale University.
Text from: Almanac of the Infamous, the Incredible, and the Ignored by Juanita Rose Violins, published by Weiser Books, 2009
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Literally you just have to keep going and keep trying even when it's embarrassing
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Source details and larger version.
From living toys to haunted ones, here’s my strange vintage toy gallery.
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Audrey Bialke (American, b. 1991, based Ithaca, NY, USA) - A Vast Shadow Moved, 2025, Paintings: Oil on Panel
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Minyoung Kim (Korean, 1989) - Sun in the Dark (2025)
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Images from the No Kings protest on Saturday, June 14, 2025:
Minnesota:
Chicago:
San Diego:
Dallas:
Seattle:
San Francisco:
Philadelphia:
Los Angeles:
(source 1, source 2, source 3, source 4, source 5, source 6, source 7, source 8, source 9)
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Showing your True Colours - William Mackinnon , 2023 .
Australian, b. 1978 -
Acrylic, oil and automotive enamel and glitter on linen , 220. x. 160 cm.
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The Sea in Divers
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THE GREEN KNIGHT (2021) dir. David Lowery
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People fundamentally don’t want women to seek justice against men who abused them because if we held every violent man accountable for his behavior, the patriarchy and how society in general functions would collapse. It’s easier for people to twist themselves into knots to justify why they think every woman in a high profile case is lying than to justify what they really think, that men should be allowed to beat and rape and shoot women with impunity.
When a woman doesn’t seek justice or settles a case because she doesn’t want to be abused all over again by the legal system, misogynists rejoice, because she’s been frightened back into submission and the man gets away with it—exactly how they want the world to work.
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