Ancient Manuscripts That Should Never Have Been Opened
Summary
TLDRThis video script delves into the mysteries of ancient manuscripts, such as The Voyage, which are written in undecipherable languages and feature bizarre illustrations. It explores various enigmatic documents, including a mummy-wrapped in an Atruscan text, the controversial Gospel of Judas, the Messet Kellum, the Groer Codex, and the Book of Soyga. Each manuscript presents unique challenges and theories, reflecting humanity's enduring fascination with decoding the past and understanding the world.
Takeaways
- ð The Voynich Manuscript is a mysterious book written in an unknown language with drawings of non-existent plants and animals, challenging our understanding of history and language.
- ð Many mysterious manuscripts have been found worldwide, often sparking controversy and raising questions about their origins and meanings.
- ð The Atruskan linen book found wrapped around an Egyptian mummy in Zagreb is unique, as it's the longest Atruskan text ever found and provides insights into an extinct language.
- ð The Atruskan text contains a calendar of rites and sacrifices, with references to gods like Nethuns, related to the Roman god Neptune, suggesting it was composed near modern-day Perugia, Italy.
- ð€ The journey of the Atruskan linen from its creation to its use as mummy wrapping raises questions about how it ended up in Egypt, with theories ranging from trade to the mummy's possible Atruskan ancestry.
- ð€ The Gospel of Judas, a controversial text suggesting Jesus asked Judas to betray him, challenges Christian roots and is believed to be a product of Gnostic belief.
- ð° The Messet Kellum, or the Tretis of the Vessels, claims to reveal the location of the Ark of the Covenant and other treasures, but its authenticity and origins are uncertain.
- ð²ðœ The Groer Codex, an 11-page Mayan manuscript found by looters, contains images of death gods and a calendar for tracking Venus, and has been authenticated as genuine from the 13th century.
- ð§ââïž The Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power, or Egyptian Handbook of Ritual Power, is a recently deciphered guide for rituals and spells, dating back to pre-Islamic Upper Egypt.
- ð® The Book of Soyga, reportedly transcribed by angels for Adam in Eden, is filled with Latin text and a mysterious code that has puzzled scholars for centuries.
- ð€ The existence of these mysterious manuscripts raises the question of whether ancient people were simply creative storytellers, similar to how we create fiction and art today.
Q & A
What is the significance of The Voyage manuscript?
-The Voyage manuscript is significant because it is written in an unknown language with drawings of non-existent plants and animals, challenging our understanding of history and sparking controversy due to its mysterious origins and undecipherable content.
How does the disappearance of languages impact our understanding of history and culture?
-The disappearance of languages leads to the loss of unique cultural ideas, historical records, time periods, and stories that were significant to those cultures, diminishing our understanding of human history and diversity.
What was unusual about the linen strips found with the Egyptian mummy in Zagreb?
-The linen strips were unusual because they did not contain Egyptian hieroglyphics but instead featured an unknown language, which was later identified as Ausin, an early form of the Roman language not previously known to be in Egypt.
What does the Atruskan linen book wrapped around the Egyptian mummy suggest about cultural exchange?
-The Atruskan linen book suggests that there was significant cultural and trade exchange between different ancient civilizations, as the mummy was wrapped in a text from a language and region not native to Egypt.
What is the main controversy surrounding the Gospel of Judas?
-The main controversy is that the Gospel of Judas presents an alternative version of Christianity, suggesting that Jesus asked Judas to betray him to fulfill a prophecy, which challenges traditional Christian beliefs.
How was the authenticity of the Groer Codex established?
-The authenticity of the Groer Codex was established through a detailed analysis by anthropologists, archaeologists, and cultural experts, including ultraviolet imaging, X-rays, microscopic analysis, and radiocarbon dating, which confirmed it was created in the 13th century without modern materials.
What is the significance of the Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power?
-The Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power is significant as it provides insights into ancient magical practices and beliefs, including rituals and spells for various purposes, and is considered one of the oldest documents on magic from pre-Islamic Upper Egypt.
What is the Book of Soyga and why is it considered mysterious?
-The Book of Soyga is a 200-page Latin text with sections on astronomy, angel identification, summoning demons, and magic. It is considered mysterious due to its seemingly random Latin letters forming a code that was not understood until mathematician Jim Reeds deciphered it in 2006, revealing a complex system based on magic words and constellations.
How do these mysterious manuscripts challenge our understanding of human creativity and history?
-These manuscripts challenge our understanding by blurring the line between historical records and creative expression, suggesting that ancient people may have been as imaginative and artistic as we are today, and that some of these documents could be the result of creative storytelling rather than factual records.
What is the current state of research on the deciphered manuscripts mentioned in the script?
-While the manuscripts have been authenticated and their codes deciphered, the full meaning and implications of the texts remain subjects of ongoing research and debate among scholars, with many mysteries still unsolved.
Outlines
ð The Enigma of Untranslatable Manuscripts
This paragraph delves into the world of mysterious ancient manuscripts, such as The Voyage, which have challenged our understanding of history and language. It highlights the importance of language preservation, as the loss of a language equates to the loss of cultural ideas and historical records. The discussion transitions into the intriguing discovery of an Egyptian mummy wrapped in linen strips with unknown writings, which turned out to be an Atruscan text, a language not native to Egypt. This unexpected find raises questions about how the linen made its way to Egypt and the purposes behind its use.
ð Controversial Texts: Gospel of Judas and the Messet Kellum
The paragraph discusses the controversial Gospel of Judas, which presents an alternative version of Judas's role in Jesus's life, suggesting a close relationship between the two. The manuscript, written in Coptic language and later translated to Greek, has caused significant debate within the academic and religious communities. Additionally, the Messet Kellum, or the Tretis of the Vessels, is introduced as a manuscript claiming to reveal the fate of the Ark of the Covenant, listing various treasures and their hidden locations. The authenticity and origins of these documents remain uncertain, with some scholars considering them as works of fiction based on traditional scriptural methods.
ðïž The Groer Codex and the Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power
The Groer Codex, an 11-page bark paper manuscript with images of pre-Columbian death gods and Mayan symbols, is explored in this paragraph. Initially doubted due to its discovery by looters, it was later authenticated using various scientific methods, confirming its 13th-century origin. The Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power is also introduced, a recently deciphered document containing spells and rituals, believed to have been written in pre-Islamic Upper Egypt. The text includes references to Jesus and the Sethians, a religious group, and is thought to be a guide for achieving goals through magical means.
ð® The Book of Soyga: A Mysterious Latin Manuscript
The final paragraph focuses on the Book of Soyga, a 200-page Latin manuscript with sections on astronomy, summoning demons, and magic. It was part of John D's library, who was told by a medium that the book was transcribed by angels for Adam in Eden. The manuscript contains a square of seemingly random Latin letters on each page, which mathematician and cryptologist Jim Reeds decoded in 2006 as being based on magic words and zodiac constellations. Despite the decoding, the meaning of the text remains a mystery, and theories suggest it could represent the universe. The paragraph ends by pondering the creative nature of humans and the possibility that these ancient documents might be the products of ancient creativity rather than factual records.
Mindmap
Keywords
ð¡The Voyage
ð¡Language Crisis
ð¡At Truskin
ð¡Gospel of Judas
ð¡Masset Kellum
ð¡Groer Codex
ð¡Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power
ð¡Book of Soyga
ð¡Mysterious Manuscripts
ð¡Authenticity and Deciphering
Highlights
The Voynich manuscript is a mysterious book written in an unknown language with drawings of non-existent plants and animals.
Ancient Egypt discovered a mummy wrapped in linen strips with unknown writing, later identified as the Aten language.
The Aten language was an early form of the Roman language, and no surviving examples of Aten linen books had been found until this discovery.
The linen book was preserved due to Egypt's arid climate and the materials used in mummification, making it the longest Aten text ever found.
The text from the linen book was a calendar detailing rights and sacrifices, composed near modern-day Perugia, Italy.
The Gospel of Judas, written on Papyrus, suggests Jesus asked Judas to betray him to fulfill a prophecy.
The Messet Kellum claims to reveal the location of the Ark of the Covenant and lists various treasures.
The Groer Codex, an 11-page Mayan manuscript, was initially doubted due to being found by looters but later proven genuine.
The Coptic Handbook of Ritual Power, recently deciphered, contains spells and incantations, including love spells and exorcisms.
The Book of Soyga is a 200-page Latin book with sections on astronomy, summoning demons, and magic, but contains a mysterious coded section.
The Jamestown Slate has overlapping inscriptions and drawings, challenging our understanding of history.
The Piri Reis Map shows mountains in South America and a deted Antarctica without ice, raising questions about ancient knowledge.
Easter Island's wood tablets have an undecipherable Rongo Rongo script that runs in different directions.
The Feos Disc contains 242 symbols that may represent phonetic groups but cannot be deciphered due to their limited number.
Mysterious manuscripts and codes share a commonality of capturing human fascination with mysteries and the desire to make sense of the world.
Ancient documents might be creative works, similar to how we create art and fiction today, challenging the notion of their pure historical accuracy.
The search for meaning in ancient documents, though they may never be fully solved, is still a valuable endeavor in understanding our past.
Transcripts
chances are you've heard of The Voyage
manuscript the mysterious book that
seems to be written in an unknown
language that nobody's ever been able to
translate it features drawings of plants
and animals that don't exist and nobody
knows who made it I've done a video
about it here it's super famous but it's
not the only mysterious manuscript
that's ever been found there's actually
a lot of them in fact I got a lot of
comments on that Voyage video requesting
that I talk about some of them but yeah
all around the world we've found
documents that challenge what we think
we know about history stir up
controversy and sometimes
just make no sense so today let's take a
look at some of the most mysterious
ancient manuscripts that have ever been
found in my episode about the world's
weirdest form of writing I talked about
how we're in a bit of a language crisis
I mean nine languages a year are stop
being spoken worldwide it's so bad that
they predict that by 2080 we'll be
losing a language every two weeks and
this is important because we we lose
ideas that are specific to cultures when
a language dies we lose records of time
periods and people we lose stories that
that were important to them at that time
and could still have meaning in our
lives today and then there are the
languages that we come across from our
past that we can't understand that um
even though we found them its meaning is
lost to us but what might be even
weirder is when we find manuscripts or
documents and languages we do understand
where we can decipher the information in
it but that
information is weird weird or out of
place or out of time or it's made in a
way that we can't figure out by people
who we don't know who they are now some
of these I'm about to talk about are
still being studied uh so we may find
out that they're not for real at some
point in the future but some of these
have been studied thoroughly and are
super legit which only brings up more
questions so let's start our treasure
hunt where else ancient Egypt in 1868 an
Egyptian mummy made its way to the
Museum of Zagreb in Croatia it was of an
ordinary woman nobody of any royalty or
a priest or anything like that but what
was interesting was what she was wrapped
in it was linen strips with writing on
it which isn't that big a deal but it
wasn't Egyptian hieroglyphic
it actually was something unknown at the
time about 20 years later the museum
officials sent the rappings to Vienna
and there the Austrian egyptologist
Jacob CRA looked at them and he figured
out what the language was it was
actually Ausin yeah weirdly for some
reason this mummy had been wrapped with
strips from an at truscan linen book
this was an incredible Discovery first
of all because at truscan was not spoken
in Egypt it was an early kind of Roman
language but also no surviving examples
of at truskin linen books had ever been
found I meant to say at truskin not at
there usually a linen book like this
would have dissolved way over time but
Egypt's area climate and the materials
that were used to dry the mummy helped
preserve it this wasn't just the first
atesin linen text that was found
completely intact it was also the
longest at truskin text ever found the
book was originally a sheet about 3.4 M
long before it was torn into strips for
bandages it contained 12 Columns of text
written in black and red ink and it's
thought that about 60% of the original
text is still on there they also found
Papyrus from the Egyptian Book of the
Dead wrapping the mummy's body which
could give us a clue as to who she was
so we found this linen it's in at
truscan we can read it what was this
thing actually about well basically it
was just a calendar about which rights
and sacrifices should be done throughout
the year there are certain Gods
mentioned like nethuns who was an at
truscan Water God related to the Roman
god Neptune and some of the words and
names in the text lead the experts to
believe that it was composed near the
modern day Italian city of perusia now
the linen itself was dated to the 4th
Century BCE but the writing is from much
later like the word January is used as a
start of a ritual year which means that
it was probably written between 200 150
BCE meaning whoever wrote this found
linen that was literally like 3
centuries old and then wrote stuff on it
and then later it got ripped up and was
used on a
mummy this linen has had quite the
journey like to me that's a huge mystery
right there like who goes and finds 300y
old linen and then writes on
it this doesn't even make sense but then
there's the obvious question of how did
this you know linen with a tresen
writing on it make its way to Egypt so
so the theory is uh since the mummy was
found in the in the city of Alexandria
which is a port city it's a big trading
Hub um one theory is that she was
basically just wrapped in whatever
material was available which again um
we're going to bury this person Let's uh
let's just let's just find that book
over there just tear up that book and
just wrap let's just do a papier-mâché
around yeah that's one way to do it now
if that's the case then it would just
happen to have a truskin text on there
and there's no connection between that
and the Egyptian Book of the Dead stuff
that was in there and there's not really
any big mystery as to how it would have
made its way to Alexandria like I said
it was a port city there was a lot of
trade there and there was plenty of seaf
fairing trade that went on in the
Mediterranean way way back when so
that's one theory that they just found
the book and wrapped her up in it
because that's what was available
another theory is that she was actually
of a truscan ancestry so she was buried
to the customs of her ancestral and
adoptive cultures but either way it's a
book that was found wrapped around a
mummy and if that is not worthy of a
spot on a list of mysterious manuscripts
out of I don't know what is Here's a
thought instead of being a traitor could
Judas scariot have been Jesus's best
friend according to the controversial
Gospel of Judas that's exactly the
situation written on Papyrus and dating
to around the 2 Century ad it tells a
story of Jesus asking Judas to betray
him so that he can fulfill his prophecy
and Rise To Heaven the Papyrus is
actually what they call a codex that was
translated from ancient Greek to the
Coptic language around 300 ad it was
discovered in the 1970s in a cave near
elmina in Egypt and it just kind of got
past along between Antiquities dealers
before finally winding up in a safe
deposit box on Long Island New York he
wound up in the hands of Antiquities
dealer frieder newberger chakos who
bought the manuscript tried to sell it
couldn't sell it and then shipped it to
the meus foundation for Ancient Art in
basil Switzerland in 2001 there the text
was reconstructed and translated by
Rudolph CER or caser sure it was a 66
page manuscript that not only contained
The Gospel of Judas but also the first
Apocalypse of James a letter from Peter
to Phillip and a fragment of a text
called The Book of alyes okay so this
came out hundreds of years later it
clearly wasn't the actual Judas who was
the author of this text it was most
likely written by a gnostic by the way a
gnostic is someone who believes that
salvation is achieved through knowledge
instead of Faith um they also believe
that the world's Creator is not perfect
so the Gospel of Judas shows Judas as
being Jesus's favorite disciple and he
would actually give secret messages to
Judas that he didn't tell the other
disciples things like the creation of
humans and angels and other Celestial
beings and the nature of the Universe
the text also includes conversations
between Judas and Jesus in the week
before Passover all of that's
controversial but its biggest
controversy by far is the idea that
Jesus actually asked Judas to betray him
because he wanted if somebody were to
betray him he would want that to be his
best friend rather than an enemy this of
course challenges the roots of
Christianity um some Scholars have even
gone so far as describe it as fiction or
heretical forgery it also offers up a
different understanding of God which you
know in a perfect world would be okay
different different viewpoints in
all we don't really live in that world
so yeah the the the veracity of this
document is still very much under debate
uh obviously it's very old but how
accurate it
is as yet to be determined another Bible
related manuscript is the messet Kellum
or the tretis of the vessels it claims
to reveal what happened to the Ark of
the Covenant in King Solomon's Treasures
I mean don't we know what happened to
the Ark of the
Covenant feel like I've seen that
before
it lists items like 200,000 talents of
pearls 77 gold tablets from the walls of
Eden 1,000 liars and 7,000 loots all
these items were hidden in different
locations before the Babylonians
conquered Jerusalem and these locations
are purposefully obscure but also kind
of specific like in a tower or in the
spring of zedekiah Professor James deila
from St Andrew's University translated
the text but its age authorship and
origin are still uncertain there are
also two different versions of this the
first version was put into composite
Hebrew volumes between the 17th and 20th
centuries this version says that the
treasures are stashed away around
Babylon between the Euphrates and Tigris
Rivers the other version appears on two
ancient plaques and it says that the
treasures were stored in the Holy Land
either way Dila believes that U both of
these are basically fiction based on
different Legends as he told Live
Science in 2014 quote the writer draws
on traditional methods of scriptural
Exodus to deduce where the treasures
might have been hidden but I think the
writer was approaching the story as a
piece of entertaining fiction not any
kind of real guide for finding the Lost
Temple Treasures there are also some
similarities to The Copper Scroll which
is one of the Dead Sea Scrolls dating
back more than 1900 years for example
both texts refer to vessels and include
listings of gold so where do these
documents say that the arch of the
Covenant actually is
um well of course it's mysterious uh in
its own obscure way the text says that
the location won't be revealed until
quote the day of the coming of the
Messiah son of David So if you're
watching this and your name is David and
you have a child um please chime in in
the comments let us know if your child
is the Messiah cuz uh then we might
actually find out where this thing is in
1965 a team of looters Unearthed a few
items in a cave in Mexico they found
things like a wooden mask and a knife
with a handle shaped like a fist sounds
like some James Bond billain stuff they
also found a manuscript but because they
were looters they had trouble selling it
because people didn't think it was
authentic it was an 11-page manuscript
on bark paper that included images of
pre-colombian death Gods a calendar for
tracking Venus in Mayan images and
symbols it eventually found its way to a
book collector named hos Sans I think
I'm saying that right uh who had it
displayed at the groer club in New York
which is how it got its name the groer
Codex now when I first read that I
thought wow that's amazing and they
found this at some dance club in New
York no it's the groer club is a book
club they have exhibitions of rare books
and stuff like that
so not as interesting of a story it's
not as out of place there as it sounds
but because it was found by lutter and
because uh it kind of made its way to a
book club where it was on exhibition and
not quite you know in an academic sense
uh it was still considered by many to be
um inauthentic but in 2016 it was
officially determined to be genuine a
team of anthropologists archaeologists
and cultural experts examined the
document closely they looked at things
like its content its physical structure
and its style they used everything from
ultraviolet Imaging to X-rays and
microscopic analysis they even
radiocarbon dated it to the 13th century
so it's legit they were also able to
prove that the pigments and ink in the
manuscript contain no modern materials
that they were consistent with pigments
that were used in three other Maya Cotes
in fact the blue pigment found on one of
the pages is from Indigo die and
something called P gorite I think I'm
saying that right that's a clay mineral
that Mayans used for their blue pigments
and this material was only identified in
1964 and wasn't synthesized until the
1980s so yeah there's no way that the
looters could have made that ink back in
the' 60s there also images in the Codex
of the forger in the 1960s wouldn't have
known about like on one page uh there
was a mountain God picture with a Clift
in the center of his head that contains
maze kernels now that wouldn't mean
anything except that in 1974 a similar
image was found on a wall painting so
the forgers would have had to known
about that wall painting before faking a
book with that image in it and there's
no way they could have done that as for
what's in the groia Codex it's thought
that it has information about Venus's
role in Mayan astronomy and religion
also its drawings are really gnarly and
according to some places that I saw it's
considered the oldest manuscript in
North America today when we think of
spells and incantations and stuff like
that we think of witches and the dark
arts it's kind of frowned upon it's got
some you know Sinister motive to it but
there was a time in the ancient world
when you know incantations and spells
weren't frowned upon at all because
everybody believed in Magic and that's
where the Coptic Handbook of ritual
power comes into play it's also called
the Egyptian Handbook of ritual power
just amazing Name by the way but it was
only deciphered recently in 2014 by two
Australian researchers an antiques
dealer sold it to mcquary University
University in Australia in 1981 and yeah
researchers took a look at it and they
figured out that it's a handbook for
rituals and spells some of the Spells
include spells for love spells for
curing black jaundice and instructions
for performing an exorcism overall there
are 20 pages of parchment offering 27
spells and several incantations and
illustrations and at one time it may
have actually been two documents that
were combined into one later on Scholars
are unsure of exactly where it was
originally found but they believe that
somebody wrote it in pre-islamic Upper
Egypt around 1300 years ago there are
several references says to Jesus and the
sethians in the manuscript uh the
sethians were religious groups who
identified with Seth which is Adam and
Eve's third son the groups also
identified with a Godlike being named
bacoa uh this figure opens up the Codex
with these lines I give thanks to you
and I call upon you the bacoa the great
one who is very trustworthy the one who
is Lord over the 40 and the nine kinds
of serpents the translators think the
person who wrote this was not a priest
necessarily but maybe a scholar who was
writing this as a way to help people
achieve their goals like for example
there are spells in in there to help
someone do better in business or to get
along with other people in a way you
could say this was like the first
self-help book but with
magic and before we get to the last
manuscript there are some honorable
mentions we want to throw out there some
other mysterious items that are worth
checking out the colonial era Jamestown
slate was found in an old well in
Jamestown Virginia and has overlapping
scratched inscriptions and drawings of a
man dressed in a ruffle collar the lands
of the pur rise map is a 1513 document
that shows mountains in South America
that were unknown at the time in a det
deted Antarctica without ice even though
it's been covered in ice for 6,000 years
easter island has wood tablets that
contain an undecipherable rango rango
script that runs left to right and then
right to left when turned upside down
and then there's the feos disc which has
242 symbols that show things like an
arrow a beehive a cat a tree and a
tattooed head that may be phonetic
groups but since there aren't that many
of them they can't be deciphered if any
of those sound interesting enough for
its own video let me know down below now
last but not least we have the book of
soyga and according to 16th century
scholar and Mystic John D the book of
SOA was actually transcribed By Angels
for Adam while he was in Eden it was a
medium named Edward Kelly that told him
this U even though D was a man of
science he was also interested in the
occult so of course it makes sense that
the book of sorga was part of his
Library it's a 200 Page book written in
Latin and seems to be about Renaissance
magical practices and beliefs uh now
part of the book includes sections on
astronomy the identification of specific
Angels summoning demons and of course
magic so de understood the Latin text
but the book's 36 Pages were confusing
to him because each page contains a
square of 36 rows and 36 Columns of
seemingly random Latin letters that's a
total of
46,656 characters D couldn't decode it
and that's why he asked the medium
Edward Kelly for answers and he was told
that only the Archangel Michael could
translate it or if anybody did figure
out how to translate that section they'd
be cursed to die within two and a half
years so you guys just stay away from it
now the text itself does post some some
problems like some of the the Latin
words appear written backward for no
apparent reason uh in fact the word SOA
may actually be the reverse of agios
which is a Greek word for sacred or holy
the book was auctioned off in 1608 after
d died and then was just basically lost
for about 400 years but two copies were
found in 1994 one in the British library
in London and another in the bodland
library at Oxford but then in 2006
mathematician and cryptologist Jim Reeds
figured out that code not to get too In
The Weeds about it but each table is
based on a magic word of six letters
this is the seed word and it's different
on each page he discovered that the
first 24 tables are named after
constellations in the Zodiac two tables
for each sign and then there are seven
tables named after planes four after
natural elements and one after the
figure of Magister or master so even
with the code correct we still don't
really know what it all means now one
theory is that it's a representation of
the universe oh and remember that curse
well Jim Reeds is still alive
so but then again he only cracked the
code he didn't figure out its meaning so
the book of SOA is definitely ancient
and it's definitely weird uh it's got a
lot of mysteries around it but uh maybe
maybe we'll figure out its meaning as
time goes on so what do all of these
mysterious codes and manuscripts have in
common um outside of the fact that like
we're just look we're humans we we love
a good mystery we love making sense of
the world and and and you know figuring
out patterns and whatnot we're just
wired that way but something that I
always wonder whenever I run across
these stories about like mysterious
ancient documents and stuff like that
was um how do we know they're not just
people being creative because yes we we
love a good mystery and we love solving
Mysteries and whatnot but we're also
creative people we're artists the very
first things we did was put art on the
walls of caves and stuff like that so
how do we know that this isn't just
people being creative you know like we
tend to treat everything that's written
in the past like it's some kind of pure
document but most of what we write today
is fiction or some kind of you know
creative thing so who's to say that they
weren't just making up stories back then
like we do today like I've joked before
that if people from the future applied
the same logic to today as we ascribe to
the Past then they might find a Harry
Potter book and think that we all had
magical powers so yeah what if these
manuscripts and codes were just people
having fun what if the book of Judas was
a kind of fanfiction or alternative
history exercise I like to consider that
but there's also the other side of the
coin which is that you know way back in
in that time the ability to write was so
rare and the process of creating
documents was so labor intensive um it
was probably unlikely that people would
have gone through all that just on a goo
but think people do some crazy stuff in
the in the spirit of just being creative
so who knows either way I find all of
these just fascinating and I'm curious
to see what else comes up these ancient
documents might not ever fully be solved
but the search is still worth doing
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information back in the day it was it
was how we learned today of course we
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uh you guys have an eye opening rest of
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Monday love you guys take care
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