This document presents a novel, interdisciplinary hypothesis regarding the origins and meaning of the Voynich Manuscript, grounding its visual and structural elements in 16th-century Central European history. By analyzing specific folios through a cartographic and historical lens, this research draws direct correlations between the manuscript's allegorical imagery and the dynastic struggles of the Habsburg and Jagiellonian houses. Key focal points include the tragic death of King Louis II at the Battle of Mohács in 1526 (Folio 1r), the geopolitical expansion of Emperor Charles V's "never-setting sun" mapped on a rotational layout (Folios 85v-86r), and the encoded, numerical representation of the 15 children born to Anna Jagiellon and Ferdinand I. Furthermore, this study proposes the Hungarian humanist and Habsburg court historian, Johannes Sambucus (János Zsámboky), as the manuscript's true author. Visual parallels between the Voynich manuscript and Sambucus’s Emblemata, alongside hidden ciphers in contemporary portraits, suggest that the manuscript serves as a cryptic ledger of suppressed court secrets. The analysis concludes by examining the manuscript's transmission to Athanasius Kircher via Johannes Marcus Marci, arguing through portrait iconography that the true purpose of the text was to preserve a hidden, bloody narrative for future generations.
Janos Zsiros (Mon,) studied this question.