Abstract This paper proposes a definitive shift in the cryptanalysis of the Voynich Manuscript (MS 408). Moving away from traditional linguistic or substitution cipher theories, this research identifies the manuscript as a steganographic database. The study demonstrates that the illustrations are not merely decorative but function as the algorithmic key (One-Time Pad) to filter "null-text" noise. By applying an Algorithmic Extraction Protocol (AEP) based on the count of discrete visual elements (N), consistent technical terms in Vulgar Latin and Proto-Romance emerge with direct semantic correlation to the folios' themes. Protocol of Activation and Anchoring The extraction is governed by three rigid rules of activation that prevent arbitrary readings: Proximity Trigger: The counting sequence initiates at the first lexical unit immediately adjacent to the key illustration. In circular diagrams, the "12 o'clock" position serves as the default Alpha point. Marginal Rubrics (Flags): Specific symbols in the left margins (e.g., 4-pointed stars in Folio 88v) act as protocol headers, signaling that the subsequent paragraph contains encrypted technical data. Sequence Termination: The skip-code remains active until the first major paleographic break (double spacing or line termination), after which the system resets.
Unai García de Eulate Aramendia (Tue,) studied this question.