Real Life Cryptology
Title
Real Life Cryptology
Subtitle
Ciphers and Secrets in Early Modern Hungary
ISBN
9789048536696
Format
eBook PDF
Number of pages
224
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
Hardback - € 117,00
Table of Contents
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Abbreviations Note on terminology Note on names 1. Introduction 2. Uncovered fields in the research literature 2.1. Neglected secret writings in secrecy studies 2.2. Secrecy in the history of science 2.3. The need for social history in cryptography studies 2.4. Cryptography in Hungary 3. Secret writings and attitudes - research questions 4. Theory and practice of cryptography in early modern Europe 4.1 Vulnerable ciphers: the monoalphabetic way 4.2. An Arabic contribution: the cryptanalysis 4.3. New methods in the literature: the polyalphabetic cipher 4.4. Practice in diplomacy: the homophonic cipher 5. Ciphers in Hungary: the source material 5.1. Frameworks of data collection 5.2. General description of the sources 5.3. Cipher keys 5.3.1 The structure of the tables 5.3.2. Letters of the alphabet 5.3.3. Nomenclatures 5.3.4. Nullities 5.3.5. Grammatical elements 5.4. Ciphered letters 6. Ciphers in action 6.1. Sharing the key 6.2. Replacing the cipher keys 6.3. The tiresome work of enciphering 6.4. The cryptologist 6.5. Cautious and reckless encryption 6.6. Sand in the machine 6.7. Breaking the code 6.8. Advanced or outdated? 7. Ways of knowledge transfer 7.1. Handbooks of cryptography 7.2. Artificial languages 7.3. Stenography 7.4. The Turkish factor 7.5. Distance from diplomacy 8. Scenes of secrecy 8.1. Dissimulation and the secret 8.2. Communication in politics 8.3. Military operations and espionage 8.4. Love, politics and male bonding 8.5. Family secrets and privacy: ladies and ciphers 8.6. Private sins-public morals: secrets of a diary and shame 8.7. Science, chemistry and alchemy 8.8. Secret characters and magic 8.9. Encrypting in religion 9. Summary 10. Appendix 10.1 List of cipher tables from early modern Hungary 10.2 List of ciphertexts from early modern Hungary Acknowledgements Earlier publications Bibliography INDEX

Benedek Láng

Real Life Cryptology

Ciphers and Secrets in Early Modern Hungary

A large number of enciphered documents survived from early modern Hungary. This area was a particularly fertile territory where cryptographic methods proliferated, because a large portion of the population was living in the frontier zone, and participated (or was forced to participate) in the network of the information flow. A quantitative analysis of sixteenth-century to seventeenth-century Hungarian ciphers (300 cipher keys and 1,600 partly or entirely enciphered letters) reveals that besides the dominance of diplomatic use of cryptography, there were many examples of ŸprivateŒ applications too. This book reconstructs the main reasons and goals why historical actors chose to use ciphers in a diplomatic letter, a military order, a diary or a private letter, what they decided to encrypt, and how they perceived the dangers threatening their messages.
Author

Benedek Láng

A historian of science, Benedek Láng is a professor at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics. He specializes in late medieval manuscripts of learned magic and early modern secret communication (artificial languages and cipher systems).