How researchers managed to decipher a letter from Charles V that no one understood for 5 centuries

A series of symbolsinintelligibles“which sheds light five centuries later: four researchers presented Wednesday, November 23 in Nancy their discovery, the deciphering of a letter written in 1547 by Charles V to his ambassador in France, shedding new light on the relations between the kingdom ruled then by Francis I, and the Holy Roman Empire.

To achieve this “exceptional” feat, six months of work were needed for cryptographers from the Lorraine Computer Research Laboratory (Loria), associated with a historian from the University of Picardy.

The letter, forgotten for centuries, was in the collections of the Stanislas library in Nancy. Cécile Pierrot, cryptographer at Loria, heard for the first time in 2019 of an “encrypted letter from Charles V” (1500-1558) by chance, during a dinner. The researcher then believes in a legend, but when the existence of this document is mentioned to her again two years later, she decides to dig.

Word of mouth works, and at the end of 2021 she sees for the first time the mysterious and incomprehensible letter bearing the signature of the King of Spain, addressed to his ambassador Jean de Saint-Mauris.

Then begins the work of deciphering. Cécile Pierrot observes the letter for a long time, class “by separate families” the some 120 symbols used by Charles V. She names them and decides to count their occurrences, to identify the combinations that could be repeated

Evil Code

For this, she and two other researchers from the Nancy laboratory, Pierrick Gaudry and Paul Zimmermann, decided to use computers to “speed up research“. No artificial intelligence, here it is the human who “ask the right questions to the computer“, insists the cryptographer.

Deciphering is done”small step by small step“, because the code used by Charles V is diabolical. In addition to its large number of symbols, “whole words are encrypted with a single symbol“and vowels preceded by a consonant are marked by diacritics, an inspiration probably coming from Arabic, explains Cécile Pierrot.

Another confusing element, the emperor uses “null symbols“, which mean nothing and in fact serve to mislead the adversary who would try to decipher the message.

The click finally happens at the end of June: Cécile Pierrot manages to isolate a series of words in the missive.

For this, the three cryptographers from Nancy called on Camille Desenclos, a specialist in both cryptography and relations between France and the Holy Roman Empire in the 16th century.

The historian helps them put the pieces of the puzzle together, recontextualizing the letter to better understand its allusions.

“Pierre de Rosetta” in Besançon

A real “Rosetta stone” also helps the research: a letter from Jean de Saint-Mauris kept in Besançon, where the recipient had written in the margin “a form of transcription“by deciphering the missive sent to her by the ambassador, explains Ms. Pierrot.

Once deciphered, the letter “confirms the rather degraded state“in 1547 relations between Francis I and the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire Charles V, who had nevertheless signed a peace treaty three years earlier, explains Camille Desenclos.

Despite this peace, the two sovereigns maintained a “mistrust“reciprocal”extremely strong“and seek”to weaken“mutually,” she adds.

Other information revealed by the decryption of the letter: “a rumor of an assassination plot against Charles V which would be brewing in France“, says Mrs. Desenclos, rumor of which “we didn’t know much“before. She turns out”unfounded” – Charles V was not murdered – but this letter shows “the fear” of the prestigious monarch vis-à-vis “this potential plot“, she underlines.

In his missive to his ambassador, the emperor also evokes the situation of his empire and his “political and military strategy“: the use of encrypted correspondence thus allows him to “hide“this information to his opponents.

Researchers now hope to be able to identify other letters in Europe from the emperor and his ambassador, “to have a photograph of the strategy of Charles V in Europe“.

We are likely to make many more discoveries in the coming years.“, rejoices Ms. Desenclos.

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