The 10 recently deciphered ancient writings give us a fresh window into the minds of long‑gone civilizations. From dusty scrolls to enigmatic cave art, each newly cracked code unlocks secrets that scholars once thought were forever lost.
10 recently deciphered discoveries
10 Egyptian Book Of Spells
In 2014, after decades of painstaking effort, scholars finally untangled an Egyptian codex, revealing it to be a genuine spell‑caster’s handbook. The lavishly illustrated pages present incantations for love, commercial success, curing a rare jaundice, or even performing an exorcism. Depending on one’s temperament, the manual offers options to either reconcile with a foe or crush him outright.
The 1,300‑year‑old parchment even name‑checks Jesus and a mysterious deity called “Bakthiotha.” Some of the spells are linked to the extinct Sethian movement, which in this text refers to Seth—Adam and Eve’s third son—as “the living Christ.” While this may suggest religious confusion, researchers argue the manuscript marks Egypt’s shift from older belief systems toward orthodox Christianity.
The identity of the book’s owner remains a puzzle, as does its provenance. Dubbed the “Handbook of Ritual Power,” the codex bears a Coptic script style pointing to Upper Egypt, possibly the ancient city of Hermopolis.
9 The Ein Gedi Scroll
Ein Gedi, a desert oasis on the Dead Sea’s western shore, boasts a history of almost five millennia of intermittent habitation. Famous as King David’s refuge from Saul, it later housed a Byzantine Jewish village whose mosaic‑floored synagogue burned to the ground. In 1970, archaeologists uncovered a severely charred scroll at the synagogue’s ruins, its flames rendering it impossible to open or read.
Nearly half a century later, cutting‑edge technology performed the impossible: researchers virtually unrolled the 1,500‑year‑old scroll using specialized scanning software. The virtual unwrapping revealed legible text—surprisingly, the opening verses of Leviticus. Today, the Ein Gedi scroll stands as the oldest biblical fragment discovered since the Dead Sea Scrolls and marks the first Torah scroll ever found within a synagogue excavation.
8 The Real Shakespeare
A 400‑year‑old botanical tome may conceal an extraordinary treasure—a portrait of William Shakespeare. It is the sole portrait known to have been produced during the playwright’s lifetime, offering a glimpse of his true appearance at age 33, just before he penned Hamlet.
The rare volume, The Herball, caught the eye of historian‑botanist Mark Griffith while he researched author John Gerard. Griffith grew convinced that four faces on the title page were not decorative but depictions of actual individuals. By decoding surrounding heraldic symbols and emblematic flora, he identified the author, another noted botanist, and Queen Elizabeth’s lord treasurer among the faces.
Griffith’s discovery that one of the figures was Shakespeare sent his socks flying. The identification hinged on Shakespeare grasping a fritillary and an ear of sweetcorn—both allusions to his works—and an Elizabethan cipher hidden beneath the portrait, lending further credibility to the find.
7 The T514 Glyph

The majority of Mayan symbols have already been understood, yet a handful remain enigmatic. One such symbol, dubbed the T514 glyph, lay hidden for over 1,700 years inside an undiscovered royal tomb in southern Mexico.
Resembling a jaguar’s molar, the glyph defied interpretation for six decades until researchers linked it to the concept of a “sharp edge.” By comparing actual jaguar skulls and related glyphs, they cracked its meaning, which in turn revealed the name of King Pakal’s burial chamber: “The House of the Nine Sharp Spears.”
War‑focused, T514 appears in numerous inscriptions describing battles, invasions, and the taking of prisoners. Its decipherment helped scholars gauge the frequency of warfare between AD 700 and 800, confirming that, contrary to the Maya’s warrior ethos, actual wars were relatively scarce during that era.
6 The Eye Society
An 18th‑century manuscript, the Copiale Cipher, may be the lone surviving relic of a secret brotherhood obsessed with ocular treatments. Bound in gold‑tinged green brocade, the 105‑page handwritten book is a tapestry of abstract symbols punctuated by occasional Greek and Roman letters, alongside the cryptic phrases “Phillipp 1866” and “Copiales 3,” which gave the work its name.
International cryptographers wrestled with the cipher, initially stymied by the mixed alphabets and ignorance of the author’s native tongue. After discarding 80 dead‑end language attempts, they realized the Greek and Roman characters were deliberate decoys. Switching focus to German—consistent with the manuscript’s Berlin discovery and the German spelling of “Phillipp”—finally unlocked the code.
The decoded text unveiled a German secret society dubbed the “Oculist Order.” Its pages chronicle political debates, ritual practices (including an eyebrow‑plucking initiation), and discussions of Freemasonry. Though members weren’t necessarily eye doctors, the eye served as a potent symbol of authority within many clandestine groups.
5 ‘Winged Monster’
A Utah cave painting, long touted as evidence of an ancient pterodactyl sighting, sparked debate after its 1928 discovery. The vivid red figures, created by Native American hands roughly 2,000 years ago, were later highlighted with chalk—a now‑illegal practice that altered the rock’s chemistry.
Experts of the 1970s, including rock‑art specialist Polly Schaafsma and geologist Francis Barnes, championed the “winged monster” theory, describing a beak lined with sharp teeth and likening the image to the region’s fossilized flying reptiles.
Modern analysis using DStretch—a pigment‑separating imaging tool—proved the “monster” was not a single creature but a composite of five overlapping images: a tall figure with large eyes, a shorter figure, a dog, a sheep, and a snakelike being. The pterodactyl myth thus dissolved under scientific scrutiny.
4 The Herculaneum Scrolls
When Mount Vesuvius obliterated Pompeii in AD 79, it also buried nearby Herculaneum. Excavations in 1752 uncovered the city’s library, containing roughly 1,800 scrolls that had been carbonized by the eruption. For centuries, these charred bundles were unreadable lumps.
Two centuries later, researchers employed X‑ray imaging to peer inside the fragile parchment without unrolling it, detecting Greek letters and fragments of text. While many scrolls remain partially indecipherable, the effort has revealed lost works by Epicurus and other philosophers, as well as previously unknown texts.
Beyond literary treasure, analysis of the inks showed an unexpectedly high lead content, challenging the belief that metallic inks only appeared around AD 420. The Herculaneum scrolls thus rewrite both literary and material histories.
3 The Fate Of The Ark Of The Covenant

Although Hebrew itself isn’t a cryptic language, a newly translated treatise—dubbed the “Treatise of the Vessels”—sheds light on the Ark of the Covenant’s destiny after King Solomon’s Temple was pillaged. The manuscript claims that, just before Nebuchadnezzar II’s Babylonian siege, the Ark was secretly relocated with the help of prophets and Levite custodians.
The text, however, dashes treasure‑hunter hopes: it asserts that the Ark and other sacred items were hidden across Israel and Babylonia, refusing to disclose precise locations. It ominously promises revelation only “when the Messiah son of David arrives…”
Scholars debate the treatise’s historicity, noting its fantastical elements—gold taken from the Garden of Eden’s walls, angelic guardians, and other mythic flourishes. Yet the notion that the Ark was concealed before the Babylonian onslaught may hold a kernel of truth, suggesting a blend of fact and legend.
2 Phaistos Disk
Since its 1908 discovery on Crete’s palace of Phaistos, the 4,000‑year‑old Phaistos Disk has tantalized linguists. Measuring about 15 cm in diameter, the fired‑clay disk bears 45 distinct symbols arranged into 241 boxed segments that spiral inward, resembling a pictographic comic strip.
After a six‑year collaborative effort at Oxford, researchers managed to decode roughly 90 % of the symbols. The breakthrough began with the recurring term “mother,” which led to the realization that the disk encodes a prayer honoring the Minoan mother goddess. One side appears dedicated to a pregnant woman, the other to a woman in labor.
1 The Voynich Breakthrough
The notoriously impenetrable Voynich manuscript finally yielded a modest breakthrough when linguist Stephen Bax adopted a botanical and astrological approach. By hunting for recognizable plant illustrations and zodiac motifs, he hoped the surrounding text would contain their names.
His strategy succeeded: the word “Taurus” emerged alongside a cluster of stars identified as the Pleiades, while plant names such as “juniper,” “coriander,” and “hellebor” appeared next to their respective drawings. In total, Bax deciphered 14 characters, unlocking six additional words.
Although the manuscript remains far from fully understood, Bax’s findings demonstrate that the cipher is genuine—not a medieval hoax—and that systematic, interdisciplinary methods can gradually unveil its secrets.

