Sunday, April 29, 2018

Biliteral Cypher Code - Francis Bacon

DOC]Biliteral Cypher Code - Francis Bacon

https://www.baconlinks.com/docs/BILITERAL.doc
Bacon was 17½ years old and living in Paris when he invented his biliteral cypher code to protect state documents between France and England. At that time, he was the attaché to Queen Elizabeth's ambassador to France. By this time, he had already graduated college, spoke and translated four major languages and was ...


Francis Bacon's personal and secret
Biliteral Cypher Code
using a's & b's
(Late-16th Century)

is the predecessor of today's
Binary Number System
  using 0's & 1's now used in all modern
Computer Technology.
(Agusta Ada/Charles Babbage, Differential Engine -- early-19th Century; 
British Mathmetitian George Boole developes Boolean Algebra: 1850's)

Bacon was 17½ years old and living in Paris when he invented his biliteral cypher code to protect state documents between France and England.  At that time, he was the attaché to Queen Elizabeth's ambassador to France.  By this time, he had already graduated college, spoke and translated four major languages and was beginning his exemplary career in English Law, Natural Philosophy (physics and natural science) and, of course, writing.

end quote from this file:

My parents were given what seemed like a Hand written book by Francis Bacon on the Biliteral code when I was a child because they were ministers in charge of an "I AM" Sanctuary in Los Angeles between the years 1954 and 1960. Eventually they gave this book to the "I AM LIbrary" then in Shasta Springs, California (in between Dunsmuir and the city of Mt. Shasta in California. Whether it is still there or not I cannot say.

Francis Bacon also mentions "In writings in this code" that he was the author of the Shakespearean plays but would have been either put in jail or beheaded in those times for the aristocracy to be found writing something like the plays then (just like women were not allowed to be actors then only men. So, men had to play women's parts too).

The Francis Bacon Library is now I believe still a part of Pomona College Library or was during my teens and 20s and beyond. My parents and I visited this library when it was at a woman's home near Pomona College in California when I was about 10 years old then which would be about 1958.

No comments: