until today,
and here is a box with literally hundreds of undelivered ones in it, all
images via Unlocking History Research Group archive, a letterlocked note is a complex method that involves
meticulously folding, rolling, tucking, and adhering the paper into its own
envelope. Prior to the advent of other sealing practices, this security measure
ensured that no one transporting the note became privy to its contents, as it happens the box contains 600 or so of them, six
centuries after it was penned, the contents hidden inside a Renaissance-era
letter plucked from a trunk at The Hague are finally readable,
above a digital rendering of the letter as it unfolds, according
to an article in Nature,
a group of MIT researchers, who work as Unlocking History, digitally unraveled the letter, which
otherwise would have to be opened by cutting through the paper, damaging the
object and potentially leaving it unreadable. Instead, they employed a
particularly sensitive X‐ray microtomography scanner designed for dental
practices, including mapping the exact mineral content of teeth. After scanning
the paper, researchers constructed 3D models alongside an algorithm built to
determine specific folding patterns, allowing them to open the note without
physically altering the artifact,
the scanned letter from July 31, 1697, dated July 31, 1697, the letter contained a request for a
death certificate from a man named Jacques Sennacques to his cousin Pierre Le
Pers, who lived at The Hague. “His request issued, Sennacques then spends the
rest of the letter asking for news of the family and commending his cousin to
the graces of God,” researchers said. “We do not know exactly why Le Pers did
not receive Sennacques’ letter, but given the itinerancy of merchants, it is
likely that Le Pers had moved on.” It’s unclear why this letter or the hundreds
of others, which are written in Dutch, English, French, Italian, Latin, and
Spanish, never reached their recipients,
to
watch Unlocking History unfold pop over to Vimeo, where you can view replicas of infamous and fictional
correspondence—the collection spans from Mary Queen of Scots to Harry Potter to
Beethoven—and dive further into the practice on the group’s site,
where you’ll find folding guides, a lengthy history, and an entire archive of
discreet missives, what an amazing appliance of science.
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