Cryptographie indéchiffrable

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cryptographie indéchiffrable (subtitle: basée sur de nouvelles combinaisons rationelles) is a French book on cryptography written by Émile Victor Théodore Myszkowski (a retired French colonel) and published in 1902.

His book was based around the description of a cipher that the author had invented and claimed (incorrectly) was "undecipherable" (i.e. secure against unauthorised attempts to read it). It was based around a form of repeated-key transposition.

See also: Books on cryptography, Transposition cipher
This article about a science book is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.