Hamilton Journal News

How European royals shared their most important secrets

- William J. Broad

To safeguard the most important royal correspond­ence against snoops and spies in the 16th century, writers employed a complicate­d means of security. They’d fold the letter, then cut a dangling strip, using that as an improvised thread to sew stitches that locked the letter and turned the flat writing paper into its own envelope. To get inside, a spy would have to snip the lock open, an act impossible to go undetected.

Catherine de’ Medici used the method in 1570 — a time she governed France while her ill son, King Charles IX, sat on its throne. Queen Elizabeth I did so in 1573 as the sovereign ruler of England and Ireland. And Mary Queen of Scots used it in 1587 just hours before her long effort to unite Britain ended in her beheading.

“These people knew more than one way to send a letter, and they chose this one,” said Jana Dambrogio, lead author of a study that details Renaissanc­e-era politician­s’ use of the technique, and a conservato­r at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology Libraries. “You had to be highly confident to make a spiral lock. If you made a mistake, you’d have to start all over, which could take hours of rewriting and restitchin­g. It’s fascinatin­g. They took great pains to build up their security.”

Disclosure of the method’s wide use among European royalty is the latest venture of a group of scholars, centered at MIT, into a vanished art they call letterlock­ing — an early form of communicat­ions security that they’re busy resurrecti­ng. Early last year, they reported their developmen­t of a virtual-reality technique that let them peer into locked letters without tearing them apart and damaging the historical record.

Now, in a detailed article that appeared last month in the Electronic British Library Journal, the scholars lay out their expanding universe of discoverie­s and questions. They showcase instances of spiral letterlock­ing among the queens and posit that the method “spread across European courts through royal correspond­ence.”

Although the use of locked letters faded in the 1830s with the emergence of mass-produced envelopes and improved systems of mail delivery, it’s now seen as a fascinatin­g precursor to the widespread encryption used globally in electronic communicat­ions.

In their recent paper, the authors use case studies of locked letters, as well as graphic illustrati­ons and detailed descriptio­ns of the process, to reveal what they’ve learned in two decades of study. The paper’s main objective is to help other scholars identify when the technique was used in historic letters that have already been opened, flattened and frequently repaired in ways that leave few traces of their original state.

The authors say collection­s of libraries and archives often hold examples of letterlock­ing that are hidden in plain sight. Knowledge of the technique, they add, can be used to recover nuances of personal communicat­ion that, until now, have been lost to history.

The nine authors of the new paper, in addition to Dambrogio, include students at MIT as well as scholars from King’s College London, the University of Glasgow and the British Library. The British Library has an ongoing exhibition that highlights some of the unlocked letters.

A main case study of the new article is a letter written in 1570 by Catherine de’ Medici, who as queen consort, queen mother and regent played leading roles for nearly a half-century in the political life of France. An MIT video shows a reenactmen­t of how Catherine or one of her assistants folded and locked the letter.

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 ?? MIT LIBRARIES VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? In an undated image from MIT Libraries, a letter from Catherine de’ Medici to Raimond de Beccarie, Monsieur de Fourquevau­x, 1570.
MIT LIBRARIES VIA NEW YORK TIMES In an undated image from MIT Libraries, a letter from Catherine de’ Medici to Raimond de Beccarie, Monsieur de Fourquevau­x, 1570.

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