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Encrypting texts is a very old technique, which is known already from the time of the Romans, if not earlier. Now a simple text cypher is easily done with low-tech means, as long as those trying to break the code also have to rely on low tech.

Now medieval maps were often secrets. Therefore one might imagine that some medieval king wants his maps encrypted as well. Now it's of course easy to encrypt names using any text cypher, and moreover you may use non-standard symbols for landmarks. However, those would probably be easy to decode for anyone who is familiar with at least a small part of the mapped landscape. Therefore an effective encryption would need to encrypt the actual map, including the positions and relations of the landmarks to each other.

Therefore my question is: How might one encrypt a map?

The conditions are:

  • Encryption/decryption should be doable with medieval means.
  • For someone familiar with the encoding, it should be possible to decode the relevant features in little time, using only a minimum of tools (the map should be usable on travels).
  • The encryption should be non-obvious to someone who is familiar with the mapped region, but doesn't know the encoding (that is, the encryption doesn't need to withstand modern cryptanalysis tools — the Caesar code wouldn't withstand them either — but it should not allow someone not knowing the code to look at the map and say "I recognize this region").
  • In response to Keith: The map should be detailed enough that you can find your way, and can identify special spots (like the spot where you want to position your army, or the spot where you have buried the secret chest). However, the map can be amended with written information for details (for example, if it allows you roughly to get to the place of the buried chest, the exact placement could be written in a text referring to the landmarks around), so there's no need for extreme precision.
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    $\begingroup$ "Now medieval maps were often secrets." It's a fun idea, but do you have any backup for this statement? Since the medieval period ended nominally at 1400 C.E., any example you provide must predate this. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 21:27
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    $\begingroup$ Strictly speaking, Medieval maps weren't secret, they were virtually non-existent. For the most part, Medieval spatial information records were written sets of directions. On the rare occasions maps were made, they tended to be rough diagrams intended more to convey religious doctrine than geography. The surveying needed to produce modern topographic maps with military significance was a later development. The modern style maps associated with pseudo-medieval fantasy are one of the many anachronisms of fantasy. (not that there's anything wrong with that) $\endgroup$
    – smithkm
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 22:51
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    $\begingroup$ @smithkm is spot on. The question would benefit from a clarification on the level of detail expected in the map. Even maps from the classical period were usually quite rudimentary. $\endgroup$
    – Keith
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 23:43
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    $\begingroup$ @2012rcampion The technical phrasing used today is that "encryption" refers to making a document readable only by authorized parties, and a "cipher" is any procedural set of instructions for how to execute said encryption. For example, DES is considered a "Feistel cipher" because it is a procedure which uses a Feistel network for security. These terms should be contrasted to "code," which is merely a way of communicating information, not a secret (e.g. Morse code) $\endgroup$
    – Cort Ammon
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 4:53
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    $\begingroup$ Make the map to an inconsistent scale. There is (potentially apocryphal?) story that loyalist mapmakers made the Maine wilderness out to be several hundred miles narrower that it actually was, making a coastal landing of American troops and a quick hundred mile hike to the major Quebec cities seem like a great idea. Four hundred miles later, out of food and suffering from the bugs and disease, the troops arrived significantly weakened. At least that's the story, unfortunately I can't find a reference. $\endgroup$
    – Josiah
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 14:55

29 Answers 29

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You could always do it the way Robert Baden-Powell (the founder of the Scout Movement) did when he was posted to Malta as a spy, Draw maps as butterflies or some other animal. This does not require any special tools to decrypt other than to merely look at it. Those unfamiliar with the concept will see only an image of an animal / bug. In theory this could still be used today depending on how many people know what you are up to. In particular, in the included image you can note that "secret spots" (in this case gun emplacements) are marked on the wings of the butterfly as patterns further hiding the real intentions behind the image. Essentially if you could produce a convincing enough image of an animal that could have features that stand out only to the recipient or those knowing the code, you would have both an alibi for carrying a "map", as well no real proof that what you are holding is a map.

Links to Sources:

http://publicdomainreview.org/2013/07/10/robert-baden-powells-entomological-intrigues/ http://pinetreeweb.com/bp-adventure02.htm

Map of a Fort Disguised as a Butterfly Map of a Fort Disguised as a Butterfly2 Map of a Fort Disguised as a Moth Map of a Fort Disguised as a Leaf

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    $\begingroup$ +1 for the idea and for a great fact about Baden Powell I was unaware of :) $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 9:06
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    $\begingroup$ This technique of hiding information in a way which makes it appear as unrelated information is actually an example of steganography, not encryption. $\endgroup$
    – Philipp
    Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 17:11
  • $\begingroup$ @Whelkaholism One of the many things you learn about him, having being in Scouts. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 23:55
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    $\begingroup$ @Phillip You are correct this is steganography although I did not explicitly say that this was encryption either (merely I replying to the original question in that encryption/decryption was to be doable through medieval means). I suppose I could have reworded "This does not require any special tools to decrypt..." to be a little clearer on this point. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 23:59
  • $\begingroup$ @TheWanderingCoder I was in Cubs many, many years ago, but I don't recall this :) $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 11, 2015 at 9:31
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Folding.

Make a large map with large erroneous portions that become hidden with proper folding. This will confound even someone familiar with the area. "That looks like such and such river, but it doesn't have this adjacent mountain range..."

Yes, creasing could give it away, so the solution there is to use separate pieces of different maps which, when layered and oriented properly, reveal the real map. The cipher would be something akin to overlapping the dot marking certain towns or geographical landmarks.

Basically this is a map made of a collage of maps. I can't find a proper example, because maps aren't usually designed to do this, but it might look something like this when the erroneous sections are folded away:

enter image description here

Folding is preferred for the single or separate maps to produce the final map. Otherwise you just have the complete map cut into pieces. The maps can otherwise contain many folds to hide the proper ones and be flattened when not in use to avoid capture of the proper folding. Adding other maps which play no part in the final map will serve to further confuse anyone who captures them.

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    $\begingroup$ How would you stop people from seeing the creases in the map from people using it? If the map was used a lot, there'd be pretty prominent creases, so what would stop people from just using the creases to refold the map? $\endgroup$
    – Martin_xs6
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 20:59
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    $\begingroup$ @Martin_xs6 You must have stopped reading at some point. "Yes, creasing could give it away, so the solution there is to use separate pieces of different maps " and "The maps can otherwise contain many folds and be flattened when not in use to avoid capture. Adding other maps which play no part in the final map will serve to further confuse anyone who captures them." $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 21:01
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    $\begingroup$ Perhaps all the creases and more are already there, as in a typically folded modern map. The trick lies in known which sections to fold in and in what order to reduce the large page to a valid map. And of course, the unfolded map must look "mappy" even in the fictional areas. Mad Magazine's fold-in writ large, as it were. $\endgroup$
    – RBerteig
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 21:01
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    $\begingroup$ I think you're very much overestimating how easy it is to refold something given the creases. I invite you to try the following img.geocaching.com/cache/… origami which gives all creases with direction. I tried over 10 destroyed pieces of paper and 20+ hours I'm nowhere nearer a solution. $\endgroup$
    – DRF
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 20:17
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    $\begingroup$ @TheWanderingCoder I believe only folds present in the resulting object are marked (i.e. if you fold the whole thing in the middle but then at some point reverse or flatten part of the fold that part would not be marked). This means that somewhat fewer folds are drawn then would end up being present on the resulting map as creases, but adding them would IMO make it harder rather then easier to solve. I know there are people who are quite good at solving this type of origami puzzle, but I'd still say it's a decent "encryption" strategy in the sense of Cesar's cipher. $\endgroup$
    – DRF
    Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 7:30
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Anamorphic drawing

enter image description here

uses a reflecting surface to draw/view a scene (or a map)

The shape of the reflecting surface is the cryptographic "key" that would allow the information to be extracted, while hiding it from anyone lacking the correct reflector.

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    $\begingroup$ I think it would be easy to figure out. It might not even bother much: the relationship between featues is more important than a uniform scale. It would be necessary to use a method that didn't have an obvious way of verifting a decryption. $\endgroup$
    – JDługosz
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 7:01
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    $\begingroup$ This might be less easy to figure out if only the essential parts of the map have this distortion. However, one would need to consider the type of information being hidden. In the anamorphic drawing example, the topology is unchanged (no matter how much you mess with it), so if it's a map of your strongholds with identifiable weak spots, the essential information is leaked simply by looking at the connected lines between the strongholds and mapping them to reality $\endgroup$
    – Cort Ammon
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 15:46
  • $\begingroup$ This is a really cool idea. Maybe you could even combine a couple of reflective surfaces to confuse things even more? $\endgroup$
    – Martin_xs6
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:43
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    $\begingroup$ If the reflective piece placed in the centre was some shape other than a cylinder, this could work really well. With a cylinder, it's a pretty straightforward distortion, but imagine if it was a chalice shape - non-uniform distortion. Or even better, something that's not the same all round, so it has to be oriented correctly. you could even shape it such that certain areas of the map aren't visible in the reflection, and then fill those patches with false information. As a bonus, the "decoder" would look like an ornament - say, a small polished statue. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 13:12
  • $\begingroup$ The main problem with this solution is that you do not require the original key (reflective surface) to decode the map. In fact, anything that is similar in shape (e.g. a cilinder twice the diameter) will produce an image that allows the viewer to guess what the correct key should be. A second problem is that this method only allows a small portion of the map to be useful, making the map mostly useless. $\endgroup$
    – Sumurai8
    Commented Jun 11, 2015 at 9:46
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Encryption requires a key to decrypt. Lets work with that assumption.

Draw a full map to act as the "key", and cut holes and lines and shapes in it that ruin it. Draw a second full map by first overlaying the cut out pieces of the key on top of the second map. For each section that is not covered, draw fake details and information into it. Then, remove the covered sections and replace it with legitimate information.

Now, only when you have both the key and the map are you able to make any sense of the two - the key is full of holes and as such unusable by itself, and the map is full of fake sections that are covered up by the key when applied correctly.

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    $\begingroup$ For a medieval time frame this is a quality answer. $\endgroup$
    – James
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 15:05
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    $\begingroup$ @James I'd go as far as to say that this is the best answer. $\endgroup$
    – minseong
    Commented Oct 18, 2015 at 21:19
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Color Encoding

When the map is made, add landmarks and terrain features using a specific color. Accompany the resulting map with a set of glasses with color-filtering lenses designed specifically for that map. Medieval techniques would cause each map and each set of glasses to be slightly different, making perfect decoding of unassociated map-glasses pairs to be difficult and/or confusing.

Image Distortion

Instead of using color filtration, the maps could be made using image-distorting lenses, much in the same way as the mirrors at a fun house. If the cartographer makes unimportant/important parts of the map using lenses that make everything wavy, the resulting hodgepodge of real and wavy parts can easily cause confusion.

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    $\begingroup$ "Medieval techniques would cause each map and each set of glasses to be slightly different" This is intriguing. I suppose they would cast the glass with an arbitrary tint, then the mapmaker could mix pigments while wearing the glasses, in order to determine easily which colors would be visible through the lenses. The distorting lenses seem like a riskier proposition - they would require precise alignment with the map in order for it to be readable, instead of doubly distorted. $\endgroup$
    – recognizer
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 14:45
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You could draw parts of the map on pieces of thin paper. The pieces would need to be folded and stacked in a specific way. Then, the map is lit from the back somehow (sunlight, sky or firelight). This reveals the map.

If you've seen the original Iron Man, Tony Stark uses a method like this (without the folding) to disguise his plans for the first Iron Man suit he made in the cave when he was captured. When the pieces were arranged correctly, it showed the full suit, but otherwise they just looked like random drawings. (Sorry, couldn't find the link..)

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  • $\begingroup$ +1 Using circle-shaped pieces instead of rectangles would increase complexity. $\endgroup$
    – algiogia
    Commented Jun 12, 2015 at 8:45
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Hide the map in what looks like a coded message of text.

For instance, take the following text with various capital letters:

AT VEro eos et accusamus et iusto odio dignissimos ducimus qui bLAnditiis praesentium volupTAtum deleniti atque corrupti quos dOLores et quas molestias EXCEpturi Sint occaecati cupiditate non proVIDENT, SIMIlique sunt IN cULpa Qui OFficia DEserunt mollitia animi, id est laboRUm et doloRum fuGA. et haRUm qUIDEM rerum facilis est et expeDITa distinctio. Nam liberO tEMporE, cum soluta nobis est eligENDI OPtio cumque nihil iMPEdit qUO minus id quod mAXIME placeat facerE Possimus, omnis vOluptas Assumenda est, omniS dolOr repellendus. tEmporibus autem quibusdaM Et aut officiis DebitIs aut rerum necesSITatibus saepe eveniet ut et voluptateS REPUdiandae sint et molESTiae non recusandae. itaque earum rerum hic tenetur a sapiente dElectus, ut aut reiciendis voluptatibus maiores alias consequatUR AUt perferendis doloribus asperiores repellat.

Apply the cypher which says to split lines after a certain number of characters at the nearest space:

AT VEro eos et accusamus et iusto odio dignissimos ducimus 
qui bLAnditiis praesentium volupTAtum deleniti atque corrupti 
quos dOLores et quas molestias EXCEpturi Sint occaecati cupiditate 
non proVIDENT, SIMIlique sunt IN cULpa Qui OFficia DEserunt mollitia 
animi, id est laboRUm et doloRum fuGA. et haRUm qUIDEM rerum 
facilis est et expeDITa distinctio. Nam liberO tEMporE, cum 
soluta nobis est eligENDI OPtio cumque nihil iMPEdit qUO minus 
id quod mAXIME placeat facerE Possimus, omnis vOluptas Assumenda 
est, omniS dolOr repellendus. tEmporibus autem quibusdaM Et aut 
officiis DebitIs aut rerum necesSITatibus saepe eveniet ut et 
voluptateS REPUdiandae sint et molESTiae non recusandae. itaque 
earum rerum hic tenetur a sapiente dElectus, ut aut reiciendis 
voluptatibus maiores alias consequatUR AUt perferendis doloribus 
asperiores repellat.

Throw away lower case letters and replace them with spaces, replace the capital letters with some character.

XXXXX                                                 
     XX                         XX                    
      XX                       XXXX    XX             
       XXXXXXXXXXX           XXX  XX  X XX      XX    
                 XX          X     XXXX  XX   XXXXX   
                  XXX               X     XX XX   XX  
                    XXXXXXX                XXX     XX 
         XXXXXX            XXX              X       X 
         X    X               X                     XX
         X    X                XXX                     
         XXXXXX                  XXX                  
                                   X                  
                                   XXXXX              

The simple map is revealed. Meanwhile any captured documents would have enemy spies trying to decipher some encoded message, when no such message exists.

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    $\begingroup$ Not very easy to decode by hand. $\endgroup$
    – Mnementh
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 14:14
  • $\begingroup$ @Mnementh It's not supposed to be easy. Not only does it require a cipher, it requires skill. $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:09
  • $\begingroup$ Yeah, skill could be an necessity, some other answers involve also some skill, like the correct folding. So it's fine I think. $\endgroup$
    – Mnementh
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:21
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    $\begingroup$ Also I'm pretty sure sed has been around since the middle ages. $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:23
  • $\begingroup$ @Mnementh OT, but good to see another Pern fan :) $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 9:20
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We can make some sort of jigsaw puzzle with square pieces without holes and pinches from map.

enter image description here

And put special symbol on the bottom side of the map. Let us consider the "MAP_OF_CITY" is the key. So, the first piece is the one with "M1" on bottom, the next is "A1", third is "P1" and so on, than, after "Y1", the "M2", than "A2" and so on. Of course we have pieces that are fake (for example, with letter of "W1","W2" and so on).

So, the map can be assembled quite fast, and pieces can be quite small for images to be usefull.

Also the map can be something, that do not looks like a map - like Ammassalik wooden maps enter image description here

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    $\begingroup$ Great idea to get away from the map completely. Obfuscation is always useful. $\endgroup$
    – Josiah
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 15:00
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Create a map grid with letters on one axis and numbers on the other, ex: A through Z on top, 1-26 on the left.

If you need finer details, you can increase that, say A through AZ and 1-52.

Now turn your map into a written description:

The river is an eighth of a mile wide and runs from A3 to E7 to M6. It widens around L6 and there is a crossable ford at D5. The trade road runs from A5 through...

Now you have a written description, and you can use standard encryption techniques on that. You have two options with that:

  1. Encrypt all of the text. This is the most secure, but takes the longest to decrypt.
  2. Only encrypt the coordinates. This is less secure, because people will be able to gather rough details without the code. But it also makes it much faster to decode and reverse to the correct coordinates and recreate the map.
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  • $\begingroup$ +1. Also, in essence this is basically how we do it today albeit that our written description might sometimes be less human-readable a binary string representing a raster image. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 13, 2015 at 15:52
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Love this question, and there are some ingenious answers already.

I haven't checked the engineering on whether this would be possible, but I'm thinking a Pantograph with custom geometry to transform the map outlines; the transforming element could be replaceable for different encodings.

Pantograph animation

So, General 1 creates his master map. It is transformed onto another sheet, which is given to Disposable Soldier 1 to take to General 2, who uses the previously agreed upon pantograph element to reconstruct the original.

Doable with some bits of wood and a charcoal stick; although the transforming element may have to be more accurately made.

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    $\begingroup$ To make this more secure, use several differnt pantograph settings with different colors of ink. Then when decoding, use the ink color to determine the setting. $\endgroup$
    – Jabe
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 15:39
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    $\begingroup$ +1 It's a neat idea. Any simple mechanical pantograph will always be linear though, so Jabe's idea for using multiple pantographs with different colors to resize the various elements back to the proper size is an excellent amendment. $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:16
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    $\begingroup$ @Samuel Not so. The Lipkin linkage (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peaucellier–Lipkin_linkage) is an extremely simple device but produces a non-linear transform. $\endgroup$
    – user58697
    Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 0:45
  • $\begingroup$ Excellent, someone with better engineering knowledge than me :) I really want to try making a map transformer now. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 9:03
  • $\begingroup$ @user58697 That linkage doesn't transform both ways. It can't be used as a pantograph that encodes and then decodes information. $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 12, 2015 at 16:53
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Invisible ink

It is is not exactly cryptography, but steganography, but you are using an innocent looking sheet of paper and paint the map in invisible ink which will be visible if heated. The idea is already known in the time of the old Greeks.

Grille

Use a Fleißner Grill. Draw the map, divide it in equal parts divisible by four and create a template where one fourth of entries are open. Look at the windows, enumerate the parts on the back, rotate the grille and continue. In this case the map must not have shared lines or features on their borders because then it is a jigsaw puzzle which can be solved..

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Excellent question. I don't know if it has ever been done.

Substitution and Transposition

First, re-arranging map elements, such as a mountain-replaced-by-a-body-of-water. But this is recognizable to someone familiar with your region.

Next, re-assembly of the mapped region by squares of, say 500m x 500m, so that there is a distortion that only your readers can understand how to re-assemble it.

Smooth out the features so that they blend together and you have a map of an un-recognizable region with features that are not familiar to anyone from 'round here.

Your readers then take up the scissors and re-assemble and re-substitute. Feel free to throw in classic cryptography of the names of features or strategic positions after that.

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  • $\begingroup$ Another possibility here, if you have access to any type of transparent material to write on, would be to put a few features each on many different pages, with ciphered instructions for laying the pages together to form a final picture. The pages would be rotated differing degrees and overlapping one another to the point that it would be impossible to put them together accurately without the instructions. At the most secure, each page could have a single feature and two or three coded reference points that don't refer to a real location, just provide a point to line up with other pages. $\endgroup$
    – Bryon
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 20:23
  • $\begingroup$ @Bryon good point. I guess it depends how deep you want it to be crypted (is that a sentence?). There are many opportunities: cut it into a hundred pieces with cryptic symbols on the back of each, etc. This should confuse the casual observer who is familiar with the region, though. I look forward to finding out! $\endgroup$
    – Mikey
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 20:25
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    $\begingroup$ I think you beat me to it with what is a very similar idea, though yours does include more obfuscation. +1 $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 21:06
  • $\begingroup$ @Samuel no, I love the folding idea; I just don't know how much the OP wants to encrypt, so I put in some age-old techniques. $\endgroup$
    – Mikey
    Commented Jun 8, 2015 at 21:37
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One idea which can be combined with the others is to have a stack of decoys. Following the wrong one can be expensive or dangerous, if it includes things like safe reef passages and mountain passes.

You have to know which parts of which sheets are right, as well as how to fold/mask/layer them properly.

The cost of brute-forcing the key could then be higher than the value of the map.

Some specific details might be practically coded as plain text, which is then encrypted in a conventional manner. For example, a shoreline can be covered with numbered points, and the safe way through the rocks/reefs is encoded as a list of waypoints in a separate document.

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Visual Cryptography provides a very nice approach:

enter image description here

The advantage is that if done right, each share has exactly zero information. Suppose that you convert the map into grayscale "pixels". You take a transparent sheet and for each pixel, fill half of the pixel at a random orientation. This is the key.

Now you take another transparent sheet, put it on top of the key sheet, and start drawing the map by filling exactly half of each pixel again, but at such an orientation that combined with the underlying key it will either result in a fully black pixel, a half-black pixel, or anywhere inbetween.

Very simple, completely secure (zero information in each share separately), and does not require a computer to create. (though admittedly transparent sheets might be difficult to come by in those times)

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How about drawing the maps on the glass of a set of lamps. When you want to see the map, you can set the lamps up at a certain distance and angle to a screen (this would be the key). You then setup a screen of some sort (like the wall of a tent, or other flat, lightly colored surface) When you light all the lamps, the map is projected onto the screen. If you don't want the maps captured, smash them.

It would look like this, except the pictures would be parts of a map, and overlapping. Also, you could have a more complicated shade or blown glass cover for the lamp to distort or mask things for more secrecy.

enter image description here

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Use stack of transparent papers

enter image description here

Each paper consists of patches of real and fake parts of a map drawn on them (with solid background), but it is mostly transparent. When stack in the correct order, all fake pieces are hidden under the real ones, revealing the true map. Every paper is numbered from 1 to N, giving N! different arrangements. The decryption key is a sequence of numbers in which they need to be stacked. Papers are randomly shuffled before storing the map. This map is easy to decrypt and read and decrypting doesn't require any additional items. In addition the map can be split between multiple parties. Also pieces that contain only fake patches can be added to increase the difficulty.

Edit: In addition every piece can be stack in obverse or reverse giving you total of N!*2^N possibilities

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    $\begingroup$ Did transparent paper exist in medieval times? $\endgroup$
    – celtschk
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 18:47
  • $\begingroup$ I don't know, you can cut the transparent pieces off or paint it on a glass $\endgroup$
    – Cano64
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 20:03
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ I don't think the order that you stack them matters, since they are transparent... You just need a way to tell which orientation they should be in (which side up, which corner where, etc..) $\endgroup$
    – Martin_xs6
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 21:52
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    $\begingroup$ @Martin_xs6 Some of them contain e.g. white squares that mask whatever is shown on the ones below them. $\endgroup$
    – Random832
    Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 3:47
  • $\begingroup$ Ahh, that makes it a lot more practical. Especially since scraping off the mask would make there be a potentially ridiculous amount of lines on the map, making it hard to read. $\endgroup$
    – Martin_xs6
    Commented Jun 10, 2015 at 15:01
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Use a one-time pad with XOR.

To encrypt

1) Draw your map as a black and white grid of squares (bitmap) made up of filled and empty squares (plaintext)

_________
|_|_|_|_|
|_|X|X|X|
|_|X|_|_|
|_|X|_|_|

obviously you can make this as big as you want.

2) Draw another bitmap with squares filled in randomly (key)

_________
|X|_|X|X|
|X|_|X|_|
|_|X|_|X|
|_|X|X|_|

3) Draw your encrypted map with the following rules: For each square compare the contents of 1) and 2) and colour in only the squares that are different (black in one, but not the other)

_________
|X|_|X|X|
|X|X|_|X|
|_|_|_|X|
|_|_|X|_|

To decrypt:

Take 3) and 2) For each square compare the contents of and colour in only the squares that are different (black in one, but not the other) Voila, you get 1) back.

_________
|X|_|X|X|
|X|X|_|X|
|_|_|_|X|
|_|_|X|_|


_________
|X|_|X|X|
|X|_|X|_|
|_|X|_|X|
|_|X|X|_|

=> original

_________
|_|_|_|_|
|_|X|X|X|
|_|X|_|_|
|_|X|_|_|

Provided you filled in 2) randomly then there is no way of breaking this encryption unless you have the key. Also you should only use 2) once and not for a set of maps.

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Similar to what Mnementh suggested.

Start with a large piece of high quality leather. Leave large top and bottom margins and draw the map in between. Full width but only the middle part vertically.

Now divide the map into vertical strips of width suitable for a belt with a marker. From these strips mark a belt length portion that covers the map containing but has a different top and bottom margins, start and end points for each strip. Belt holes and buckles should also go to the unmarked part. Cut off the strips, fill the unmarked parts with fake map lines, and turn the strips into belts. The belt decoration on the other side should tell with some code the strip ordering and the top margins used.

Anyone who knows the same code of markings to order and margin can reassemble the map. Presuming that they use same measures for the margins... Each belt can be given to different person and aged to different degree.

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I'm most familiar with the encryption of numbers, so I came at this from a numbers angle.

Maps can be numbers, most usually in a grid. These numbers can either represent geographical features, topography, or something else entirely.

Features grid visually represented (screenshot of Advance Wars on GBA):

features

Topography:

topography

Now, since we're using numbers, we can use classic encryption methods. You'd have your original map, and you'd have a key, a grid of random numbers. You could then add/etc. the respective numbers on both grids to form the encrypted map. As long as the recipient had the key, they could reverse calculate the original map, and it would be impossible for anybody without a key to decrypt it, as there could feasibly be a key that would generate any possible map.

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An idea is having longer stripes of paper. Lets say you have six of these stripes (ABCDEF). Some of them you can now lay horizontal, some vertical, lets say:

AAA
BBB
CCC

DEF
DEF
DEF

Now you lay the stripes over each other in a pattern, so that some parts are hidden by others:

AEA
DBF
CEF

On the parts that are hidden in the final layout paint some fake map to distract people.

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Well it seems to me that any kind of direct-placement of symbols on a page wouldn't work, simply because it doesn't matter what the symbols are -- anyone familiar with the area could infer meaning from them, and deduce an "unusual" one to be more important.

Instead, some means of scrambling the actual data seems in order. That's rather challenging to do with a single, homogeneous page, as there is no easy way to un-scramble paper, except with cutting and rearranging, as @Mikey suggests.

I'd imagine some kind of tool or "key" used to encode and decode the map. Such as a specially-shaped glass lens. Place it on top of the map, and it de-encrypts it. Or blue-glass filter, and multi-color paper. Hard to see the real data without it. Or a chemical added to it, which only reacts with another chemical.

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The requirement that the map can be used while on a journey, presumably under Medieval conditions, is a tough condition. I can think of all sorts of ways of encrypting a map using technology available in the Middle Ages, but most of the ideas I come up with would require considerable time to decrypt, tools that might not be so convenient to lug around, etc.

But here are two ideas that I can suggest:

  1. Cut the map into pieces, with each piece being too small to be of practical value. Write some code number of symbols on each piece that can be used to put them back together correctly. Note the symbol must be in code: obviously if the pieces are simply labeled with grid co-ordinates, anyone could quickly figure this out and put them together. But there are any number of routine cyphers available to encrypt the grid co-ordinates.

Combine this with encrypting any text on the map, so that an unauthorized person can't use place names as clues to figuring out the proper arrangement.

Deliberately mis-align things that cross the borders between sections slightly. You don't want someone to be able to re-arrange the pieces by lining up roads and rivers, or you just turn the cypher into a jigsaw puzzle. So if, say, a road crosses from tile A4 to tile E6, move the road just slightly to the north on the edge of A4 and slightly to the south on the edge of B6 so it doesn't line up.

  1. Use conventional map symbols, but use them randomly for the wrong things. Like on one part of the map a blue line may be a river like we would expect, but elsewhere it is a road, and yet somewhere else it is a mountain range. Coded text on the map tells which it is in each case. The text is encrypted by conventional means. So if I see what looks like a mountain range, and it's labeled "Fwghthrnbr", and I decrypt this and it turns out to mean "Rhine River", then I know this mountain range really represents a river.

Hmm, if we use a system to encrypt the text that doesn't look like code but like plausible names, like we encrypt "Rhine River" as "Harold's Mountains", then to someone trying to read the map, it might look like an ordinary map, and he just can't figure out where this place is. If he doesn't realize it's in code, he won't try to crack the code. It would be easy enough to have some substitution cypher that treats common terrain names, like "River", "City", "Bridge", etc, as units that are transformed into each other according to some set and reversible rules. Like arrange them in a list and then go up or down so many slots in the list based on the position of the word on the map or other words around it.

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Usability may depend on intentions. Assume you want to transfer a map from A to B once, with the risk of being intercepted. Shave the head of a messenger. Tattoo the map on his skalp. Wait for his hair to grow. Send the messenger (with a fake map for distraction). At the destination shave hime again.

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Draw a normal and usable map but include some extra points (like trees with n branches or letters with a special shape..) in it. To decipher the secrets one would have to connect the extra points.. The crossing of two or more connectors are the hidden places..

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Don't make a map, make directions

Think about what a map really is. A map is a visual display of local geography. It shows rivers, hills, roads and towns. The biggest reason a map is used is to figure out directions to get to a certain place. Therefore, instead of encrypting the map, cut out the middleman and just give directions.

Make the directions harder to follow for those that must not know

Instead of using official names for villages, use codewords that include minor events from villages. Refer to villages not by the village name, but by the name of a local dignitary. Most people don't know the name of the dignitaries a village over. Hell, most people don't even know the names for their own village dignitaries.

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    $\begingroup$ A map gives the ability to give any set of directions for an area. What do you do when you discover the bridge at the river, that step six tells you to cross, is out? $\endgroup$
    – Samuel
    Commented Jun 9, 2015 at 16:20
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How about having a Mirror Key for your encoded map?

You place the mirror at a certain location on the map with a certain orientation, then look at it from a certain point and the map will come into focus.

Notes:

  • The mirror key doesn't need to be a perfect mirror, but instead just reflective enough to make out the image. Polished metal would work and would be consistent with medieval times
  • As you are drawing your encoded map you need to replicate the same setup as when you'll read it later, and then draw it based on the reflected image you want (I'm sure that will take a LOT of patience and practice).
  • You can also have "dark" places that won't show up in your reflected image. This will let you add in features to the map that don't belong.
  • You can vary several things to make it difficult to read the map even if someone finds the mirror and the map together:
    • Where you put the mirror in relation to the map
    • What side of the mirror is up
    • What angle to hold the mirror at
    • Where you look at the image from
    • How the map is folded
  • The mirror will take some experimentation to get right. For example, you may find that some setups won't work because the places you'll need to draw will overlap. Probably the easiest would be to cut flat pieces and have them at different planned angles to avoid this. However, curved pieces would add an extra layer of distortion (and complexity!)

enter image description here

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Encrypt the text-based instructions necessary for creating the map

for example, take a chess game and imagine the board as a map - most commonly, the board arrangement is determined by walking through how the pieces got there rather than giving each piece a coordinate

so for example, you could have instructions to place a city in the dead center, then a mountain range from east to west just north of the city, an enemy city a quarter of the map away to the north-east on the other side of the mountain range, and then an equal amount away but to the north-west have a hidden cave with the treasure, that will be visible only by the last light of Durin's Day, etc.

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Up is Down

Up is down.

(I can't make comments yet)


*sigh*

Ok, this is a map featured in the third Pirates of the Caribbean movie. It consist of several Annulus of different sizes, with a circle in the center of them all.

I think this could be done with thin wood by attaching the circle and the outer annulus to other, more stable surface (like another piece of thin wood, either circular or square). Or, maybe it doesn't have to be attached at all; by leaving the pieces separated (and maybe split in several parts) they can be carried easily and add other level of difficulty to this. It could also be done in paper, though.

Since the pieces can be rotated, the key is the relative position of all the pieces.

If the annulus are split in several parts, its pieces have many ways to be put together as long as there are no recognizable "outlines" (as stated below), but that could be solved by adding fake ones. Each piece could have some sort of identifier, like signs, letters or numbers (don't have to be sequential, it may be "1", "-8", "Pi" for example), so one can remember their relative order.

All locations don't have to be real, only the relevant one. The rest can be fake to make it harder to solve the puzzle.

Annotations could be made like in the film (between one annulus and other, as seen in the pic), or inside of them.

You could use one key for the map in question, and other key for the annotations.

The downside of this is that it has to be a map of either many outlined parts (as is the case of the movie with islands), or a map of a zone with no recognizable outlines (e.g. a river). If it contains a river, the solution would be make only one part of the river "real" (the most relevant) and then complete it with fake splits, if possible in other part of the map but that, when using a certain key ("position") the fake river matches with the real (i.e. a "collision" in the "output").

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  • $\begingroup$ You need to add some prose to go with the picture and link, or it will be deleted. What is that? Assume the link will be broken for some future reader. $\endgroup$
    – JDługosz
    Commented Jun 14, 2015 at 7:30
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As an extension to Andrew's answer, quickly generating pseudorandom binary strings for the one time pad by hand can done in the following way:

  • Take a number and transform it into binary.
  • Add a 0 to the end of the bit string.
  • Remove the first bit from the string.
  • XOR this string with the previous string.
  • This is your random string.
  • Repeat.

This is based on the Xorshift algorithm.

This algorithm will generate $2^n$ random numbers for a seed of length n. It is not secure, but it eliminates the need to share a large amount of random numbers.

An Example:

11011 (The start number) - First Number - 27.

110110 (Add a zero.)

10110 (Remove the first bit.)

01101 (XOR with previous result) - Second number - 21.

...

A simple implementation in Python:

def random(seed):
    seed ^= seed << 1
    yield seed
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  • $\begingroup$ Welcome to Worldbuilding.SE. This seems a bit hard for working doable with medieval means, but the OP did not ask for medieval knowledge (binary are too new) though... $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 12, 2015 at 12:59
  • $\begingroup$ @bilbo_pingouin Binary was discovered in 1679 by Liebniz - Is that too recent? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 13, 2015 at 15:20
  • $\begingroup$ hard way to have 1672 in the middle ages. But it's up to the OP. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 13, 2015 at 15:23
  • $\begingroup$ Numbering systems with bases other than ten have existed since ancient times. The Sumerians used base 60. The Mayans used base 5 and 20. Plus several systems with no consistent base or where you can map it onto multiple bases depending on how you think about it. Nobody really messed with base 2 for general math, but there's no reason they couldn't have. The I Ching from ancient China uses binary and quaternary for divination, and the Egyptians used Horus-Eye notation for fractions and a binary process for multiplication. And Ars Generalis is a 13th century Western example. $\endgroup$
    – Perkins
    Commented May 24, 2023 at 19:16

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