The Voynish manuscript is one of the oldest surviving manuscripts of human knowledge, dating back to the first millennia BCE, but it has been almost completely destroyed by fire and erosion.
The Voynovich Manusciences Manuscript Foundation, which has launched a crowdfunding campaign to help preserve it, is seeking donations to keep it preserved.
The foundation’s founder, Paul G. Voynov, has been working on preserving the manuscript for nearly a decade.
He hopes the money will allow him to bring the manuscript to the United States, where it can be displayed in a museum or in a library, among other places.
G.V. Voynova, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has published a series of articles and a book on the Voynovish manuscript.
The book, which will be published in 2018, is a compendium of the Voynik manuscripts, written in Latin and edited by the English professor.
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Voynov says he hopes to publish the Voynova Manuscript in the U.S. in a few years.
“If I could find a way to have it in the United Kingdom, in Europe or Japan, it would be a fantastic gift to humanity,” GV, who is in his mid-50s, said in an interview.
The manuscript has been in the hands of the Manuscript Preservation Society since 2007.
In the past, Voynov has presented the manuscript, which is about 500 pages long, to international delegations.
The Society has not received any significant donations to support the preservation effort.
In his book, Voynovich describes the Voynian manuscript as a collection of human scribbles that were originally in the form of a manila envelope.
“In the end, it’s a handwritten text that contains not just some of the most basic information about the universe, but also some of our greatest discoveries,” Voynov said.
“The Voyniyans are the fathers of the scientific revolution.
We are responsible for the development of all things science, technology, medicine and medicine, the history of science.”
Voynov and his wife, Maria, a medical doctor, were part of the first expedition to the Americas in 1776.
In 1779, the couple sailed to the Caribbean and then on to New England, arriving in New York in March.
They stayed at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in New Haven, Conn., for about three weeks, where they stayed for three weeks.
The next day, they set sail again.
Gv Voynov describes the first Voynis as a “disastrous experience,” because they had to stay at the hotel for three days to prepare.
They arrived at Cape Horn in July 1780 and stayed there for nearly four weeks.
“We had no idea how long we would stay there,” he said.
They left in the early afternoon and spent several days sailing on the coast of the Cape of Good Hope.
“Then we got the news: the sea was frozen and the wind was bad.
We were all very excited.
We decided we were going to go back to Cape Horn,” he recalled.
Voynovsky’s account of the voyage is based on a memoir written by his sister-in-law, Anne Voyn.
He said he and his sister Anne had been on the ship from April 1779 to March 1780.
Voyovsky and Anne Voynov were the first European settlers to settle on the island of Newfoundland, in what is now Canada.
Anne Voynova later married an American man, Robert Smith, who later became a U. S. congressman.
They built a cabin on the shore of Newfoundland and built a fort on the site, in 1784.
“It was not a good time to go ashore.
It was cold, windy and rainy.
But we stayed in that cabin and waited for the tide to rise and then we sailed down the Cape, where we camped out and stayed for several weeks,” Voyninsky said.
G V Voynov died in February 2018 at the age of 98.
His daughter, Maria Voynov, said her father would have preferred to be buried at sea, but he wanted to be cremated.
He died in his home in Plymouth, Mass., on Feb. 8.
Maria Voynov is also a medical physician and professor at Boston College.
She is a former chairwoman of the American Society of Clinical Pathology.
She served as the founding chairwoman and director of the medical school at Boston Medical School and is now the medical director of Boston Children’s Hospital.
G Voynov was born in Brest in Belgium and lived most of his life in the Netherlands.
He was the son of a lawyer and a teacher who moved to Amsterdam when he was six.
In 1893, he was sent to England, where he began teaching at Cambridge University.
He left for the United State in 1904 to work for the University of California at Berkeley.
G voynov is survived by his wife Maria, daughter-in