The Enigma machine is a piece of spook hardware invented by a German and used by Britain's codebreakers as a way of deciphering German signals traffic during World War Two. It has been claimed that as ...
A set of cogs from the Second World War Enigma code-breaking machine has been discovered after languishing in a cupboard for up to 30 years. The three rotors were found at the Royal Navy training ...
The Enigma was the machine use to encrypt German ciphers during the war, and was eventually cracked by a team of code-breakers at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes. On Friday, September 15 renowned ...
Bletchley Park was the nerve centre of the code breakers The first phase of a new exhibition complex has opened at the intelligence nerve centre in Buckinghamshire where the Enigma code was cracked.
It has taken 10 years and about 60 volunteers to rebuild piece-by-piece a replica of the Turing Bombe - the vital machine which cracked the Nazis' Enigma Code. It was something worthwhile, a tribute ...
As the 75th anniversary of the seizing of the Enigma codebooks is remembered on Monday, October 30, a new book is published which credits Derbyshire man Rolf Noskwith, with one of the most important ...
Code- and cipher-breaking have been in operation for centuries. However, cryptanalysis – the art of deciphering encoded messages – took on a new importance during WW2 as British boffins strived to ...
Codebreaker Ruth Bourne, from HIgh Barnet, north London, who worked alongside Alan Turing to crack the German's Enigma code, has died aged 98.
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Boston-based RR Auction is set to offer the rare fully operational Enigma I cipher machine, which is expected to achieve over £138k. Described as "straight from the annals of World War II espionage", ...
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