Pietro Partenio, a notary and one of the most brilliant Venetian cryptologists, certainly knew Hieronimo di Franceschi deputy for the ciphers for the CX*, who had repeatedly been his client as seen on his notarial deeds. He took up the two most original ideas of Franceschi, the one of super-encryption and the one of a fake key. Partenio criticized the Venetian ciphers in use in those years, including Franceschi's cifra delle caselle, considered the safest of them all.
In June 1595 the CX faced with the news that François Viète had boasted to be able to decrypt the caselle, ordered to use from now on a cipher of Pietro Partenio. The fifth cipher was chosen from those presented by Partenio to the CX in the years 1592-1593, and a week later the CX sent the cipher key to the ambassador in Paris, with the recommendation to use this cipher for the most reserved parts of the dispatches.
At the bottom of this page you can encrypt using this cipher inside an interactive window.
The key of the cipher is double: a three digits nomenclator, which begins with the letter A encrypted with 100 and continues in a more or less orderly manner, as in the figure on the right, showing the very first beginning of the encrypting list, and a small super-encryption list converting digits into letters.
It could be argued that this cipher could be simplified in one single operation, a nomenclator with eight homophones for each letter or syllable or word; for instance the letter A would be encrypted with one of the eight homophones: chh chp cph cpp thh thp tph tpp .
But there are a few good reasons in favor of a two-step encryption:
This cipher is not the most complicated and sophisticated of Partenio, and perhaps it was chosen by the CX for its simplicity.
Unfortunately, the secretaries in charge of the cipher did not appreciate, in particular the one in Paris, who first used it. The three dispatches from Paris, in July-August 1595, using this cipher for limited portions, the most secret and reserved, have errors and cancellations, a sign that the secretary did not find it so simple to use and after the third attempt he did not use it anymore.
To date, no other dispatches have been found in the Venetian archives that use Partenio's ciphers.
Many months after having partially recovered the key of this cipher, among the papers of Pietro Partenio, I found the original sheet with the key, the handwriting looks the one of Partenio, it had been overlooked, hidden among other sheets. it was thus possible to recover the whole cipher.