An original French code (1778) is reproduced in Pierrot, Chaline, Damoiseau-Malraux, Mekhail, Perret (2025), "A Caribbean Directory-based Encryption during the American War of Independence" (HistoCrypt 2025).
It was for D'Agoût, governor of Saint Domingue (1777-1780). It is a two-part code consisting of a table for encoding in alphabetical order and a separate table for decoding in numerical order. The substitution table assigns three figures for the vowels and one figure to the other letters and the ampersand.
The nomenclature includes entries for syllables and common words. As was typical with French ciphers, some variants are covered by one entry: "action, s" (for "action", "actions"), "it, e" (for "it", "ite"), "puis, que" (for "puis", "puisque").
It should be noted that the codes are made on printed templates. The template for encoding has syllables and words printed in alphabetical order, with a section "NOMS de Lieux" in which place names are not printed and are filled when preparing a code for a specific application. The decoding table has printed numbers 1-850.
Pierrot et al. (2025) reports their reconstruction of a similar code used in 1782 between Guillaume de Bellecombe, governor of Saint Domingue a few years after D'Agoût (1782-1883), and the Secretary of State for the Navy. The number ranges up to 857. There might have been a necessity for additional entries 851-857 beyond the template range 1-850.
Contemporary French diplomatic codes I know had 1200 entries (Barbé-Marbois (1782), Luzerne (1781), Napoleonic age), larger than these naval codes. On the other hand, the code used in one undecoded message between Admiral D'Estaing and Gerard, French minister in Philadelphia, (1779) ("Unsolved Historical Ciphers") has a highest number 597.
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