History of Cryptography
The art of cryptography is
considered to be born along with the art of writing. As civilizations evolved,
human beings got systematized in tribes, groups, and kingdoms. This led to the
emergence of ideas such as supremacy, clashes, sovereignty, and politics. These
ideas additionally fuelled the natural need of people to connect secretly with
selective recipient which in turn ensured the continuous evolution of
cryptography as well.
The roots of cryptography are found in Roman and
Egyptian civilizations.
Hieroglyph − The Oldest Cryptographic Technique
The first known evidence of cryptography
can be traced to the use of ‘hieroglyph’. Some 4000 years ago, the Egyptians
used to communicate by messages written in hieroglyph. This code was the secret
known only to the scribes who used to transmit messages on behalf of the kings.
Later,
the scholars moved on to using simple mono-alphabetic substitution ciphers
during 500 to 600 BC. This involved replacing alphabets of message with other
alphabets with some secret rule. This rule became a key to
retrieve the message back from the garbled message.
The
earlier Roman method of cryptography, popularly known as the Caesar Shift
Cipher, relies on shifting the letters of a message by an agreed number
(three was a common choice), the recipient of this message would then shift the
letters back by the same number and obtain the original message.
Steganography
Steganography
is similar but adds another dimension to Cryptography. In this method, people
not only want to protect the secrecy of an information by concealing it, but
they also want to make sure any unauthorized person gets no evidence that the
information even exists. For example, invisible watermarking.
In
steganography, an unintended recipient or an intruder is unaware of the fact
that observed data contains hidden information. In cryptography, an intruder is
normally aware that data is being communicated, because they can see the
coded/scrambled message.
Renaissance
It is during and after the European Renaissance,
various Italian and Papal states led the rapid proliferation of cryptographic
techniques. Various analysis and attack techniques were researched in this era
to break the secret codes.
Improved coding techniques such as Vigenere
Coding came into existence in the 15th century, which
offered moving letters in the message with a number of variable places instead
of moving them the same number of places.
Only after the 19th century,
cryptography evolved from the ad hoc approaches to encryption to the more
sophisticated art and science of information security. In the early 20th century,
the invention of mechanical and electromechanical machines, such as
the Enigma rotor machine, provided more advanced and efficient means of
coding the information. During the period of World War II,
both cryptography and cryptanalysis became excessively
mathematical.
With the advances taking place in this field,
government organizations, military units, and some corporate houses started
adopting the applications of cryptography. They used cryptography to guard
their secrets from others. Now, the arrival of computers and the Internet has fetched
actual cryptography within the influence of common people’s lives.
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