Tabula Recta

In cryptography, the tabula recta (from Latin tabula rēcta) is a square table of alphabets, each row of which is made by shifting the previous one to the left. The term was invented by Johannes Trithemius in 1508, and used in his cipher.

Trithemius used the tabula recta to define a polyalphabetic cipher which was equivalent to Leon Battista Alberti's cipher disk except that the alphabets are not mixed. The tabula recta is often referred to in discussing pre-computer ciphers, including the Vigenère cipher and Blaise de Vigenère's less well-known autokey cipher. All polyalphabetic ciphers based on Caesar ciphers can be described in terms of the tabula recta.

In order to encrypt a plaintext, one locates the row with the first letter to be encrypted, and the column with the first letter of the key. The letter where the line and column cross is the ciphertext letter.

Classical cryptography
Ciphers
  • ADFGVX
  • Affine
  • Alberti
  • Atbash
  • Autokey
  • Bifid
  • Book
  • Caesar
  • Chaocipher
  • Dvorak
  • Four-square
  • Great
  • Hill
  • Kama Sutra
  • Keyword
  • Nihilist
  • One-time pad
  • Permutation
  • Pigpen
  • Playfair
  • Polyalphabetic
  • Polybius
  • Rail Fence
  • Rasterschlüssel 44
  • Reihenschieber
  • Reservehandverfahren
  • ROT13
  • Running key
  • Scytale
  • Smithy code
  • Solitaire
  • Straddling checkerboard
  • Substitution
  • Tap code
  • Transposition
  • Trifid
  • Two-square
  • VIC cipher
  • Vigenère
Cryptanalysis
  • Frequency analysis
  • Index of coincidence
  • Kasiski examination
Miscellaneous
  • Cryptogram
  • Bacon
  • Scytale
  • Straddling checkerboard
  • Tabula recta
Cryptography
  • History of cryptography
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  • Cryptography portal
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  • Symmetric-key algorithm
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  • Steganography