Enigma (2024)

Individuals

Discover how Bletchley Park was vital to Allied victory in WW2. A place of exceptional historical importance, Bletchley Park is also the birthplace of modern computing and has helped shape life as we know it today.

Families

Families can expect an exciting, fun-filled full day out, exploring the collections with hands-on displays and interactives. With plenty of outdoor space and so many different areas around the park to explore, go on an adventure and uncover some surprising stories!

See & Do

There is something for everyone to see & do, read on to find out more and plan your visit today.

Exhibitions

We have a range of permanent and temporary exhibitions for you to enjoy, housed in our historic buildings, they piece togeher the stories of Bletchley Park.

Food & Drink

We have a delicious range of food and drink options for you to enjoy. Our Café in Hut 4 and Coffee shop in Block C are open daily.

Explore

Discover more about what you can find at Bletchley Park

Interactive Map

Use our interactive map to plan your visit. Click on places of interest to find out what there is to see and do.

Events at Bletchley Park

We have a range of events to enjoy at Bletchley Park throughout the year.

Explore Our Story

Explore Bletchley Park’s stories, find out more about the history of the site, the people who worked here.

Join and Support

Join as a Friend or find out other ways you can support the work of Bletchley Park Trust

Become a Friend

As a Friend, you can enjoy free unlimited year-round access to our heritage site and museum, plus a range of other benefits including exclusive events, previews and discounts.

Sponsor a Brick in the Codebreakers' Wall

Sponsor a brick in your name, in memory of a loved one or in the name of a Veteran to commemorate their wartime achievements.

Volunteer

Volunteers are vital to the running of Bletchley Park and an integral part in delivering an exceptional experience to thousands of our visitors each year. Come and join our team of valued volunteers where you’ll help make a real difference.

Learning, virtual & outreach Sessions

We offer award-winning learning sessions tailored to pupils of any age.

Learning Visitors

Start here to find out more information about Learning opportunities at Bletchley Park

Our very own bursary scheme, funded by kind donations from external organisations, charities and individuals, allows eligible schools to experience Bletchley Park’s Learning programme for free.

How to book

Book an onsite learning visit.

Essential Information

Essential information for your learning visit to Bletchley Park

How to book

Book an outreach learning visit.

Find a Veteran on the Roll of Honour

The Bletchley Park Roll of Honour lists all those believed to have worked in signals intelligence during World War Two, at Bletchley Park and other locations. Compiled from information in official sources, publications and provided by Veterans, friends and families.

Find a Veteran

The Bletchley Park Roll of Honour lists all those believed to have worked in signals intelligence during World War Two, at Bletchley Park and other locations.

About the Roll of Honour

The Roll of Honour has been compiled from information in official sources, publications and, most importantly, that provided by the veterans themselves, their former colleagues and families.

Codebreakers' Wall

Find out about our Codebreakers' Wall, our commemorative wall for the Veterans, families & supporters of Bletchley Park.Learn how to sponsor a brick and discover our digital Wall.

About the Trust

Find out more about the Bletchley Park Trust - who we are and what we do.

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01

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The Enigma machine was invented by a German engineer Arthur Scherbius shortly after WW1.

The machine (of which a number of varying types were produced) resembled a typewriter. It had a lamp board above the keys with a lamp for each letter. The operator pressed the key for the plaintext letter of the message and the enciphered letter lit up on the lamp board. It was adopted by the German armed forces between 1926 and 1935. The machine contained a series of interchangeable rotors, which rotated every time a key was pressed to keep the cipher changing continuously. This was combined with a plug board on the front of the machine where pairs of letters were transposed; these two systems combined offered 103 sextillion possible settings to choose from, which the Germans believed made Enigma unbreakable.

The Poles had broken Enigma in as early as 1932, but in 1939 with the prospect of war, the Poles decided to inform the British of their successes. Dilly Knox, one of the former British World War One Codebreakers, was convinced he could break the system and set up an Enigma Research Section, comprising himself and Tony Kendrick, later joined by Peter Twinn, Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman. They worked in the stable yard at Bletchley Park and that is where the first wartime Enigma messages were broken by the British in January 1940. Enigma traffic continued to be broken routinely at Bletchley Park for the remainder of the war.

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Enigma (2024)

FAQs

How many possible combinations did Enigma have? ›

Combining three rotors from a set of five, each of the 3 rotor settings with 26 positions, and the plugboard with ten pairs of letters connected, the military Enigma has 158,962,555,217,826,360,000 different settings (nearly 159 quintillion or about 67 bits).

Who actually broke the Enigma code? ›

Until the release of the Oscar-nominated film The Imitation Game in 2014, the name 'Alan Turing' was not very widely known. But Turing's work during the Second World War was crucial.

How to decode Enigma text? ›

To decrypt a message, one needs not only an Enigma machine, but also the knowledge of the starting state, i.e. at which positions the wheels were when the text was typed in. To decrypt the message, the machine must be set to the same starting state, and the cipher text is entered. Output is the plain text.

Did the Germans find out about Enigma? ›

The actual revelation for the majority of Germans did not come until the 1970s when the Ultra documents were finally de-classified. The long delay in revealing them was the result of many Warsaw pact countries relying on Enigma based technologies through the 1950s and 1960s.

How long would it take to crack the Enigma code today? ›

So to try all possibilities, it'll take us 150 trillion divided by 30, which is 5 trillion seconds: about 160,000 years! Not that it matters much, but the encryption key changes every 24 hours, so brute forcing this wasn't an option back then and isn't an option today!

Did a woman break the Enigma code? ›

Joan Clarke

Though she did not personally seek the spotlight, her important role in the Enigma project that decrypted Nazi Germany's secret communications earned her awards and citations, such as appointment as a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE), in 1946.

How many lives did Alan Turing save? ›

Due to the problems of counterfactual history, it is hard to estimate the precise effect Ultra intelligence had on the war. However, official war historian Harry Hinsley estimated that this work shortened the war in Europe by more than two years and saved over 14 million lives.

What if we never broke the Enigma code? ›

Being able to read these messages proved to be a vital tool that arguably altered the course of the war. Without it, history might have taken a very different shape. One of the first theatres in which the cracking of Enigma had an impact was the battle of the Atlantic, which raged throughout the war in Europe.

How old was Alan Turing when he cracked the Enigma code? ›

The machine was designed in 1939; at that time, Turing was 27 years old. Here's a replica.

What is the easiest cipher to decode? ›

One of the simplest types of encryption is the Shift Cipher. It provides a good introduction to encryption because it is easy to understand. The Shift Cipher is also called the "Caesar Cipher", because Julius Caesar liked to use it for his personal correspondence.

What is the hardest code to decrypt? ›

The Vigenère cipher is a symmetric polyalphabetic substitution cipher that was invented by Giovan Battista Bellaso in the 16th century. It is considered one of the most difficult historical ciphers to crack, primarily due to its polyalphabetic nature.

Why is it so hard to decrypt Enigma? ›

An Enigma machine allows for billions and billions of ways to encode a message, making it incredibly difficult for other nations to crack German codes during the war — for a time the code seemed unbreakable.

Why was Bletchley Park kept secret? ›

By the end of the war, some 9,000 people worked here in top secrecy in a series of huts built in the 50-acre grounds of the mansion. Their job was to supply Turing and the codebreakers with encrypted radio messages hacked from German and Japanese and Italian radio communications all over the world.

What happened to Alan Turing after the war? ›

After the war Turing worked on the design of the ACE (Automatic Computing Engine) at the National Physical Laboratory, which many people see as the forerunner to the modern computer.

Who stole the Enigma machine from the Germans? ›

In January 2016, at the age of 95, Lieutenant Commander David Balme died a hero. Credited with capturing the top-secret Enigma machine that turned the tide of the deadliest war ever fought and thus shortening it by two years, he helped save hundreds of thousands of lives across the world.

How many possibilities does a 3 rotor Enigma machine have per letter? ›

The complexity of the Enigma machine

The basic 3-rotor Enigma has 26x26x26 = 17,576 possible rotor states for each of 6 wheel orders giving 6x17,576 = 105,456 machine states. For each of these the plugboard (with ten pairs of letters connected) can be in 150,738,274,937,250 possible states.

How many bit encryption was Enigma? ›

Enigma was so sophisticated it amounted to what's now called a 76-bit encryption key. One example of how complex it was: typing the same letters together, like "H-H" (for Heil Hitler") could result in two different letters, like "L-N." That type of complexity made the machines impossible to break by hand, Simpson says.

How to calculate Enigma machine combinations? ›

We will also assume this is an Enigma machine with three rotors. What Allied cryptanalysts had to determine was which three of the five possible discs were chosen, and in which order they were placed into the machine. This is simply 5 × 4 × 3 = 60 possible combinations which needed to be checked.

Is it possible to crack Enigma? ›

The Enigma code breaking process began long before the war broke out. The combined efforts of some of the most gifted mathematical minds helped crack the enigma. Through innovations discovered by Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman, a logic-based device was created to help decipher the Enigma.

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