The Enigma was a German code generating machine.
It was invented and developed by the code breakers at Bletchley Park, UK.
One of the major contributors was Alan Turing.
Polish accounting firm in 1930's
Because it was not invented yet
enigma
The 'enigma' coder.
The Enigma was evolved during the pre-war and war time from 3-wheel model, up to a 6-wheel model. As such there were some independent research of the codes, and broken independently by more scientists. The earliest one was a Polish scientist, then UK and later in USA was invented a faster and more efficient method in breaking the Enigma class codes. So there wasn't an only one team and only a single leading scientist. The enigma machine had its different incarnations too. All methods relied on the bruteforce attack and known plaintext attack.
enigma
Because it was not invented yet
It was called The Enigma Machine for German encoding.
Enigma machine
enigma
Germany used an enigma machine to encipher and decipher messages before World War II, and with military operations during the War.
the German military in world war 11
Enigma was used for war. Enigma was first invented by German engineer in World War 1.
It was the Enigma machine.
Arthur Scherbius invented the Enigma machine, filing his first patent in 1918. Its original intended use was for secure business communication.In the late 1920s the German military ordered two differently modified versions of Enigma machines for the Navy and Army that were intended to be more secure than the standard commercial Enigma machines.
The 'enigma' coder.
The Enigma was used to decode the Enigma. The British decoders at Bletchley Park during the Second World War used brain-power to try to crack the German codes. That is, until they got their hands on an Enigma machine which the Polish had captured.
Enigma.