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Les Prophéties (The Prophecies) is a collection of prophecies by French physician Nostradamus, the first edition of which appeared in 1555 by the publishing house Macé Bonhomme. His most famous work is a collection of poems, quatrains , united in ten sets of verses ("Centuries") of 100 quatrains each.
According to the Century 10, Quatrain 74 of The Prophecies (1555), [199] the "start" of the end of the world begins in the given date of 3797, with a prolonged global war lasting between 25 to 29 years, followed by a series of smaller wars, [200] but most interpretations of Nostradamus dates are aware of required basic mathematic sums, given ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 8 January 2025. French seer and astrologer (1503–1566) For other uses, see Nostradamus (disambiguation). Michel de Nostredame Portrait by his son Cesar, c. 1614, nearly fifty years after his death Born 14 or (1503-12-21) 21 December 1503 Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, Provence, Kingdom of France Died 1 or 2 ...
One well-known supposed prophecy is that "a great and terrifying leader would come out of the sky" in 1999 and 7 months "to resuscitate the great King from Angoumois."But the phrase d'effraieur (of terror) in fact occurs nowhere in the original printing, which merely uses the word deffraieur (defraying, hosting), and Nostradamus sometimes uses the word ciel simply to mean 'region', rather than ...
The site lists a number of purported "Nostradamus 2021 predictions" such as bitcoin, solar storms and a comet hitting Earth. ... according to one of his prophecies from a book discovered at the ...
Published a book, The Late Great Planet Earth, suggesting Christ would return in the 1980s, probably no later than 1988. Edgar C. Whisenant: Published a book, 88 Reasons Why The Rapture Will Be in 1988, predicting the Second Coming and World War III, starting on Rosh Hashanah that year. [33] 1989 Edgar C. Whisenant
In his book The Mask of Nostradamus, James Randi also notes that it is a common strategy of prophets to make many predictions, hope that some come true, and subsequently ignore all the incorrect predictions. [24] Randi notes a series of incorrect predictions that Dixon made, also noting that these are only a few from a "very long" list.
He published his treatise about Nostradamus' letters and works, La clef secrète de Nostradamus ('The Secret Key of Nostradamus') in 1950. In the book, Frontenac professed his belief in Nostradamus as a true prophet, who made correct foretellings, and that the centuries (French: Les Propheties) contained true predictions about future events until the year 3797.