The prediction of Nostradamus on Donald Trump, Prophecy?
There have been many prophets and seers throughout the ages with wonderful and terrible predictions. Some of the greatest and most accurate prophecies we have come from the words of the French seer Michel de Nostre-Dame, better known by his Latin name coverted " Nostradamus ".
During the 16th century, he saw in the future many great calamities involving the world, the world wars and even the presidential election of Donald Trump when he came to power as President of the United States of America. Millions of people around the world were surprised by Trump's victory after a long and tenacious election competition against his Democratic opponent and former Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, the believers of Nostradamus say they were not surprised because they already knew the predictions of the medieval seer on which Trump would be chosen as the President of the United States.
An imminent world war?
Followers of Nostradamus also warn in a disturbing way that his victory announces the end of the world in a catastrophic nuclear holocaust. The conspiracy theorists are totally interested in these predictions, one of which even speaks of the beginning of a great and terrible war ordered by a "false flag".
For the most knowledgeable of Nostradamus' prophecies, he says that when he says "great howler" he refers to Trump's great capacity for communication, and when he says the "governor of the army" he refers to the fact that he is responsible for the military's greatest military force. world. The other prediction of Nostradamus linked to the victory of Donald Trump is found in the first century, quatrain XL (40):
"The false rush hiding madness.
It will make Byzantium a change of laws.
It will leave Egypt, that wants that it is untied.
Edict changing currency and value. "
The word "trumpet" is a reference to Trump, according to the followers of the prophet.
The evidence that "Byzantium" is a reference to the US Trump is related to the fact that the problem of illegal immigration has been the main focus of Trump's campaign platform.
"The hook-nosed blonde will rush.
For the duel and will
cast out, The exiles inside will make them put back,
In the marine places attacking the strongest. "
According to the greatest representative of a society linked to the prophet Nostradamus in America, " hooked-nosed blond " is a clear allusion to Donald Trump and also shows a derogatory way of approaching him. And, finally, Nostradamus announced terrible catastrophes after the victory of Donald Trump, mentioning the Third World War. The prediction that the new war refers to mentions that it will explode when two great military powers confront each other and this war will last about 27 years.
Several people firmly believe that these prophecies are totally authentic and real, for others Donald Trump is the true Antichrist.
So, what will become of the world now? How big will the American wall be? Watch the following video to know more!
Born on December 14, 1503 in the Occitan city of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, where his intended birthplace still exists, Miquel de Nuestra Dama was one of the at least 8 children of Reynière de St-Rémy and the merchant of grain and notary Jaume de Nostredame. His family was of Jewish origin, although Jaume de Nostredame's father, Guy Gassonet, had already converted to Catholicism in the vicinity of 1455, at which time he chose the name "Pierre" and the surname of "Nostredame" (apparently chosen by the name of the saint of the day on which the conversion was officiated).
His known brothers include Delphine, Jehan (around 1507-77), Pierre, Hector, Louis (born in 1522), Bertrand, Jean (historian) and Antoine (born in 1523).
Little is known about Nostradamus's childhood, despite the fact that there is a firm belief that was raised by his great-grandfather on the mother's side, Jean de St. Rémy, which is arguable because of the disappearance of historical data after 1504, when the boy was only a year old.
Born on December 14, 1503 in the Occitan city of Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, where his intended birthplace still exists, Miquel de Nuestra Dama was one of the at least 8 children of Reynière de St-Rémy and the merchant of grain and notary Jaume de Nostredame. His family was of Jewish origin, although Jaume de Nostredame's father, Guy Gassonet, had already converted to Catholicism in the vicinity of 1455, at which time he chose the name "Pierre" and the surname of "Nostredame" (apparently chosen by the name of the saint of the day on which the conversion was officiated).
His known brothers include Delphine, Jehan (around 1507-77), Pierre, Hector, Louis (born in 1522), Bertrand, Jean (historian) and Antoine (born in 1523).
Little is known about Nostradamus's childhood, despite the fact that there is a firm belief that was raised by his great-grandfather on the mother's side, Jean de St. Rémy, which is arguable because of the disappearance of historical data after 1504, when the boy was only a year old.
It was mainly a reaction to the almanacs that Nostradamus began to receive astrological queries and predictions from the nobility of other wealthy people from faraway lands, even though he normally expected them to provide the dates of birth on which to base the horoscopes, contrary to the usual practice of professional astrologers.
When he forced himself to prove this, based on the tables published at the time, he often made mistakes and could not adjust the figures of place or time of birth of his clients.
Then he began his project to write a book of a thousand quartets, which constitute the extensive undated prophecies for which he is still famous at the moment. Since each book contained exactly one hundred quartets, he called them Centuries.
Feeling vulnerable to religious fanaticism, he devised a method to hide its meaning using a virilized syntax, puns, an archaic French for his time and a mixture of languages such as classical Greek, Italian, Latin and Provencal. For technical reasons in the publication of three installments (the editor of the third and last installment seemed reluctant to start it in the middle of the century), the last 58 quartets of the 17th century have not survived in any existing edition.
The quartets, published in a book called The Prophet, received various reactions once they reached the public. Some thought that Nostradamus was a servant of the devil, an impostor or mentally ill, while several among the elite thought they were spiritually inspired prophecies, being under the light of their post-biblical sources (see below literary sources), as Nostradamus himself I preferred to say.
Catherine de Medici, the queen consort of King Henry II of France, was one of the main admirers of Nostradamus. After reading her almanacs in 1555, which provided clues about several anonymous threats to the royal family, she summoned him to Paris to be able to explain and draw horoscopes for her children. At the same time, he feared he could be beheaded, but at the time of his death in 1566, Catherine appointed him Counselor and Chief Medical Officer of the king.
In 1556, shortly after the first edition of the first seven centuries, Nostradamus moved to Italy, where he was received by Pope Paul IV. During this trip he stopped for some time in Turin. Then he returned to Salon
Several biographical notes of Nostradamus' life indicate his fear of being persecuted for heresy by the Inquisition, but neither prophecy nor astrology were within his "jurisdiction," and he would have been in danger only if he had practiced magic to help in the predictions. In any case, his relationship with the church as a prophet and healer was excellent. His timely imprisonment of Marignane at the end of 1561 was motivated only by the publication of his almanac by 1562 without the express permission of the bishop, something contrary to a recent royal decree.
In 1566, the gout suffered by Nostradamus, which had caused him many pains and made movement difficult for several years, turned into an edema or dropsy. At the end of June of that year, he called his lawyer to leave as his legacy his property and 3,444 crowns, except for some debts, to his wife, a pending debt of his second wedding, and to his children (when they did 25 years), and to his daughters (when they married). This testament was followed by some minor modifications.
On the night of July 1, it is believed that he spoke with his secretary Jean de Chavigny to announce that the next day they would not find him alive at sunrise. The next morning he was found dead lying on the floor next to the bed (Presage 141 [originally 152] for November 1567, as posthumously it is written to fix it).
He was buried in the local Franciscan chapel (a part of which has now been incorporated into the La Brocherie restaurant), but was buried again during the French Revolution at the Collégiale St-Laurent, where his tomb still stands today.
Nostradamus collects his collection of the main long-term predictions, the first installment of which was published in 1555. The second edition, with 298 prophetic verses was also printed in 1557. The third edition, with three hundred new quatrains, is printed on 1558, but currently there is only part of the anthology that was published before his death in 1568. This version contains a quartet without rhyme and 941 rhymes, grouped into nine groups of 100 and another of 42, called "Centuries".
Because of the printing practices of the time (which include the "printing technique" dictated), two identical editions are not found, and it is relatively rare to find two copies that are exactly the same. Certainly, there is no guarantee, as the decipherers say, that none of the transcriptions of any of the editions are originals in Nostradamus.
The Almanacs, which were published annually from 1550 until his death are the most popular of his works. He could often publish two or even three in a single year, each entitled Almanacs (Detailed Predictions), Predictions or Omens (more general predictions).
Nostradamus, besides being a fortune-teller, was also a professional healer. At least two books written by him on medical science are known. One is a supposed translation of Galénica, and is called Traité des fardemens (mainly a recipe book with material collected from other places), where it includes a description with methods to combat the plague, where none of them (including bloodletting) apparently worked. The same book also describes how to prepare cosmetics.
Another manuscript known as Orus Apollo still exists in the municipal library of Lyon, where more than 2,000 original documents of Nostradamus are preserved under the tutelage of Michel Chomarat. It is a purported translation of an ancient Greek work on Egyptian hieroglyphs based on later Latin translations, all of them unfamiliar with the real meanings of ancient Egyptian writing, which was not correctly deciphered until the work of Jean François Champollion in the 19th century.
Since his death, only the Prophecies have remained popular, but in this case in an extraordinary way. More than 200 editions appeared at that time, along with more than 2000 comments. Its popularity lies in the fact that the vagueness and the lack of dates used makes it easy to selectively assign the main dramatic events retrospectively and announce them as successes.
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