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2007-01-17 02:37:44 · 6 answers · asked by Mandar 2 in Arts & Humanities History

6 answers

Thta the third anti christ or whatever, is young and the most ruthless of all. He'd be under his late 20's or early 30's. Thats what Ive heard. I was in Junior High then, and now here, I am an undergraduate college student.

Cool. Nice musings.

2007-01-17 02:45:11 · answer #1 · answered by shanekeavy 5 · 0 0

I'm still trying to understand whether the predictions of Nostradamus are true or not. Most of us tend to dismiss his predictions as meaningless, jumbled verses that nobody can comprehend. I could imagine the frustrations in the faces of so many people who tried to interpret his verses through the centuries. Even myself felt a lot of skepticism on his predictions. But then, I decided that it's better for me to keep an open mind on any subject, even when it borders the impossible, rather than surrender to outright prejudice.

Now, I've found something fascinating in his predictions that's worth giving some thought:

In Nostradamus' period (the 15th century France), America haven't been discovered yet. The whole Middle-East is nothing but a vast desert inhabited by primitive, nomadic, camel-riding tribes dwelling on tents and mud-houses, who herd goats and sheeps to survive.

How did Nostradamus knew that the Middle-East would play such a huge role in the future times?. Why is it that so many of his predictions refer to conflicts and tumultous events in this desolate region, and that those events shall have profound effect on people's lives on the whole planet?.

Indeed, all other astologers and mystics during Nostradamus' time didn't even mention anything about the Middle-East. The region is very insignificant to bother anyone's attention, let alone give predictions on it.

One more thing that should be understood is the way Nostradamus attributed dates on his predictions. Does the year "nineteen ninety nine and seven months" directly means the year 1999 as we all know it today?. For one thing, the Gregorian Calendar that we are now using universally was developed only in 1582, long after Nostradamus' death (the Gregorian Calendar was adopted during the reign of Pope Gregory XIII). So, from which calendar did Nostradamus based his dates?. Definitely it's not the Gregorian Calendar, because it hadn't yet existed during Nostradamus' time. Therefore, it's not correct to correlate the the dates mentioned by Nostradamus to the Gregorian Calendar.

2007-01-18 18:55:11 · answer #2 · answered by roadwarrior 4 · 0 0

It was:
"In the year nineteen ninety nine and seven months and alarmingly powerful king will come from the skys. He will resurrect the ancient king of the Jaques. Before and after Mars will reign at will. "
The Jaques were the peasant uprisings in France in the 15th century. Mars is a reference to war.
Actually some people claim that the twin towers was a reference to this. This is a desperate and pathetic attempt to cover Nostradamu's a**e. Although he is by now wearing a glass robe.
The twin towers happened in 2001 and Nostrodamus was prescise in his prediction of THE YEAR 1999 AND SEVEN MONTHS. The twin towers happened in the ninth month. And Ben Laden is not exactally the either the alarmingly powerful king or even the GREAT KING OF TERROR that some versions have-not doubt for convenience. He is of course a great terrorist but not exacally a great king of terror,especially as in as it suggests, bestriding the world as a collossus, and particularly not as Nostrodamus, living in the 15th century would have described a KING.
The dates which Nostrodamus precisely predicted were not true, the original version is nothing like Ben Laden and even in the other versions-he does not quite fit the bill. This is an attempt to resurrect a dead horse and beat it. Nostrodamus was proven false when August 1999 came and went and espicially 2000 - August came and went when his precise and boasting prediction displayed him for all of history to see. Hope this helps.

2007-01-17 10:49:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Go to Michael Rathford's Nostradamus Code World War III, you can down load it and read what Nostradamus had to say about WWIII.

2007-01-17 02:47:19 · answer #4 · answered by dee m 1 · 0 0

Through his quatrains, he was supposed to have predicted September 11th, followed by conflicts within Islamic nations and that there will be attacks planned out in Istanbul, formerly known as Constantinople, and before that, Byzantium. Here's an article and some more info:

http://paranormal.about.com/library/weekly/aa050602a.htm

http://skepdic.com/nostrada.html

http://www.nostradamususa.com/

2007-01-17 06:13:23 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

i don't know but i think there would be a world war 3................. it would be so scary.........

2007-01-17 02:51:35 · answer #6 · answered by chRistiNeeeeeeee 2 · 0 0

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