Quatrain (Century 10, Quatrain 72):
“A great city will be abandoned,
Its citizens scattered far and wide;
In the East, a new city rises,
Built on ancient wisdom and pride.”
- Popular Interpretation: Some believe this foretells the decline of Western dominance and the rise of a new global center in Asia—possibly referencing China’s Belt and Road Initiative, futuristic cities like NEOM (Saudi Arabia), or even space colonization.
- Reality Check: Nostradamus never specified “East” as Asia—it could mean Eastern Europe or the Middle East. Also, cities have been abandoned and rebuilt throughout history (e.g., Constantinople → Istanbul). This quatrain likely reflects cyclical views of empire, not a specific future event.
⚔️ 3. The “Third Antichrist” and Global Conflict
Quatrain (Century 6, Quatrain 97):
“Three times the throne shall be taken by the North,
The Third Antichrist soon to appear;
He shall bring death to the great King of the West,
And terror through land and sea.”
- Popular Interpretation: Over the decades, this has been tied to Napoleon, Hitler, and now modern leaders—with some fearing it predicts a coming world war or authoritarian global crisis around 2025–2030.
- Reality Check: Nostradamus used “Antichrist” symbolically to mean tyrants or corrupt rulers, not a literal biblical figure. The “North” likely referred to England or Scandinavia in his time. Historians note he wrote during the Protestant Reformation—a period rife with fears of heresy and invasion.
🧠 Why Do People Keep Believing?
- Vagueness = Flexibility: His quatrains are so ambiguous they can be retrofitted to almost any event (a phenomenon called retroactive clairvoyance).
- Pattern-Seeking Minds: Humans naturally look for meaning in chaos—especially during times of crisis.
- Cultural Mythmaking: Nostradamus has become a symbol of “hidden knowledge,” amplified by books, documentaries, and social media.
❤️ Final Thought
Nostradamus wasn’t a prophet—he was a poet of anxiety.
His writings reflect the fears of his own era: plague, religious war, political instability. While fascinating as historical artifacts, they are not blueprints for the future.
As scholar Dr. Richard Carrier notes:
“If Nostradamus could predict the future, he’d have warned himself about his own son’s death… but he didn’t.”
So while it’s fun to ponder, remember:
The future isn’t written in riddles—it’s shaped by choices we make today. 💛✨
The future isn’t written in riddles—it’s shaped by choices we make today. 💛✨
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