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How the World Ends According to Nostradamus

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0:00Hi, this is Josh, and today we’re explaining  how the world ends… according to Nostradamus
0:06Born at the beginning of the 16th century, Michel  de Nostredame, better known as Nostradamus,  
0:11lived in an age of constant war and disease.  The bubonic plague killed his first wife and  
0:16two young children. At the time, he was  working as an apothecary, selling plague  
0:20remedies - which can’t have been any good. So, he turned to his other great love:  
0:25astrology, predicting marriages,  outbreaks of disease, usurpers  
0:28of European thrones. You name it, he saw it. Some called him evil. Others said he was mad. 
0:33In an era where claiming visions could get  you tortured or executed, that mattered. 
0:38But with Catherine de' Medici - wife of King  Henry II of France - as one of his clients,  
0:43his head remained firmly attached to  his shoulders. In an era when death came  
0:46without warning, demand for his supposed  psychic powers and horoscopes made him a  
0:51favorite of the French nobility. But he didn’t stop at predicting  
0:54next month or a few years down the line.  Depending on your reading of his works,  
0:59he might have envisioned everything from Adolf  Hitler to 9/11 to JFK’s unfortunate day in Dallas. 
1:05And that’s where things  start to get uncomfortable. 
1:07It goes without saying that the Catholic  church wasn’t his biggest fan, but with a Royal  
1:11endorsement, he was effectively untouchable. Even after he might have predicted  
1:15the King’s very grizzly death. On June 20th, 1559, King Henry was  
1:20on top of the world. He’d recently signed a peace  treaty with his enemies, the Habsburgs of Austria,  
1:24and his daughter, Elizabeth, had gotten  married to King Philip II of Spain. 
1:28To celebrate, he staged a weekend of  jousting - with himself as the star  
1:32attraction. Wearing the colors of his mistress,  the 40-year-old king rode headlong into combat  
1:37against a much younger soldier. And he immediately regretted it. 
1:42The soldier’s lance shattered, and a piece of wood  splintered off and pierced Henry’s eye and brain.  
1:47The injury became infected, spread to the brain,  and Henry died in agony from sepsis 10 days later. 
1:53Ten days. Had Nostradamus predicted it? 
1:56One of his quatrains, a short  four-line prophecy, warned that  
1:59a “young lion will overcome an older one.” Sure, he said it would be on a “field of  
2:04combat,” not a joust… but it’s close enough. But the best part is Nostradamus predicted  
2:09that the young soldier would pierce the older  man’s “eyes through a golden cage” – maybe  
2:14armor. He also said that, “two wounds  made one” – eye and brain equals sepsis. 
2:20He called it a “cruel death,” and  10 days in agony certainly was. 
2:24Convincing? Maybe. Coincidence? Possibly. But we’re just getting started. 
2:28Nostradamus might have predicted the 1572 St.  Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, when Paris was  
2:33effectively turned into a killing field. Thousands  were murdered in the streets and their homes. Up  
2:38to 30,000 could have been killed in total  after the fighting spread out of the city. 
2:43These were the days of the French Wars  of Religion. The Catholics versus the  
2:46Protestant Huguenots. On the day it  all kicked off, Paris was packed with  
2:50Protestant nobles attending the wedding of  Catherine de’ Medici’s daughter, Marguerite,  
2:54to the Protestant King Henry of Navarre. What started as targeted assassinations  
2:58of Huguenot leaders quickly  spiraled into a mass slaughter. 
3:02And word on the street was that  Queen Catherine was behind it all. 
3:05Again, Nostradamus might have predicted it. He wrote of a “great city…plunged into  
3:10sudden confusion.” Check. “Night-time slaughter,  
3:13the innocent struck down.” Check. “The royal power will be blamed.” Double check. 
3:18And “faith betrayed.” Check. That’s a lot of boxes ticked for one massacre. 
3:23The one thing he didn’t see was that one of  the Protestants who survived the massacre  
3:26was Gabriel de Montgomery, a Scottish-French  nobleman. This was the soldier, now much older,  
3:32who’d injured and effectively killed Henry in the  joust. Nostradamus didn’t make the connection, 
3:37So if Nostradamus was any good at his job, what massive event would he have predicted?
3:45Here’s a clue. The Enlightenment, heads  on pikes, angry, bread-deprived peasants? 
3:50That’s right, the French Revolution. This wasn’t the death of a king. It  
3:54was the collapse of an entire system. 10 years of mayhem and madness and  
3:58political change that started with  the Storming of the Bastille in 1789. 
4:03Nostradamus might well have seen it  in his visions. Here’s his quatrain: 
4:06“From the enslaved populace,  songs, chants and demands, 
4:10While princes and lords are  held captive in prisons; 
4:13These will in the future  be taken as divine prayers 
4:16By headless idiots.” Enslaved peasants and enlightenment  
4:19intellectuals certainly liked singing songs.  La Marseillaise was one of their favorites. 
4:23As for chants, the Revolution was full of them. And princes and lords in prisons?  
4:28The jails were bursting with nobility. As for the “headless idiots,” it may have  
4:33been a scathing critique of the Revolution’s chaos  - where collective madness took hold, and many  
4:37revolutionaries quite literally lost their heads. And who emerged through the smoke  
4:41of the Revolution? Napoleon, of course. So,  
4:44what did Nostradamus have to say about him? Quite a lot, it turned out. 
4:48He wrote: “PAU, NAY, LORON will be more of fire than blood, 
4:53He will roam the seas in  praise, refusing the crown.” 
4:56You don’t need to play with the  letters of PAU, NAY, LORON for  
4:59long to get something close to Napoleon. Napoleon did indeed become a great leader,  
5:04but it wasn’t his bloodline that  made him top dog. It was his fire! 
5:08Roaming the seas was his forte, and absolutely,  he refused the crown. There were plenty of  
5:13monarchists during Napoleon’s reign, biding their  time. But while he was busy turning foreign armies  
5:17into the dust, they could only stand back in fear  as Napoleon received “praise” from his people. 
5:22But there was more. Nostradamus also talked  about, “An Emperor will be born near Italy,  
5:27who will cost the empire dearly.” Napoleon was born Corsica, an island off  
5:31the coast of Italy. It might have been annexed  by France, but culturally, it was Italian. 
5:36Did Napoleon cost the empire dearly? Well, his military sojourns around  
5:40Europe cost millions of lives and a  lot of cash. Some argue his conquests  
5:45ultimately hurt France’s geopolitical position  as a superpower. But we’ll let you decide. 
5:49Just so you know, Nostradamus never claimed to  be a mystic. Educated in math and astrology,  
5:54he said he was merely a learned interpreter  of celestial patterns - not a sorcerer.  
5:59He called it “judicial astrology.” In an era that burned accused witches  
6:03and believed villagers flew on broomsticks,  openly claiming visions from another realm  
6:08could’ve left him crushed in Spanish boots  or having his toes held to the flames. 
6:12That’s the reason he could get away  with this next vision. He wrote: 
6:15“The kingdoms will be shaken by sudden uprising, The people will overthrow ancient rule; 
6:21Law will fail, order broken, And the great will fall from their seats.” 
6:25This should be straightforward. The French Revolution didn’t just  
6:29change the lay of the land in France. It had  repercussions far and wide. The old order had  
6:34been kings and queens that ruled over peasants  who didn’t get much say in…well, anything. Their  
6:39“sudden uprising” did overthrow the “ancient  rule,” while law and order broke down. 
6:43The Enlightenment, with its focus on the rights  of man, changed the face of the entire Western  
6:48world. All over Europe, in the German states,  Austria, and Italy, in what would become the USA,  
6:54revolutions exploded. The great leaders  did indeed “fall from their seats.” 
6:58But revolution wasn’t the only  force reshaping the world. 
7:01Technology. Peasants flooded into cities,  
7:04where machines began producing goods  faster than ever before. This Industrial  
7:08Revolution began in England - and spread fast. Nostradamus might have been talking about the  
7:13urban decay that followed when he wrote: The poor man’s cry will go unheard, 
7:17While the rich will grow harder still; Cities will be filled with lamentation, 
7:22And order will fail.” The poor suffered, and the  
7:24rich grew colder toward the new working class.  Cities swelled into slums, and unrest followed. 
7:30In another quatrain, Nostradamus talked about  cities being filled with the scourges of “famine  
7:34within plague,” and “people put out by steel.” Was he seeing outbreaks of smallpox, typhus,  
7:40and tuberculosis? And were “people put out by  steel” the deadly crackdowns on protestors? 
7:45Then the industrial powers went to war. And they brought their machines with them. 
7:50So, did Nostradamus predict WWI? He talked about "wars stirred up  
7:54anew" saying after a period of peace,  there would be “battles in the sky.” 
7:59Could that mean the airplanes - something  no one had ever fought with before? 
8:03He added to that, “Noise, song,  battle, fighting in the sky perceived.  
8:08And one will hear brute beasts talking.” Fighting in the sky, the beasts talking, was maybe  
8:14the sound of guns. When Nostradamus was alive,  no one fought in the sky. He also wrote that the  
8:19“world shrinks.” And with airplanes, it did. Another part of the quatrain talks about a  
8:24“Pig half-man.” A pilot wearing a mask  would have looked exactly like that 
8:29Ok. Adolf Hitler. There’s a guy who  certainly left a mark on history. 
8:33Did Nostradamus envisage a small man with a  questionable mustache who tried to take over  
8:37half of the world? Kind of. 
8:39He talked about a “young child”  who’d be “born of poor people.” 
8:43Hitler’s parents both came from the peasantry, but  they weren’t poor when Adolf was born. The father,  
8:48Alois Hitler, was a middle-level customs official,  and he provided a stable life for his wife, Klara,  
8:53and Hitler’s 7 siblings – 4 died  very young, 2 were half-siblings. 
8:57So, the Hitlers weren’t exactly scraping  by, but they did come from poverty. 
9:02Nostradamus went on, saying this child would  one day “seduce a great troop” by his “tongue.” 
9:08Hitler was many things but he was a fantastic  orator, and he absolutely seduced a nation of  
9:13men to fight for him. Nostradamus also said this  man will be born in Western Europe and quote, “His  
9:19fame will increase towards the realm of the East.” Ask anyone in Russia - or anywhere east of  
9:24Germany - if they’ve heard of Hitler, and the  answer is an immediate yes. He was massive in  
9:29the East, infamous rather than famous,  but let’s not get hung up on semantics. 
9:33Nostradamus also saw “Beasts ferocious  with hunger” that “will cross the rivers.” 
9:38That could be planes, tanks, or even ships. Nostradamus might have envisioned the battle  
9:43on the Eastern Front, because he  wrote that, “The greater part of  
9:46the battlefield will be against Hister.” That sounds a lot like Hitler. We can’t  
9:51really fault a visionary for his spelling. Staying with the early 20th century,  
9:55there was another major event that killed off  humans. No weapons. No madcap idealists. Nature  
10:00did it all by itself. Nostradamus wrote: 
10:03“After great war, a greater pestilence, No remedy, bodies struck without sign; 
10:08Cities left deserted, Death walking unseen.” 
10:11This might be referring to the Spanish Flu.  Maybe 50 to 100 million dead globally. No  
10:17one can be sure of the numbers, but  this greater pestilence likely killed  
10:21more people than the 9–11 million soldiers and  6–13 million civilians who died in World War I. 
10:28“No remedy” . “Bodies struck without sign?” Maybe  he meant the invisibility of an airborne virus. 
10:34As for “cities left deserted”, Nostradamus  hit the nail firmly on the head. 
10:38News reports from the US talked about cities  under quarantine where the streets were empty.  
10:43Saskatoon, Canada, was described as a “city of  the dead”, a ghost town, as everyone stayed home.  
10:48And the “death walking unseen” could have been  referring to people wearing masks or being very  
10:53ill and not yet showing symptoms. Another major event from the early  
10:5720th century is two Japanese cities  being annihilated by American bombs. 
11:01Did Nostradamus see nukes in his visions? One of his quatrains does sound a little bit  
11:07like destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It says: “Near the gates and within two cities 
11:12There will be two scourges the  like of which was never seen, 
11:15Famine within plague, people put out by steel, Crying to the great immortal God for relief.” 
11:21Two cities scourged. The like of which  was never seen. Seems pretty obvious. 
11:25Famine and plague might be the radiation  poisoning that the US at first denied existed.  
11:30The steel could be related to the B-29 bombers  that dropped the bombs. As for relief, well,  
11:35the people certainly did cry out for it,  but their government was slow to help. 
11:39Then we have the day many Americans said their  country lost its innocence, when darkness  
11:43descended after a relatively stable 1950s - the  day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. 
11:49Nostradamus wrote: “The ancient task will be completed 
11:52From on high, evil will fall on the great man A dead innocent will be accused of the deed 
11:57The guilty on will remain in the mist.” “Ancient task” – assassinating political  
12:02leaders has been around forever. “From on high” and “evil” – that could  
12:05mean the invisible hands many Americans  believe arranged the assassination. 
12:09But the best part of this prediction is the  “dead innocent being accused of the deed.” 
12:15For conspiracy theorists, Lee Harvey Oswald, who  was murdered after he was arrested, was innocent. 
12:20And if the skeptics are right, the  guilty did “remain in the mist” – they  
12:23were never officially charged. Now we come to the modern age,  
12:26and the day two planes flew into the Twin Towers  as the world watched in a state of absolute shock. 
12:32Nostradamus might have seen  it in the stars when he wrote: 
12:35“The sky will burn at forty-five degrees. Fire approaches the great new city. 
12:39By fire, he will destroy their city, A cold and cruel heart, blood will pour. 
12:45Mercy to none.” Fire in a great new  
12:47city is obvious. Compared to other major  global cities, New York is still a baby. 
12:52What’s more, it lies close to the  45th-parallel – about 300 miles (483 km) away,  
12:56but we can forgive Nostradamus for that error. It wasn’t completely destroyed, not even close,  
13:01but Nostradamus was right about the cold and  cruel hearts, the blood, and lack of mercy. 
13:05He might also have seen WWIII. One of his  quatrains talks about “combat and naval battle”. 
13:11He explained the “Red adversary will become pale  with fear. Putting the great Ocean in dread”. 
13:17Red adversary? China? Was the great ocean  in dread related to the fight in the South  
13:22China Sea where China has been building bases? He also talks about a “great swarm of bees” in  
13:27the fight, which could be the drones used in  WWIII. The next big war will no doubt be a war  
13:33of machines more than humans. But one of his best lines is: 
13:37“Three fires rise from the eastern sides,  while the West loses its light in silence.” 
13:42Three fires from the East? Western  media these days likes to talk about  
13:46the new “Axis” – China, Russia, and Iran. And for years now, political scientists  
13:51have discussed the new multipolar world  where the US is no longer the only great  
13:55superpower - so maybe Nostradamus was  right about the West losing its light. 
13:59He seemed to think the world would end,  writing in another quatrain that on the  
14:03seventh month of 1999, a “great king of  terror” would fall from the sky. Unless  
14:09he meant the rain in the UK, no great  terror fell from the sky that year. 
14:13The world didn’t end. But maybe he was right  when he said that “Mars would rule” the world,  
14:18meaning constant war. But let’s soften the blow. 
14:21The truth is, Nostradamus’s grim predictions  can be read in countless ways. It’s not that  
14:25he perfectly foresaw the future - it’s that  human history is so full of war, famine,  
14:30and catastrophe that his prophecies  can be made to fit almost anything. 
14:34And even if you do believe  him, there’s some good news. 
14:37His 26th quatrains, which might relate to the  year 2026, don’t just talk about a swarm of  
14:43bees attacking by night, and the rising  of the East as the West loses its light. 
14:48He also says, "Shadows will fall, but the  man of light will rise, and the stars will  
14:53guide those who look within." We’ll leave that one up to you. 
14:56Now go check out ‘Events That Will Cause the End  of the World’. Or click on this video instead.