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Nostradamus
A short biography
1503,
the years Michel de Nostradame ws born.
Jean the remy, the grandfather of Michel de Nostradame died when Michel
was only eight.
His grandfather had been a doctor by profession but also instructed him
in astology, magic and alchemy. These skills were inextricably linked
with medicine in those days.
His other grandfather Pierre de Nostradame took over the role as a teacher
and instructed him.
He was indeed a blilliant scholar and, at the age of fourteen, he was
concidered to be ready to enter the univerity at Avignon.
Michel's first task was to persuade the university examiners to allow
him to the University. Oral examinations were custom those days, and Michel
was put to the test in grammar, rhetoric and philosophy. The first two
subjects seemed to cost him little effort. Mostly it meant reciting prepared
texts and him memory was astonishingly good. Where he generally excelled,
however, was in matters of philosophy.
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was far ahead his fellow students, and one might think, quite a few
of his examiners. His knowlegde of astronomy was impressive though
his beliefs were quite unconvential and dangerous. One might easily
be burned to death those days. He declared that the earth was round
and that it circulated around the sun once a year.More
than a century later, Galileo was destined to be prosecuted, but no
one took much belief in a fourteen year old boy. His parents however,
were extremely concerned. They were christian converts but the fact
remained that they were still Jews by raced hence their situation
in society was precarious. |
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By
the time he was eighteen, pure academics has tired him, and he mentioned
becoming a physician, like his grandfathers before him.He
enrolled in the academy of Montpellier , THE shool of medicine those days.
The professors were among the first to disect bodies of executioned convicted
criminals. Anatomy was taught there. It was normally forbidden to do so,
but the Duke of Anjou had extended his permission in 1376 and had provided
them with the corpses of criminals. one per annum. Obviously this didn't
suffice the students. But it was forbidden then, it was thought to be
necromancy. Monpellier turned out to be the perfect university for the
young Michel. He was able to attend to the finest and latest lectures
from the finest physicians. Medicine had changed little since his grandfathers
days.
To modern eyes a mixture of science, alchemy and magic. Atfer three years
of college, Nostradamus was concidered to be ready to graduate. He did
pass all the examinations and
he was now a scholar, but not a physician. He now had to teach under supervision
for three months, then he had to undergo more examinations. He passed
these examns with great ease and had one day to write a thesis about an
aphorism of Hippocrates. His conclusions were declared sound and a week
later, Nostradamus was presented his licence and was officially able to
practice medicine by the Bisshop of Montpellier. He only praticed medicine
for a few weeks when disaster struck Montpellier in the form of bubonic
plague. A horrible disease which kills in a matter of days. It is transmitted
by fleas which drank the blood of infected rats. It still has outbreaks
in Asia from time to time. The remedy back then was a mixture of science
and magic, mumbo-jumbo for short, when you compare it with nowadays point
of view. Although his methods are partly strange, some of the elements
were quite revelutionary, mainly clean water and good hygiene about the
disease. The people of Montpellier were grateful and didn't seem to care
how Michel de Nostradame did it. He became known as the plague doctor
and the word spread round to the nearby villages.
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After nearly
four years he returned to Montpellier to complete his doctorate
and re-enrolled on 23rd October 1529. Nostradamus had some trouble
in explaining his unorthodox remedies and treatments he used in
the countryside. Nevertheless his learning and ability could not
be denied and he obtained his doctorate. He remained teaching at
Montpellier for a year but by this time his new theories, for instance
his refusal to bleed patients, were causing trouble and he set off
upon another spate of wandering.
While practising
in Toulouse he received a letter from Julius-Cesar Scaliger, the
philosopher considered second only to Erasmus throughout Europe.
Apparently Nostradamus' reply so pleased Scaliger that he invited
him to stay at his home in Agen. This life suited Nostradamus admirably,
and circa 1534 he married a young girl "of high estate, very beautiful
and admirable," whose name was lost to us. He had a son and a daughter
by her and his life seemed complete.
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Then a series
of tragedies struck. The plague came to Agen and, despite all his
efforts, killed Nostradamus' wife and two children. The fact that
he was unable to save his own family had a disastrous effect on
his practice. Then he quarrelled with Scaliger and lost his friendship.
His late wife's family tried to sue him for the return of her dowry
and as the final straw, in 1538, he was accused of heresy because
of a chance remark made some years before. To a workman casting
a bronze statue of the Virgin, Nostradamus had commented that he
was making devils. His plea that he was only describing the lack
of aesthetic appeal inherent in the statue was ignored and the Inquisitors
sent for him to go to Toulouse.
Nostradamus,
having no wish to stand trial, set out on his wandering again and
kept well clear of the Church authorities for the next six years.
We know little of this period. From references in later books we
know he travelled in the Lorraine and went to Venice and Sicily.
Legends about Nostradamus' prophetic powers also start to appear
at this time.
By 1554 Nostradamus
had settled in Marseilles. In November that year, the Provence experienced
one of the worst floods of its history. The plague redoubled in
virulence, spread by the waters and the polluted corpses. Nostradamus
worked ceaselessly.
Once the city
had recovered, Nostradamus moved on to Salon, which he found so
pleasant a town that he determined to settle there for the rest
of his life. In November he married Anne Ponsart Gemelle, a rich
widow. The house in which he spent the remainder of his days can
still be seen off the Place de la Poissonnerie.
After 1550 he
produced a yearly Almanac -
and after 1554 The Prognostications
- which seem to have been successful, and encouraged him to undertake
the much more onerous task of the Prophecies. He converted
the top room of his house at Salon into a study and as he tells
us in the Prophecies, worked there at night with his occult
books. The main source of his magical inspirations was a book called
De Mysteriis Egyptorum.
By 1555 Nostradamus
had completed the first part of his book of prophecies that were
to contain predictions from his time to the end of the world. The
word Century has nothing to do with one hundred years; it
was so called because there were a hundred verses or quatrains in
each book. The verses are written in a crabbed, obscure style, with
a polyglot of vocabulary of French, Provencal, Italian, Greek and
Latin. In order to avoid being prosecuted as a magician, Nostradamus
writes that he deliberately confused the time sequence of the Prophecies
so that their secrets would not be revealed to the non-initiate.
It is extraordinary
how quickly the fame of Nostradamus spread across France and Europe
on the strength of the Prophecies,
published in their incomplete form of 1555. The book contained only
the first three Centuries and part of the fourth. The prophecies
became all the rage at Court, the Queen, Catherine de Medici, sent
for Nostradamus to come to Court, and he set out for Paris on 14th
July 1556. On 15th August, Nostradamus booked a room at the Inn
of St. Michel, and the next day the queen sent for him.
One could only
wish that there had been a witness to record their meeting. Nostradamus
and the Queen spoke together for two hours. She is reputed to have
asked him about the quatrain concerning the king's death and to
have been satisfied with Nostradamus' answer. Certainly she continued
to believe in Nostradamus' predictions until her death. The king,
Henri II, granted Nostradamus only a brief audience and was obviously
not greatly interested.
Two weeks later
the queen sent for him a second time and now Nostradamus was faced
with the delicate and difficult task of drawing up the horoscopes
of the seven Valois children, whose tragic fates he had already
revealed in the centuries. All he would tell Catherine was that
all of her sons would be kings, which is slightly inaccurate since
one of them, Francois, died before he could inherit.
Soon afterwards
Nostradamus was warned that the Justices of Paris were inquiring
about his magic practices, and he swiftly returned to Salon. From
this time on, suffering from gout and arthritis, he seems to have
done little except draw up horoscopes for his many distinguished
visitors and complete the writing of the Prophecies. Apparently
he allowed a few manuscript copies to circulate before publication,
because many of the predictions were understood and quoted before
the completed book came off the printing press in 1568, two years
after his death.
The reason for
this reticence was probably the king's death in 1559. Nostradamus
had predicted it in I.35 and may have felt that it was too explicit
for comfort and that it would be advisible to wait some years until
things had quietened down. But the following year, 1560, King Francis
II died, and this time he was openly quoted.
In 1564 Catherine,
now Queen Regent, decided to make a Royal Progress through France.
While travelling she came to Salon and visited Nostradamus. They
dined and Catherine gave Nostradamus the title of Physician in Ordinary,
which carried with it a salary and other benefits.
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But by now the
gout from which Nostradamus suffered was turning to dropsy and he,
the doctor, realized that his end was near. He made his will on
17th June 1566 and left the large sum, for those days, of 3444 crowns
over and above his other possessions. On 1st July he sent for the
local priest to give him the last rites, and when Chavigny took
leave of him that night, he told him that he would not see him alive
again. As he himself had predicted, his body was found the next
morning.
He was burried
upright in one of the walls of the Church of the Cordeliers at Salon,
and his wife Anne erected a splendid marble plaque to his memory.
Nostradamus' grave was opened by superstitious soldiers during the
Revolution but his remains were reburied in the other church at
Salon, the Church of St. Laurent, where his grave and portrait can
still be seen.
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Ancient
Whispers
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