Nostradamus's work
has been commented upon periodically since the
seventeenth century, with critics taking basically one of
three views of the writer: true prophet, liar, or muddled
mystic. In 1625, Gabriel Naud wrote that the centuries,
"so ambiguous, and so diverse, obscure and enigmatic,"
lend themselves to prophetic fulfilment by their very
nature. Nostradamus' use of "doubtful one" could also
indicate that with time an ever larger shadow of
illegitimacy will cast itself across a Bush presidency.
Nostradamus's senate putting the king to death is too
striking to ignore completely. Among the hits is the one
that made the psychic Jeane Dixon famous: that the
American president to be elected in 1960 would be
assassinated.
Nostradamus is an
interesting figure in that virtually all his prophecies
deal with negative or evil events. His divining was in
the manner of the occult - so the source of his visions
may very well have been Satan. Nostradamus is perhaps the
most respected occult prophet of all time. Nostradamus is
over the heads of many people out there. They probably
would like it if they spent the time to truly listen to
it, but in today’s instant gratification society they
don’t have the attention span it takes.
Nostradamus is
extremely accurate about his predictions, many other
important events in the past were accurately predicted,
he even predicted the time of his death, its really
amazing. He also predicts there would be asteroids coming
to our earth that will kill millions of people.
Nostradamus is best known for his book entitled "Les
Propheties," which first appeared in spring in 1555. The
book rarely has been out of print since his death.
Nostradamus is (in my view) one of the best, epic metal
CD’s I have EVER heard. And, being also a symphonic metal
fan, I have heard lots of wannabe epic
albums.
Being an armchair historian and a weekend
bike rider, I signed up for the five day bike ride across
Virginia and Maryland billed as the Civil War Odyssey. This
ride through history would give me some insight about the
people that travelled through this part of the country in
the 1860's.
My special interests are in Civil War
medicine, Catholic chaplains and sister-nurses, and the
intersection of business history and military
history.
I have been writing historical pieces for
magazines and newspapers for about 10 years. In a previous
study published by the American Journal of Economics and
Sociology in 1989, Prof Kimenyi suggested that ethnic
skirmishes could easily result in civil
war.
He treated ethnic groups as "permanent
interest groups" that compete in the market for wealth
transfers and seek to maximise "group welfare" through the
transfer of resources from other groups.
Authors Wilson-Bareau and Degener provide
a fascinating glimpse into the system by which young men
could qualify for careers in the French Navy in their book
Manet and the American Civil War which provides the
reference for this series.
A sixteen year old Manet would spend
several months aboard the vessel, Le Havre et Guadeloupe on
a trip for the sons of the wealthy who had failed the exam
and could qualify to retake it if they sailed across the
equator.
I unfortunately had to miss his game (and
most others) this year as Historian conflicted with a trip
to Ohio, a speaking engagement at the Chambersburg Civil War
seminar, and other events (I was triple booked that
weekend).
One family participated in many historic
and breathtaking moments of the Civil War. Its members
helped Abraham Lincoln get elected twice to the
presidency.
This
catch-as-catch-can formation of regiments both North and South
means that it is impossible to known even the number of
individual regiments that formed during the Civil War. It is
estimated that 2,047 Union regiments existed during the Civil
War; 1,696 of these were infantry, 272 cavalry, and 78 were
artillery.
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