Nostradamus C10 Q87: Paranoia over radioelements is overruled to enable cloning
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015, 2022
C10
Q87 is another
extraordinary verse
whose anagrams belie the possibility that they appear
by chance. Not only do they complement the story of the status of Christ's
foundations but they produce remarkably coherent stories about Psellos, another
person whose 11th century articles on demons and dualistic aspect of religion
was condemned by those holding orthodox views.
The
cipher that unites this verse with the agennos series is based on
genesis / agenesis yet these latter terms don't relate to kin and
conception but to beginnings that either mature or fail to thrive. There
are six anagrams of genesis in the 942 verses but two of them appear in
different lines of this verse. (1 and 3).
As this verse is presented it will also be seen that it has 21st century
nuclear term in it that are very modern. The appearance of both themes
sets the range of this verse's events as 2100 years starting with
the birth of Christ. It is a story of genetic lineage and the emergence
of a religous leader who is conceived artificially using DNA believed to
be that found in religious relics.
What draws it closer to the agennos stream are
anagrams such asmortalised, Psellos
and
vineyard with
the last being an iconic place in Gethsemane in the tale of
Jesus' last days. These establish a time line starting with Christ's
death.
But the nuclear and the religious legacy based on other anagrams in its
cluster such as
radioelements and agennosalso show the verse relates to a
continuous period that reaches into our future.
Accompanying the above anagrams of this verse
there are also
ones for presidents, paranoia, atomiser, redemptorial,
meliorates, fraternise,
pillar, paramonarius (an official running a Roman or Church owned farm
or rest station), exsanguinates(draining of blood),
pollinates andauxesis (Gk word for growth or
increase in cells). This collection is remarkably
coherent with the topics found in the text of Nostradamus' Prophecies.
These anagrams are either singular or have a maximum
of three occurrences.
Through the cohesion found in this cluster of
anagrams the verse tells the next stage of the Christ status story when
modern science is exploited in an attempt to bring about Christ's
resurrection. The text tells the part of the war story that unfolds in
the near future when this evolution comes to fruition.
Most of the other significant anagrams have under
eight occurrencesand
are given relevance by the particular sequence of which each is part.
By their content the current verse represents a morality tale of
dispute between those who use modern science to give birth without a
father and those who base their faith on this very principle.
And by this
path based on agennos a major
part of Nostradamus' vision for our future is presented.
DATA
section
C10 Q87
A Great King will come to
take port near Nice,
Thus the death of the great empire will
be complete
In Antibes will he place his
heifer,
The plunder by sea all will vanish.
Grand roy viendra
prendre port pres de Niſſe
Le grand empire de la mort ſien fera
Aux Antipolles poſera ſon geniſſe
Par mer la Pille tout eſuanoira.
Anagram sequences found in the above lines of
French text.
<fear radioelementS prime danger><mortalS refine a
enLarged (and) primed><atomiSer><redemptorial fineS named><Large
reprimand><meliorateS pride><moralIst><and empire><fraterniSe><enLarged fear
prime deal insert><finest moral>
<uueSt Paranoia><aPril tell ParamonariuS [anyone in
charge of church property]> <rearm a Pillar outlet no Pair uSe>
Agennetos:
(from Gka=without/ not,gennos=beget, -tos =by
means of) implying born without a father.
Sefira:The Letter carrying spheres
in the Hebrew coding device called theTree of Life
In hisThe Argument of Psellos' Chronographia,
Anthony Kaldellis
claims that
"[
Michael
Psellos
] was a serious philosopher rather than a mere polymath or
intellectual dilettante, and that he used his considerable rhetorical skills to
disguise the revolutionary nature of his political thought, which was
consciously anti-Christian and deeply influenced in some respects by the
political philosophy of Plato."
Table listing anagram occurrences (1-23) in
Nostradamus' Prophecies