Nostradamus was a French physician and seer, best known for collection of prophesies, ‘Les Propheties’
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Nostradamus was a French physician and seer, best known for collection of prophesies, ‘Les Propheties’
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After relocating to Agen in 1531, Nostradamus married a local woman, who has been identified by some as Henriette d'Encausse, and had two children with her. Ironically, his reputation as a healer suffered after he failed to save his wife and children, who died in 1534, presumably from the plague.
In 1547, he got married to a rich widow named, Anne Ponsarde, in Salon-de-Provence, with whom he had six children: three sons and three daughters. A decade later, he and his wife invested in a massive canal project organized by Adam de Craponne to relieve the dry Salon-de-Provence region of its water problems.
Nostradamus, who suffered from gout for a long time, became afflicted with edema or dropsy in 1566, which caused abnormal amounts of fluid to accumulate beneath his skin or within the cavities of his body. He summoned his lawyer in June that year to create a will leaving much of his property to his wife and children.
Michel de Nostradame was born on December 14 (December 21 by some accounts), 1503, in Saint-Remy-de-Provence south of France, to notary Jaume de Nostradame and his wife Reyniere de St-Remy. He was one of at least nine children of his parents.
His paternal grandfather, Guy Gassonet, converted from Judaism to Catholicism in around 1460 and took up the surname Nostredame (Our Lady) to honor the saint on whose day the conversion had happened. Her mother was the granddaughter of Pierre de Saint-Rémy, a renowned physician in Saint-Rémy.
According to some sources, as a child, he was tutored by his maternal great-grandfather Jean de St. Rémy. His grandfather is also credited for teaching him classical languages and mathematics.
When he was 15, he went to the University of Avignon to study medicine for his baccalaureate. However, following an outbreak of the bubonic plague, the university was shut down and he was forced to leave only after about a year into his studies.
In 1521, Nostradamus embarked on an eight-year-long journey through the countryside and practiced as an apothecary for some years. He later enrolled into the University of Montpellier in 1529 to complete his degree in medicine, but his notions of astrology were looked down upon by Catholic priests.
He was eventually expelled from the university after the authorities learned about his past as an apothecary, a “manual trade” banned by the university. However, some still refer to him as “Doctor” and maintain that he had managed to complete his education and earn a degree.
In the following years, he continued to treat plague victims by travelling throughout France and Italy. He not only addressed the lack of proper treatment by experimenting with new remedies, but also cured an impressive number of patients by improving their hygiene and diet.
He is credited with creating the vitamin-C-rich herbal lozenge, “rose pill”, made of rosehips, which supposedly protected the people from the plague and was able to cure mild infections. His success as a healer earned him the patronage of many affluent citizens, most notably the leading Renaissance scholar Jules-César Scaliger, who invited him to Agen, in southwestern France, in 1531.
In 1538, he drew the ire of the Inquisition after his remark about a religious statue offended the local church in Agen. Afraid of being persecuted, he left France and travelled through Italy, Greece and Turkey for the next few years.
It is believed that during his travels to ancient mystery schools Nostradamus became more interested in the occult, studying horoscopes, practicing divine meditation, even trying necromancy and good luck charms like the hawthorn rod.
According to legends, he made one of his first successful prophecies when he met a group of Franciscan monks and declared that one of them would become Pope in the future. Among them was Felice Peretti, who became Pope Sixtus V in 1585.
Despite his occult practices, he remained a Roman Catholic, denouncing the Protestant Reformation, and was able to return back to France a few years later. In 1545, he helped the renowned physician Louis Serre in tackling a major outbreak of the plague in Marseille, and two years later, settled down in Salon-de-Provence, treating plague victims there on his own.
According to some sources, he started focusing on the occult practices after settling in Salon-de-Provence, and would often meditate for hours in front of a bowel filled with water and herbs. He claimed to have entered trance-like state in which he saw the visions that became the basis for his prophesies.
Seeing that almanacs were very popular at that time, he decided to write his very first almanac in 1550, and also Latinized his name to ‘Nostradamus’, following popular trends. His almanac was received with positive response, which encouraged him to write at least one almanac every year.