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One of the most enigmatic figures in history, Nostradamus
apothecary, astrologer and soothsayer is a continual source of
fascination. Indeed, his predictions are so much the stock-in-trade
of the wildest merchants of imminent Doom that one could be
forgiven for ignoring the fact that Michel de Nostredame,
1503-1566, was a figure firmly rooted in the society of the French
Renaissance. In this bold new account of the life and work of
Nostradamus, Denis Crouzet shows that any attempt to interpret his
Prophecies at face value is misguided. Nostradamus was not trying
to predict the future. He saw himself, rather, as 'prophesying',
i.e. bringing the Word of God to humankind. In a century marked by
the extreme violence of the Wars of Religion, Nostradamus' profound
Christian faith placed him among the 'evangelicals' of his
generation. Rejecting the confessional tensions tearing Europe
apart, he sought to coax his readers towards an interiorised piety,
based on the essential presence of Christ. Like Rabelais, for whom
laughter was a therapy to help one cope with the misery of the
times, Nostradamus saw himself as a physician of the soul as much
as of the body. His unveiling of the menacing and horrendous events
which await us in the future was a way of frightening his readers
into the realisation that inner hatred was truly the greatest peril
of all, to which the sole remedy was to live in the love and peace
of Christ. This inspired interpretation penetrates the imaginative
world of Nostradamus, a man whose life is as mysterious as his
writings. It shows him in a completely new dimension, securing for
him a significant place among the major thinkers of the
Renaissance.
One of the most enigmatic figures in history, Nostradamus -
apothecary, astrologer and soothsayer - is a continual source of
fascination. Indeed, his predictions are so much the stock-in-trade
of the wildest merchants of imminent Doom that one could be
forgiven for ignoring the fact that Michel de Nostredame,
1503-1566, was a figure firmly rooted in the society of the French
Renaissance. In this bold new account of the life and work of
Nostradamus, Denis Crouzet shows that any attempt to interpret his
Prophecies at face value is misguided. Nostradamus was not trying
to predict the future. He saw himself, rather, as prophesying ,
i.e. bringing the Word of God to humankind. In a century marked by
the extreme violence of the Wars of Religion, Nostradamus profound
Christian faith placed him among the evangelicals of his
generation. Rejecting the confessional tensions tearing Europe
apart, he sought to coax his readers towards an interiorised piety,
based on the essential presence of Christ. Like Rabelais, for whom
laughter was a therapy to help one cope with the misery of the
times, Nostradamus saw himself as a physician of the soul as much
as of the body. His unveiling of the menacing and horrendous events
which await us in the future was a way of frightening his readers
into the realisation that inner hatred was truly the greatest peril
of all, to which the sole remedy was to live in the love and peace
of Christ. This inspired interpretation penetrates the imaginative
world of Nostradamus, a man whose life is as mysterious as his
writings. It shows him in a completely new dimension, securing for
him a significant place among the major thinkers of the
Renaissance.
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