Re: Weil wir gerade beim Thema sind

Geschrieben von mica am 08. Juli 2002 23:31:57:

Als Antwort auf: Weil wir gerade beim Thema sind geschrieben von MP42 am 08. Juli 2002 22:10:58:

>Das heisst im konkreten Falle, was für Atsrologisches Wissen gab es damals, was er angewandt haben kann? Was für sprachliche BEsonderheiten gab es damals? Was für Wissen hatte Nostradamus bei Themen wie Religion (Kaballah, Mer-Ka-bah), Alchimismus usw. Dies sind Dinge die man meiner MEinung nach beachten muss und die mit Sicherheit in die Centuren mit eingeflossen sind.<


Hallo MP42 und Forum,

hier ein paar Hintergrundinformationen zu Nostradamus, seiner Geburts"umgebung", geschichtsträchtiger Boden mit alter mystischer Kultur.
Empfehlenswert ist, den ganzen Text zu lesen, hier nur der Auszug der mit Nostradamus direkt in Verbindung steht, interessant ist sicherlich auch der Nährboden aus dem eine Person wie Michel de Notsredame hervorgegangen ist.

In Folge ist die Rede von der römischen Stadt Glanum an der Gabelung des Rhonedeltas, deren Ursprünge weit in die Geschichte zurückreichen, folglich vielen kulturellen Strömungen ausgesetzt war. Handelsbeziehungen zu Ägypten, Griechenland, Phönizien und Keltogallischer sowie später römischer Einfluss "tränkten" den Boden.


"....Michael Nostradamus, the justly famous Seer of Provence, was born barely a mile from the Arch and the "pyramid," as the Augustinian mausoleum was called in the 16th century. In Nostradamus' time, these two monuments were all that remained above ground of Glanum. They are still standing today, stark reminders along the modern road into the Alpilles of the area's ancient past.

Today's visitor, standing under the two millennium old and still accoustically perfect Arch, gazes out on the excavations of Galnum and, if he is somewhat imaginative, can glimpse in his mind's eye its antique glory. In the near distance, the discerning visitor will note an oddly shaped hill with a perfect round hole in its side. At the foot of this hill is the Monastry of St. Paul de Manseole, a 12th century church and cloister that now serves as a psychatric hospital. Van Gogh was commited there for a time before returning to Paris and committing suicide.

Nostradamus mentions this area in six of his enigmatic and prophetic quatrains and connects it with the symbolic term "mansol" and the discovery of a great "treasure" or secret. Perhaps Nostradamus foresaw the rediscovery of Glanum, full of Roman and Gallo-Greek treasures, in 1921, or perhaps the Seer of Provence was pointing to the secret of the western tradition, the holy grail of esotericism, still waiting to be discovered among it ruins. Perhaps, as Nostradamus seems to suggest, hidden near the pierced hill above the monastary of Manseole.

While a secret may remain hidden near Glanum, other clues to Provence's unusual role in the history of western esotericism, including its Hebrew and Gnostic Christian roots, are hidden in plain sight. At Arles, which has often been called the soul of Provence, Greek and Roman relics abound. It is but a brief walk from the lovely Roman arena, equal in elegance if not in scale to Rome's Coliseum, to the town square where a curious Romanesque church with a Gothic facade draws the attention of the serious hermetic student....."



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