Nostradamus C10 Q34: Death of an Olympic equestrian leaves his estate in turmoil
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015, Feb 2023
The
text of this verse focuses on the struggles of a brother in law and in
so doing matches the story emerging from this two brothers series.
That
is also the major reason I paired it with C10 Q26 in this series since in so
doing there is a good chance that important new detail is added to the
brother's story.
This approach was aided by cross references in other
verses that enhanced the new components importance.
However another good
reason for putting it in this series is that this the only verse where
frere (brother) is mentioned twice in its text.
The verse holds anagrams that repeatedly point to its message as
that of legal struggles over inherited land rights.
The text sets the
background of the participants and this is expanded upon
in the
anagrams so that we are brought to the conclusion that a leader who was
both a tyrant
and an Olympic equestrian
during an Olympic event in France [Olympiques
(loys qu'empi)] dies while riding a horse.
The
anagrams collectively carry a tone of finance and problem in its
administration.
This provides sufficient detail to deduce the
background to the story in this verse and others in this series.
The
anagrams on which this is based include
leaving-to tyrant (voltigean_t
trayn), treasurer (eur
ſera tr), tenantry (nt
trayne),
treasure (eur
ſera t), refer numeraries (frere_mineur
ſera), feudality refer (y
Du fait le _ frere_) and
agent overvalued it (eval
rude vol_ti_geant).
The
unexpected death leaves his estate in limbo with the tenants on the
properties of the estate being the beneficiaries of the delay.
This
state of affairs produces huge tension amongst those who are the
nominated inheritors of the
estate.
Key Ideas:
tyrant, Olympian, afterlife, hearsay, over-valued, revalued, forteller, elongative, metaphrases, parcenary,
tenantry, outlived, treasurer, feudality, impure, fertile, Empress, yearn,
preach, devour, felt, Prague, longer, bones.

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