{PDF} the Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Ebook Free Download

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

{PDF} the Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Ebook Free Download THE COMPLETE PROPHECIES OF NOSTRADAMUS PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Nostradamus | 194 pages | 03 Dec 2013 | Createspace | 9781494324520 | English | United States The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus PDF Book Add six to that, and you've got 66 — or the year ' The American War of Independence. Aftermath of the Coming of the Third Antichrist. Catherine de Valois the Battle of Castillon. Then, he became prime minister of the provisional post-WWII government. Nostradamus was one of the first to re-paraphrase these prophecies in French, which may explain why they are credited to him. Piedmont Eyes Ravenna. Charles De Gaulle. A manuscript normally known as the Orus Apollo also exists in the Lyon municipal library, where upwards of 2, original documents relating to Nostradamus are stored under the aegis of Michel Chomarat. Tsunami I. A stunning array of prophecies from the greatest of the prophet,'s Nostradamus whose writings are as relevant today as when they were first penned. Armageddonthe Final Prophecy. Undated The Ticino. BC Homers The Odyssey. But these were no ordinary poems. The tournament was held to celebrate the upcoming wedding of the king's daughter. The secrets of Nostradamus's power to foresee the future has never been fully explained, but with this book you will be able to experience for yourself the scope of that power and, with the aid of Henry C. The Blanche Nef White Ship. Adolf Hitler. Greek Nuclear Accident. Lemesurier, Peter Even the revolution in worldwide communication brought about by the personal computer and the World Wide Web was foretold by this greatest of prophets. What happened: President John Kennedy great man received numerous death threats petition over the course of his presidency. Prophecy , treating plague. After leaving Avignon, Nostradamus, by his own account, traveled the countryside for eight years from researching herbal remedies. The French Revolution. Latin versions of both had recently been published in Lyon , and extracts from both are paraphrased in the second case almost literally in his first two verses, the first of which is appended to this article. Internet Sacred Text Archive. Nobles and commoners alike were declared traitors to the revolution and beheaded at the guillotine headless idiots. What happened: Starting with the storming of the Bastille in , the French Revolution saw the overthrowal of the monarchy and the establishment of a new republic. Undated The Order of Fontevrault. The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus. In " Nostradamus, Bibliomancer: The Man, the Myth, the Truth ," biographer Peter Lemesurier concludes that Nostradamus "believed that history repeats itself" and used the technique of projecting past events onto the future in order to make realistic-sounding claims. Rhone Floods. The conflict in Reims and London and sickness in Tuscany, however, doesn't fit in with the assassination of the Kennedys. France Austria Unpick Genoa. Most of them had evidently been based on unsourced rumours relayed as fact by much later commentators, such as Jaubert , Guynaud and Bareste , on modern misunderstandings of the 16th-century French texts, or on pure invention. The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Writer After that came Erika Cheetham 's The Prophecies of Nostradamus , incorporating a reprint of the posthumous edition, which was reprinted, revised and republished several times from onwards, latterly as The Final Prophecies of Nostradamus. The Blockade of Genoa. Roberts's interpretations, confidently open the door and know what life holds in store for us into the next millennium. Near the gates and within two cities There will be scourges the like of which was never seen, Famine within plague, people put out by steel, Crying to the great immortal God for relief. The City of Tours. Lemesurier, Peter The SubDivision of Provence. Even the often-advanced suggestion that quatrain I. Mahatma Ghandi I. They also point out that English translations of his quatrains are almost always of extremely poor quality, based on later manuscripts, produced by authors with little knowledge of sixteenth-century French , and often deliberately mistranslated to make the prophecies fit whatever events the translator believed they were supposed to have predicted. The Siege of Pondicherry. Nostradamus was allegedly a diviner who was able predict future tidings. Dover Publications. Submarine Warfare. These will in the future by headless idiots Be received as divine prayers. King James I of England I. Mario Reading. England Secedes From European Union. Andrew Frew. Similarly, the expression Pau, Nay, Loron —often interpreted as an anagram of "Napaulon Roy"—refers to three towns in southwestern France near his one-time home. Given this reliance on literary sources, it is unlikely that Nostradamus used any particular methods for entering a trance state , other than contemplation , meditation and incubation. Since his death, only the Prophecies have continued to be popular, but in this case they have been quite extraordinarily so. He worked as an apothecary for several years before entering the University of Montpellier , hoping to earn a doctorate , but was almost immediately expelled after his work as an apothecary a manual trade forbidden by university statutes was discovered. Part of a series on the. French Crisis IV. The Battle of Malplaquet. The Siege of Belfort. Saint Malachy. Loading Something is loading. Physician , author, translator, astrological consultant. Armageddonthe Final Prophecy. Undated The Dangers of Extramarital. In the Journal of Neurosurgery , Kamilah Dowling and James Goodrich write that the profusely- bleeding king remained conscious and was "able to walk up some steps with an unsteady gait. The End of the French Revolution. The Alliance of Fontainebleau. The Death of Philip Capet. Nostradamus and his prophecies. The Magyarization of Bratislava. He first married in , but his wife and two children died in during another plague outbreak. There have also been several well-known Internet hoaxes , where quatrains in the style of Nostradamus have been circulated by e-mail as the real thing. Earthshaking fire from the center of the Earth Will cause tremors around the New City. Islamic Attack on a Northern French Port. This is the latest accepted revision , reviewed on 19 October One of his major prophetic sources was evidently the Mirabilis Liber of , which contained a range of prophecies by Pseudo-Methodius , the Tiburtine Sibyl , Joachim of Fiore , Savonarola and others his Preface contains 24 biblical quotations, all but two in the order used by Savonarola. Martin's Press. Winter Freeze. Open the door to the next century with the only unabridged, definitive edition of the authentic prophecies of Michael Nostradamus since The Diary of Samuel Pepys. The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Reviews Nostradamus' star didn't fade after his death in The great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt, An evil deed foretold by the bearer of a petition. Louis Pasteur. A leading-edge research firm focused on digital transformation. Even Leoni accepted on page that he had never seen an original edition, and on earlier pages, he indicated that much of his biographical material was unsourced. After leaving Avignon, Nostradamus, by his own account, traveled the countryside for eight years from researching herbal remedies. Nostradamus, Michel:: Orus Apollo , ? Saint Malachy. Ecological BurnOut. Dover Publications. The Italian Plebiscites. According to the prediction, another falls at night time. Physician , author, translator, astrological consultant. Nostradamus: The Illustrated Prophecies. Add six to that, and you've got 66 — or the year ' Barbary Pirates Harass the Mediterranean Email address. Greek Nuclear Accident. This is the latest accepted revision , reviewed on 19 October Bubonic Plague Strikes Venice. The Great Fire of London. Adolf Hitler Proclaims his Agenda. They also point out that English translations of his quatrains are almost always of extremely poor quality, based on later manuscripts, produced by authors with little knowledge of sixteenth-century French , and often deliberately mistranslated to make the prophecies fit whatever events the translator believed they were supposed to have predicted. The book was first published in What happened: Starting with the storming of the Bastille in , the French Revolution saw the overthrowal of the monarchy and the establishment of a new republic. At the age of 14 [6] Nostradamus entered the University of Avignon to study for his baccalaureate. The Ousting of Ismail Pasha. The Battle of Sekigahara. The academics [38] [63] [67] [68] revealed that not one of the claims just listed was backed up by any known contemporary documentary evidence. The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus Read Online Additionally, scholars have pointed out that almost all English translations of Nostradamus's quatrains are of extremely poor quality, seem to display little or no knowledge of 16th-century French, are tendentious , and are sometimes intentionally altered in order to make them fit whatever events the translator believed they were supposed to refer or vice versa. The Emergence of a New Religious Sect. Wikiquote has quotations related to: Nostradamus. At the age of 14 [6] Nostradamus entered the University of Avignon to study for his baccalaureate. Undated The Dangers of Extramarital. Career PressInc. After reading his almanacs for , which hinted at unnamed threats to the royal family, she summoned him to Paris to explain them and to draw up horoscopes for her children. Biography portal. Many of Nostradamus's supporters believe his prophecies are genuine. The Battle of Sekigahara. A stunning array of prophecies from the greatest of the prophet,'s Nostradamus whose writings are as relevant today as when they were first penned. Prophecy , treating plague. The RussoOttoman War. Saint Malachy. Salon-de-Provence , Provence, Kingdom of France. The Treaty of Paris. Most of them had evidently been based on unsourced rumours relayed as fact by much later commentators, such as Jaubert , Guynaud and Bareste , on modern misunderstandings of the 16th-century French texts, or on pure invention. French Crisis III. Ecological BurnOut.
Recommended publications
  • Botany in Medieval and Renaissance Universities
    Botany in Medieval and Renaissance Universities Karen Meier Reeds Garland Publishing, Inc. New York & London 1991 Contents List of Illustrations Preface Note on Names and Texts 1. The Character of Botany in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance 3 Introduction 3 The Community of Botanists 7 Botany and the Reformation 13 Ancient Sources of Renaissance Botany 14 Looking at Plants 24 Learning from Druggists and Herbalists 24 Emending Classical Texts 26 Drawing Plants from Nature 28 Collecting Plants 33 Conclusion: Anatomy and Botany 36 2. Botany at the University of Montpellier in the Middle Ages and Renaissance 39 Introduction 39 The Study of Simples at the Medieval University 41 The Reformation, Humanism, and the University 47 \ Guillaume Rondelet (1507-1566) and Botany at Montpellier 51 Rondelet's Training as a Doctor and Naturalist 51 Rondelet and Formal Botanical Instruction 56 Rondelet and His Students 63 Botany at Montpellier between Rondelet's Death and Richer de Belleval's Appointment 72 Under Chancellor Antonius Saporta (1566-1573) 72 Under Chancellor Joubertus (1573-1583) 74 Under Chancellor Joannes Hucherus (1583-1603) 78 Pierre Richer de Belleval, Regent Professor of Anatomy and Botany, Founder of the Jardin du Roy at Montpellier 80 Conclusion 91 viii Contents 3. Botany at the University of Basel in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century 93 Introduction 93 The University Reformers and Botany 96 Paracelsus at Basel (1527) 99 Informal Botanical Activities 104 Books 104 Gardens 106 Ties with Foreign Botanists 108 Formal Botanical Instruction 110 Caspar Bauhin (1560-1624), First Professor of Anatomy and Botany at Basel 111 Early Life and Education 111 Bauhin as a Teacher of Botany 116 Bauhin's Botanical Works 120 Conclusion 130 4.
    [Show full text]
  • The Early Book Herbaria of Leonhard Rauwolf (S. France and N
    Rendiconti Lincei. Scienze Fisiche e Naturali (2021) 32:449–461 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12210-021-01012-1 RESEARCH PAPER The early book herbaria of Leonhard Rauwolf (S. France and N. Italy, 1560–1563): new light on a plant collection from the ‘golden age of botany’ Anastasia Stefanaki1,2,3 · Tilmann Walter4 · Henk Porck5 · Alice Bertin1 · Tinde van Andel1,2,6 Received: 18 January 2021 / Accepted: 21 June 2021 / Published online: 10 July 2021 © The Author(s) 2021 Abstract The sixteenth century was a golden age for botany, a time when numerous naturalists devoted themselves to the study and documentation of plant diversity. A very prominent fgure among them was the German physician, botanist, and traveler Leonhard Rauwolf (1535?–1596), famous for his travel account and luxurious book herbarium containing plants from the Near East. Here, we focus on the less studied, early book herbaria of Rauwolf. These form a three-volume plant collection bound in leather and gold, which contains over 600 plants that Rauwolf collected between 1560 and 1563 in S. France and N. Italy when he was a student of medicine. We show the botanical value of Rauwolf’s early book herbaria, exemplifed by two exotic American specimens, namely one of the oldest surviving specimens of tobacco (Nicotiana rustica), collected in Italy, and the oldest known French record of prickly pear (Opuntia fcus-indica). These well-preserved specimens indicate that Rauwolf was eager to collect exotic plants already in his early botanical steps. We further discuss Rauwolf’s professional botanical network during his student years and suggest that the famous Swiss botanist Johann Bauhin (1541–1613), friend and companion of Rauwolf during his feld excursions and their medical studies in Montpellier, has played a signifcant role in the compilation of this precious historical plant collection.
    [Show full text]
  • Redalyc.GUSTAVE PLANCHON
    Revista CENIC. Ciencias Biológicas ISSN: 0253-5688 [email protected] Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas Cuba Wisniak, Jaime GUSTAVE PLANCHON Revista CENIC. Ciencias Biológicas, vol. 46, núm. 3, septiembre-diciembre, 2015, pp. 270 -284 Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas Ciudad de La Habana, Cuba Disponible en: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=181241373006 Cómo citar el artículo Número completo Sistema de Información Científica Más información del artículo Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal Página de la revista en redalyc.org Proyecto académico sin fines de lucro, desarrollado bajo la iniciativa de acceso abierto Revista CENIC Ciencias Biológicas, Vol. 46, No. 3, pp. 285-284, septiembre-diciembre, 2015. GUSTAVE PLANCHON Jaime Wisniak Department of Chemical Engineering, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel 84105 [email protected] Recibido: 15 de febrero de 2015. Aceptado: 16 de marzo de 2015. Palabras clave: botánica, elemi, geobotánica, globularias, jaborandi, farmacia, quinquinas, Strichnos, tufas. Key words: botany, elemi, geobotany, globularias, jaborandi, pharmacy, quinquinas, Strychnos, tufas. RESUMEN. Gustave Planchon (1833-1900), médico, farmacéutico y botánico francés promotor de la enseñanza de farmacia en Francia, realizó investigaciones en zoología, botánica, geobotánica, fitopaleontología, fisiología vegetal, medicamentos, e historia de la farmacia. Sus principales publicaciones se centraron en las globularias, quinquinas, Strychnos, y descripción detallada de la estructura de los diferentes órganos de plantas y árboles. ABSTRACT. Gustave Planchon (1833-1900), French physician, pharmacist, and botanist, promoter of the teaching of pharmacy in France, carried on research in zoology, botany, geobotany, phytopaleontology, plant physiology, drugs, and history of pharmacy.
    [Show full text]
  • Nature's Medicine Cabinet: Notes on Botanical Therapeutics at the Birth of the New World
    JwnuI 0( "'" "'-'-"~<If S<>nl<n. _&9. N...-.3a •. 1.I_UO.FaIV·'''_1OOJ Nature's Medicine Cabinet: Notes on Botanical Therapeutics at the Birth of the New World Alain Touwaide The Smithsonian Institution Abstract The period 51Telehing from Columbus's fin;1 VOYlge in 149210 lhe mid-seventeenth cen­ tury was a fonna\lve period in the development of medicine, especially botllnicallhe:l1l' peutics. This brief paper oUllines the evolulion of 1mowledge of medicinal planlS during Ihis period, which also SllW Ihe exploration of the New WOl1d. Old World Therapeutics Therapeutics in the Old World underwent a deep transformation in the 16th and 17th centuries. developing from ils classical and medieval rools in direclions that led IOward modem empirical science. The Medieval Legacy. As the 15th century ended. the field of therapemics in Europe was largely dominated by Arabic pharmacy. From lhe end of Ihe 11th century onward. Arabic medical treatises (including pharmaceutical works) had been trans­ lated into Latin in the scholarly centers of southern Europe (Salerno. Toledo. and MOlltpellier). These translations included many terms that were not translated but simply transliterated from Arabic. thus introducing uncenainlY and confusion. This was panicularly the case for technical terms and plant names. As a consequence. drugs. especially the Oriental ones previously unknown in the West were not correclly identified by Weslem physicians and this gave rise to many mistakes. Funhermore. Arabic pharmaco·therapy heavily relied on compound drugs. Their action was not as well known as was that of simple drugs: did it associate the properties of all the components or was it a new property.
    [Show full text]
  • 12 Ichthyological Topics of the European Reception of Du Bartas
    12 Ichthyological Topics of the European Reception of Du Bartas Paul J. Smith An important difference between the reception histories of Ronsard and Du Bartas lies in the way in which the two poets are presented as a poeta doc- tus by their contemporary editors, printers, and commentators. In the case of Ronsard, the poet’s presentation by Rémy Belleau and Marc-Antoine de Muret highlights mainly his humanist learning in the field of classical mythology and his profound knowledge of the ancient poets (in particular Ovid, Tibullus, Propertius, Theocritus, Anacreon, Virgil, and Homer, in order of frequency), and Petrarch and Marullus among the moderns.1 As for Du Bartas, the com- mentators Simon Goulart and Pantaleon Thevenin mainly assume a different kind of learning: Aristotle, Pliny, and Aelian, but above all contemporary work, namely the natural histories by Pierre Belon, Guillaume Rondelet and Conrad Gessner. It is precisely this natural history aspect that is consistent with the emerging interest in natural history, and is therefore one of the causes of the difference in popularity between the two poets in the 17th century, especially in reader circles where there was a general growing interest in natural history. It is known that even some early modern scientists, such as Ambroise Paré, Nicolas-Abraham de La Framboisière, Scipion Dupleix, and Simon Girault,2 liked to quote Du Bartas in their work. It is less or not at all known that there was also interest in Du Bartas among some zoologically, and in particular ichthyologically interested readers. I would like to demonstrate the latter for Du Bartas on the basis of one of Du Bartas’s most quoted passages in natural 1 See Belleau Rémy, Commentaire au Second Livre des Amours de Ronsard, eds.
    [Show full text]
  • Les Premiers Bryozoologues Et La Connaissance Des Bryozoaires De Rondelet À Linnaeus / First Bryozoologists and the Knowledge of Bryozoa from Rondelet to Linnaeus
    ZOBODAT - www.zobodat.at Zoologisch-Botanische Datenbank/Zoological-Botanical Database Digitale Literatur/Digital Literature Zeitschrift/Journal: Denisia Jahr/Year: 2005 Band/Volume: 0016 Autor(en)/Author(s): D'Hondt Jean-Loup L. Artikel/Article: Les premiers bryozoologues et la connaissance des Bryozoaires de Rondelet à Linnaeus / First bryozoologists and the knowledge of Bryozoa from Rondelet to Linnaeus. 329-350 © Biologiezentrum Linz/Austria; download unter www.biologiezentrum.at Les premiers bryozoologues et la connaissance des Bryozoaires de RONDELET ä LINNAEUS J.-L.L. D'HONDT Abstract: First bryozoologists and the knowledge of Bryozoa from RONDELET to LiNNAEUS. The first specialists of the bryozoans have logically compared the organisms as animals, but a long time before they were studied by the botanists and interpreted as marine and freshwater algae. Bryozoans were fi- nally and definitively considered as animals only at the beginning of the XVIIIth century. Nationalities, areas of study, jobs, languages of publication, professional carriers of the first bryozoologists are recapi- tulated. Scientific contributions of bryozoan specialists from RONDELET to LiNNAEUS are synthetized in the various fields of the knowledge (morphology, anatomy, development, ecology, biogeography). A short biography is presented of each of the first bryozoologists working from the Renaissance to 1758 (date of thelO* edition of the LiNNAEUS' „Systema Naturae"). An annex lists the species of Bryozoa ob- served by the bryozoologists during the XVlth and
    [Show full text]
  • Pierre Belon to Michel De Montaigne
    UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Rethinking the Status of Animals in the French Renaissance Culture: from Pierre Belon to Michel de Montaigne Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/471543m7 Author Sylvia, Olga Publication Date 2016 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Rethinking the Status of Animals in the French Renaissance Culture: from Pierre Belon to Michel de Montaigne By Olga Gennadyevna Sylvia A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in French in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Timothy Hampton, Chair Professor Susan Maslan Professor Victoria Kahn Spring 2016 Abstract Rethinking the Status of Animals in the French Renaissance Culture: from Pierre Belon to Michel de Montaigne !!! by Olga Gennadyevna Sylvia Doctor of Philosophy in French University of California, Berkeley Professor Timothy Hampton, Chair This dissertation discusses the status of animals in sixteenth century French texts of various literary and non-literary genres. It aims at demonstrating the significant shift from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance with regards to the literary portrayal of animals, which were no longer regarded in the allegorical tradition but rather as a subject matter. These changes in philosophers’ perceptions of animals were conditioned by the intersection of two major phenomena taking place at the time – geographical explorations exposing new knowledge about unknown animals and species, and a rediscovery of classical texts that challenged the Aristotelian vision of a hierarchy of species. As a result, scholars were urged to break the old tradition of animals’ representation as a vehicle of human flaws and social differences, and created instead a new role for animals for the first time in the history of Western civilization.
    [Show full text]
  • Annals of Bryozoology 3: Aspects of the History of Research on Bryozoans
    Paper in: Patrick N. Wyse Jackson & Mary E. Spencer Jones (eds) (2011) Annals of Bryozoology 3: aspects of the history of research on bryozoans. International Bryozoology Association, Dublin, pp. viii+225. THE PARISIAN SCHOOL OF BRYOZOOLOGY 35 The Parisian School of Bryozoology Jean-Loup d’Hondt Département “Milieux et peuplements Aquatiques”, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, 55 rue Buffon, F-75005 Paris, France 1. Introduction 2. The authors and their influences 3. Annex: The isolated (mainly non-Parisian) French bryozoologists 4. In conclusion: now and the future? Appendix. Known burial places of the French bryozoologists 1. Introduction The study of the Bryozoa in France was essentially carried out in the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle (Paris), and in six universities, those of Bordeaux, Lille, Lyon, Marseilles, Montpellier and Paris. In Marseille and Montpellier, the scientists were only interested in Recent species, in Bordeaux and Lyon principally by the fossils, and in Lille and Paris in both living and fossil forms. The Parisian University ran some marine stations, where the scientists carried out research in the field, as well as undertaking further studies at their laboratories in Paris. The observations made in the marine station were an extension of research carried out at Roscoff, Banyuls-sur-Mer and Villefranche-sur-Mer. The Museum also owns the marine station of Dinard. Various investigators were not attached to a particular marine laboratory but carried out their research topics elsewhere sometimes in relative isolation, perhaps owing to the requirements of their own specialities. The works on the Bryozoa were conducted successively during several centuries in Paris, beginning in Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle from the 17th century and continued up to now in the faculty of sciences.
    [Show full text]
  • Dr. Anastasia Stefanaki Van De Sande Fellow Dec 2019 – Jan 2020, Scaliger Inistitute, Leiden University Library
    Dr. Anastasia Stefanaki Van de Sande fellow Dec 2019 – Jan 2020, Scaliger Inistitute, Leiden University Library Report on the results of my visit to Leiden University Library special collections The purpose of my visit to Leiden University Library was to explore the life and botanical activity of Leonhard Rauwolf (1535–1596) in his early years in Southern France and Northern Italy in order to elucidate the historical context in which Rauwolf compiled the first three volumes of his herbarium. The Rauwolf herbarium, comprising 4 book volumes in total, is part of the Leiden Library Special Collections and since 2013 it is on (semi-)permanent loan at Naturalis Biodiversity Center (volumes 2 and 3) and the Boerhaave museum (volume 1). Leonhard Rauwolf was a 16th-century German doctor, botanist and explorer, who studied medicine and botany in Montpelier, France, under the teachings of the renowned doctor and botanist Guillaume Rondelet (1507–1566). Rauwolf became famous as the first post-Medieval European to travel to the Levant and Mesopotamia in search for new medicinal plants. This hazardous journey, which resulted to the compilation of the fourth volume of his herbarium (Ghorbani et al., 2018), is documented in detail in Rauwolf’s personal travel account (Rauwolf, 1738). The botanical content of this volume, c. 190 plants, has been recently studied and results were published by Ghorbani et al. (2018). My research regards the period 1560-1563, i.e. the student years of Rauwolf, during which he collected about 690 plants in Southern France and Northern Italy, which are included in first three volumes of his herbarium.
    [Show full text]
  • Annals Cover 5
    THIS VOLUME CONTAINS A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL INDEX OF DECEASED BRYOZOOLOGISTS WHO RESEARCHED FOSSIL AND LIVING BRYOZOANS. ISBN 978-0-9543644-4-9 INTERNATIONAL 1f;��'f ' ;� BRYOZOOLOGY � EDITED BY ASSOCIATION PATRICK N. WYSE JACKSON & MARY E. SPENCER JONES i Annals of Bryozoology 5 ii iii Annals of Bryozoology 5: aspects of the history of research on bryozoans Edited by Patrick N. Wyse Jackson & Mary E. Spencer Jones International Bryozoology Association 2015 iv © The authors 2015 ISBN 978-0-9543644-4-9 First published 2015 by the International Bryozoology Association, c/o Department of Geology, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland. Printed in Ireland. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or stored in any form by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photography, photocopying, recording or by any other means, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Cover illustrations Front: Photographic portraits of twelve bryozoologists: Top row (from left): Arthur William Waters (England); Hélène Guerin-Ganivet (France); Edward Oscar Ulrich (USA); Raymond Carroll Osburn (USA); Middle row: Ferdinand Canu (France); Antonio Neviani (Italy); Georg Marius Reinald Levinsen (Denmark); Edgar Roscoe Cumings (USA); Bottom row: Sidney Frederic Harmer (England); Anders Hennig (Sweden); Ole Nordgaard (Norway); Ray Smith Bassler (USA). Originals assembled by Ferdinand Canu and sent in a frame to Edgar Roscoe Cumings in and around 1910-1920 (See Patrick N. Wyse Jackson (2012) Ferdinand Canu’s Gallery of Bryozoologists. International Bryozoology Association Bulletin, 8(2), 12-13. Back: Portion of a plate from Alicide d’Orbigny’s Paléontologie française (1850–1852) showing the Cretaceous bryozoan Retepora royana. Background: Structure of Flustra from Robert Hooke’s Micrographia (1665).
    [Show full text]
  • Biochemistry Branches ? ? (1614-1672)  M.D
    earlier philosophers and theologians Paulus Venetus ? (1369/1372-1429) M.A.? 1395 (Paris) Sigismondo Polcastro (1384-1473) Gaetano da Thiene A.D. 1412 (Padua) (1387-1465) M.D. 1424 (Padua) M.D.? (Padua) Intellectual Heritage of the UW-Eau Claire Chemists, 1919-2012 Pietro Roccabonella Nicoletto Vernia (≈1430-1491) (ca. 1420-1499) M.D.? 1455 (Padua) A.D. 1458 (Padua) Petrus Ryff (1529-1612) Nicolo da Lonigo (Leoniceno) Pietro Pomponazzi M.D. 1584 (Basel) (1428-1524) (1462-1525) M.D./Ph.D. 1453 (Padua) M.D. 1496 (Padua) Emmanuel Stupanus (1587-1664) M.D. 1613 (Basel) Antonio Musa Brasavola Giovanni Battista della Monte Vittore Trincavelli Franciscus de la Boë (1500-1555) (Joannes Baptista Montanus) (ca. 1496-1568) (Silvius) M.D. 1520 (Ferrara) (1498-1551) M.D. ? (Padua) Biochemistry Branches ? ? (1614-1672) M.D. 1539? (Padua) M.D. 1637 (Basel) Gabriele Fallopio Antoine Vallot Etienne de Clave (1523-1562) (1594-1671) (fl. ca. 1624) M.D. 1669 (Jena) M.D. 1617 (Montpelier) M.D.? Professeur (Jardin du Roi, Paris) Johann Winther von Andernach Bassiano Landi (Ioannes Guinterius Andernacus) Girolamo Fabrici (Aquapendente) (d. ca. 1563) Michaeli John Merle Coulter (1505-1574) (1533-1619) M.D. 1542 (Padua) (1851-1928) earlier philosophers and theologians Christophle Glaser M.D. 1532 (Paris) M.D. 1559 (Padua) Karl Gotthelf Lehmann Ph.D. 1884 (Indiana) (1615-1678) Theodor Zwinger (1812-1863) Jacques Toussain (Jacobus Tussanus) Guillaume Rondelet Giulio Cesare Casseri (1533-1588) Dr. med. et chirurg. 1835 (Leipzig) M.D. ca. 1640 (Basel) (ca. 1498-1547) (1507-1566) (1552-1616) M.D. 1559 (Padua) M.A. 1521 (Paris) M.D.
    [Show full text]
  • LE-PROFEZIE-DI-NOSTRADAMUS-Carlo-Patrian.Pdf
    CARLO PATRIAN Nostradamus LE PROFEZIE © Copyright 1978 by Edizioni Mediterranee Edizione Club degli Editori Su licenza della Edizioni Mediterranee Prefazione Com'è nato il libro Da circa un anno si era concluso il secondo conflitto mondiale; compivo 17 anni, quando acquistai a Milano in Piazza Duomo il saggio di Puglionisi che rivelava come un certo numero di quartine profetiche di Nostradamus riflettevano in modo sorprendente con dettagli straordinari i recenti drammi bellici italiani ed europei. Da allora iniziai una sistematica raccolta di testi internazionali sul celebre Profeta medievale francese. Nostradamus negli USA: Un film ad Hollywood Negli Stati Uniti la «Nostradamus Incorporated» di New York, di Henry C. Roberts, dal '47 al '72 aveva pubblicato oltre 20 edizioni del «The Complete Prophecies of Nostradamus», pubblicizzando la «Futura Guerra Atomica USA- URSS, il Ritorno di Hitler, e grandi città rase al suolo» contenute in alcune quartine del Veggente di Salon che veniva presentato in vari libri con impostazione storico- scientifica da Steward Robb, laureato dalle Manitoba e Oxford Universities. Negli Usa il 1965 costituisce il «boom» di Nostradamus, quando il mensile esoterico californiano «Cosmic Star» di Hollywood, di Merle S. Gould, lancia il libro di Peter Ballbush «Mystic Prophecies and Nostradamus» da cui viene tratto il film omonimo commentato dall'attore Basil Rathbone e programmato con successo in sale pubbliche e private di mezz'America. Il Veggente viene considerato un fenomeno unico nel suo genere. Effettivamente nel mondo ben pochi possono essere a lui accostati, quasi pari fama aveva in Germania Ulrich de Mayence — che redasse nel 1527 «Arbor Mirabilis», profezie fino al 2544 — che Nostradamus incontrò a Parigi nel 1556 per un consulto profetico richiesto da Caterina de' Medici.
    [Show full text]