Nostradamus C5 Q66: The ruins of Roman Glanum as the hiding place for Nostradamus treasures.
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015
While in his youth, Nostradamus lived in St Remy and just outside the
boundaries of that town, lay the ruins of the mainly-buried Roman city of Glanum. The local name of this ruin site covered by local sediment, is
'les antiques' , a name mentioned in the first
line of text.
The second line refers to a nearby ruined aqueduct
which also is linked to the time when Glanis thrived. There was a dam and
aqueduct to support the region and it lay just above the Roman town. But
most of these features excluding the Mausoleum were covered by sediment or
fell into disrepair,
Via this verse we can deduce Nostradamus used his local knowledge
of these ruins to hide or find treasures on behalf of others.
The anagrams underpinning the thrust of the text include
century
(ct ruyne),
deifies
(es edifi),
departmental
(dante lampe T),
name-plate (ante
lampe),
Adonai
(aian d'o),
disquieten (ntiques edi),
Templar (lampe Tr),
sequential
(les antiques),
template (te lampe T).
# Adonai:
Hebrew name of God
Under Glanum's 'Les
Atiques' near the ruined aqueduct there are vestal edifices where treasures
of Gold and Silver have been hidden.

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