How I Noticed This

I was reading a Mirror article about “Nostradamus 2026 celebrity death prediction” and something felt off. The cited quatrain was Century I, Quatrain 26. Convenient, right? So I pulled up the 2025 versions of the same articles. Every single one centred on Century VII, Quatrain 25.

That sent me down a proper rabbit hole. I collected 15 English-language tabloid articles published between December 2025 and February 2026 from the Mirror, LADbible, Yahoo, Grunge, Sky History, and the Irish Times — then cross-referenced every cited quatrain against the original French from the Bibliothèque nationale de France. What I found wasn’t subtle.

Let me show you exactly what’s happening, source by source.

The Evidence: Year-Number Matching Across Two Consecutive Years

Below is the complete picture. Every article — every single one — cites quatrains that numerologically match the year being “predicted.”

2026: The Quatrains Numbered “26”

Publication Quatrain 2026 Interpretation
Mirror US Century I:26 “Great man struck by thunderbolt” → celebrity death
Mirror US VII:26 “Seven months great war” → Ukraine/Russia continuation
LADbible II:26 “Ticino overflow with blood” → Switzerland/Italy disaster
Yahoo News I:26, II:26 Celebrity death + rivers of blood
Grunge IV:26, VIII:26 “Swarm of bees” → murder hornets; “bones of Cato” → tech infrastructure
Irish Times VII:26 Continued European war

2025: The Quatrain Numbered “25”

Publication Date Quatrain 2025 Interpretation
Grunge Nov 29, 2024 VII:25 “War, particularly of the European variety” — Ukraine
Grunge (follow-up) Sep 16, 2025 VII:25 Soldiers exhausted; money drying up for Ukraine
Red94 Oct 19, 2025 VII:25 Ukraine funding crisis
LADbible Dec 10, 2025 VII:25 Exhausted soldiers + France/Turkey intervention
Irish Star Nov 20, 2025 VII:25 “Catastrophic” end to 2025

Seven different outlets. Seven different articles. One quatrain: VII:25. Let that sink in for a moment — because in 2026, that same mechanism produced five different “26-numbered” quatrains across the same outlets. The number changed. The mechanism didn’t.

The Texts Themselves: What Nostradamus Actually Wrote

This is where the whole thing falls apart at the seams. Let’s go to the original source.

Century VII, Quatrain 25 — Used for 2025 “Predictions”

Century VII : Quatrain 25 — Original vs. Modern Interpretation
Original French (1555)
“Par longue guerre tout exercice extenuer,
Que pour soldats ne trouveront pécune,
Lieu d’or, d’argent, cuir on viendra coyner,
Gaulois aérien signe croissant de lune.”
Academic translation: “Through long war, all the army exhausted, so that they do not find money for the soldiers; instead of gold or silver, they will come to coin leather, Gallic brass, and the crescent sign of the Moon.” — Written in 1555, most likely referencing the Italian Wars or Habsburg-Valois conflicts of Nostradamus’s era.
How 2025 Articles Interpreted It
“Exhausted Ukrainian soldiers… money drying up for the war effort… French and Turkish intervention imminent…”
What changed: The source text is identical. The interpretation was retrofitted to 2025 headlines. No year is specified in the original. No country is named. “Gallic” (Gaulois) is a Latin term for Gaul — i.e., ancient France — not modern geopolitics.

Century II, Quatrain 26 — Used for 2026 “Predictions”

Century II : Quatrain 26 — Original vs. Modern Interpretation
Original French (1555)
“Pour sa faveur que la cité fera,
Au grand qui tost perdra camp de bataille,
Puis le rang Pau Thesin versera,
De sang, feux morts noyés de coup de taille.”
Academic translation: “Because of the favor that the city will show to the great one who will soon lose the field of battle, then the Po and Ticino will overflow with blood, fires, deaths drowned by blows of the axe.” — References the Po and Ticino rivers in 16th-century northern Italy during the Italian Wars.
How 2026 Articles Interpreted It
“Switzerland disaster — blood in the Ticino region of modern Switzerland…”
What changed: Interpreters extracted “Ticino” (an Italian river in 1555) and reframed it as the Swiss canton of Ticino. The historical context — 16th-century Italian Wars — was ignored. The year 2026 appears nowhere in the original text.
“Nostradamus was not a mystical prophet but a bibliomancer — someone who used existing historical texts to project past patterns onto the future. His quatrains were literary exercises in pattern recognition, not divine prophecy.” — Peter Lemesurier, Nostradamus, Bibliomancer: The Man, The Myth, The Truth (2010)

Visualising the Pattern

Here’s what two consecutive years of “predictions” look like when you map the quatrain numbers. The mechanism is strikingly clear:

25
2025 Predictions

Dominant Quatrain: Century VII:25

  • Interpreted as Ukraine war exhaustion
  • Interpreted as 2025 funding crisis
  • Interpreted as French/Turkish involvement
  • Cited by Grunge, LADbible, Red94, Sky History, Yahoo, Irish Star
26
2026 Predictions

Quatrains: I:26, II:26, IV:26, VII:26, VIII:26

  • I:26 → celebrity death
  • II:26 → Switzerland/Ticino disaster
  • VII:26 → continued war
  • VIII:26 → bee swarms / tech disruption
  • Cited by Mirror, LADbible, Yahoo, Grunge, Irish Times

Why the Trick Works: Four Interlocking Mechanisms

How a 16th-Century Poem Becomes a 21st-Century Headline

  1. Deliberate ambiguity in the source material. Nostradamus wrote 942 quatrains using deliberately opaque language — mixed Old French, Latin, Greek, Provençal, metaphorical imagery, no specific future dates, and anagrams designed to evade the French Inquisition. Scholar Peter Lemesurier has argued these were literary exercises, not revelations. That ambiguity is exactly what makes them infinitely reinterpretable.
  2. The Barnum Effect. Vague statements feel personally accurate because readers supply their own context. “A great empire will fall” fits any struggling company, country, or institution. “Blood will flow” matches any conflict or disaster anywhere on earth. The vaguer the prophecy, the more precisely it seems to fit.
  3. Retrofitting to current headlines. The same “army exhausted / leather currency” verse that described 16th-century Habsburg wars became 2025 Ukraine reporting because that’s what dominated the news. In 2026, “seven months great war” in VII:26 maps to the same conflict — still ongoing. The events changed; the mechanism didn’t.
  4. SEO seasonality. Google Trends shows a consistent, sharp spike in searches for “Nostradamus [year] predictions” every December through January. Sites publishing these articles aren’t primarily interested in prophecy. They’re capitalising on a predictable annual traffic cycle. The year-matching quatrain selection may even be partly unconscious — a convenient shortcut that happens to satisfy the search query.

The Strongest Evidence: A Direct Comparison

Here’s the thing that really got me. In September 2025 — nine months into the year — Grunge published a follow-up article titled “Nostradamus’ 2025 Predictions That Appear Eerily Accurate So Far” and cited the exact same VII:25 quatrain it had used in November 2024. The interpretation had expanded to match the year’s unfolding events.

Same text. Different year. Different reading. And the piece published as an accuracy check, not as speculation.

The key observation: This is not the same quatrains recycled with different interpretations. It’s numerologically matched quatrains selected based on year number, then retrofitted to whatever is currently dominating headlines. The selection mechanism is the story — not the interpretation.

What I Cannot Claim (And Why That Matters)

Honestly, I want to be careful here. Intellectual honesty requires acknowledging three genuine limitations in this analysis:

I cannot prove deliberate fabrication. The year-number pattern may be unconscious selection bias, numerological belief shared among certain journalists, or simply editorial convenience — year-matching quatrains are easier to remember and pitch. Intent is unknowable from outside a newsroom.

I cannot prove exact text recycling percentages. A systematic paywalled archive comparison was not conducted sentence-by-sentence. My sample is 15 articles in English. French, Spanish, and other language markets were not analysed — if they select differently, that would meaningfully complicate this pattern.

What I can demonstrate: Year-number quatrains are consistently selected across multiple independent outlets, and the same verses receive interpretations that shift year-to-year based on current events, creating the appearance of year-specific prophecies where none exist in the 1555 original.

The difference between this analysis and the articles it examines lies in method — primary source verification versus free interpretation — and transparency about limitations. I’m not standing outside the system. This article participates in the same annual “Nostradamus [year]” search cycle it critiques. That’s worth saying plainly.

How to Verify This Yourself — Right Now

A Five-Step Verification Protocol

  1. Find any “Nostradamus 2026 predictions” article and note the specific quatrain number cited (e.g., “Century II, Quatrain 26”).
  2. Look up the original French text at the Bibliothèque nationale de France or the Nostradamus Research Project.
  3. Check whether the original mentions specific years, modern concepts, current people, or named 21st-century nations. It won’t.
  4. Search the same quatrain number + a previous year (“Century VII:25 2024 prediction”) and compare the interpretations.
  5. Screenshot a 2027 “prediction” article in January 2027. Check which quatrains are cited. If the pattern holds, you’ll see Century I:27, II:27, VII:27 etc. revisit in January 2028 and check the accuracy rate.

Test This in January 2027

This is the prediction I’m willing to make — and it’s falsifiable, unlike Nostradamus’s own verses. When January 2027 arrives, search “Nostradamus 2027 predictions” and note which quatrains are cited. If they cluster around numbers containing 27 — and if their interpretations map to whatever dominates the news in late 2026 — the pattern has repeated.

If outlets instead cite, say, Century III:40 or non-27-numbered verses with no discernible numerological link, that would genuinely undermine this analysis. I’d update this piece accordingly. That’s what distinguishes a hypothesis from a prophecy.

Want to help expand this research? If you find 2026 prediction articles citing quatrains that don’t match the year number, document them and send them over — it would either strengthen or refute what’s presented here. Same goes for French or Spanish-language prediction articles: whether their quatrain selection follows the same pattern is an open question worth answering.