That claim is not reliable and not supported by historical evidence or modern scholarship.
It’s a common internet myth that “Nostradamus predicted specific countries falling by a certain year.” In reality:
🧠 What Nostradamus actually wrote
Nostradamus wrote poetic, vague verses (quatrains) in the 1500s. They:
- Do not clearly name modern countries
- Are open to many interpretations
- Were written in symbolic, ambiguous language
Because of this, people often reinterpret them after events happen, which creates the illusion of “accurate predictions.”
🚫 Why “3 countries will fall by 2026” is false
- There is no verified text from Nostradamus mentioning 2026 or specific modern nations
- No credible historians or researchers support such a prediction
- These lists are usually created by modern websites for clicks and fear-based engagement
🧠 How these myths spread
They rely on:
- Vague wording (“fall,” “war,” “fire,” etc.)
- Retrofitting interpretations to current events
- Emotional impact headlines
- Lack of original source checking
🌍 Reality check
Modern geopolitics is complex, and no historical astrologer’s writings can accurately predict:
- Which countries will collapse
- Specific years of global events
- Modern political outcomes
🧾 Bottom line
There is no credible evidence that Nostradamus predicted “3 countries falling before 2026.” These claims are modern reinterpretations and internet misinformation, not historical fact.
If you want, I can show:
- real verified Nostradamus quatrains and what they actually mean
- or how to spot fake prophecy posts online
- or why people are naturally drawn to prediction myths like this