In the 1500s, a strange and gifted man proclaimed that the old Dame district of London would be consumed in a fiery conflagration.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_London_Fire
He said of it, that many of the innocent and righteous would perish at the hand of the unjust.
Like lightning, or fireballs from Heaven, the disaster would strike the very heart of the city, he said, and while it might have looked like a natural disaster, there was indeed a culprit and his name is known!
The man who made this prophecy was Michel de Nostredame, known to posterity as NOSTRADAMUS.
NOSTRADAMUS QUATRAIN #2-51
The blood of the just in London shall be demanded,
Le sang de juste a Londres fera faulte,
Burned by flames in '66;
Brusles par fouldres de vint trois les six;
The ancient city will seek to be a safer place,
La dame antique cherra de place haute,
Many of the same (suspected) sect will be killed.
Des mesme secte plusiers seront occis.***
Roughly one-hundred years later, in the year 1666, exactly as Nostradamus predicted, a terrible fire raged through the Old Dame district (the area surrounding Old St. Paul's cathedral, which had in times of antiquity served as a temple of Diana). It consumed some 70,000 persons' homes, melted the iron rings off of the London Bridge, and nearly reached beyond the Thames. Untold peasants met a hellish end. The disaster was blamed on a baker.
Within weeks, the mysterious cabal now known as the Freemasons began the planning and construction of the destroyed district. Sir Christopher Wren, a renowned architect and one of the founding English Masons, was awarded the privilege of rebuilding St. Paul's. The Masons were not suspected of a crime, although Christopher Wren and his compatriot Sir Isaac Newton were experts in the areas of chemistry, physics, optics, and methods of combustion.
A fact worthy of remembrance is this: the mayor at the time obstructed the efforts of the King of England to contain and control the fire. The court Historian, Samuel Pepys, assumed the role of courier and fireman during the terrible disaster.
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