Century 5 C5:Q1 Before the coming of Celtic ruin, In the temple two will parley Pike and dagger to the heart of one mounted on the steed, They will bury the great one without making any noise. C5:Q2 Seven conspirators at the banquet will cause to flash The iron out of the ship against the three: One will have the two fleets brought to the great one, When through the evil the latter shoots him in the forehead. C5:Q3 The successor to the Duchy will come, Very far beyond the Tuscan Sea: A Gallic branch will hold Florence, The nautical Frog in its gyron be agreement. C5:Q4 The large mastiff expelled from the city Will be vexed by the strange alliance, After having chased the stag to the fields The wolf and the Bear will defy each other. C5:Q5 Under the shadowy pretense of removing servitude, He will himself usurp the people and city: He will do worse because of the deceit of the young prostitute, Delivered in the field reading the false poem. C5:Q6 The Augur putting his hand upon the head of the King Will come to pray for the peace of Italy: He will come to move the sceptre to his left hand, From King he will become pacific Emperor. C5:Q7 The bones of the Triumvir will be found, Looking for a deep enigmatic treasure: Those from thereabouts will not be at rest, Digging for this thing of marble and metallic lead. C5:Q8 There will be unleashed live fire, hidden death, Horrible and frightful within the globes, By night the city reduced to dust by the fleet, The city afire, the enemy amenable. C5:Q9 The great arch demolished down to its base, By the chief captive his friend forestalled, He will be born of the dame with hairy forehead and face, Then through cunning the Duke overtaken by death. C5:Q10 A Celtic chief wounded in the conflict Seeing death overtaking his men near a cellar: Pressed by blood and wounds and enemies, And relief by four unknown ones. C5:Q11 The sea will not be passed over safely by those of the Sun, Those of Venus will hold all Africa: Saturn will no longer occupy their realm, And the Asiatic part will change. C5:Q12 Near Lake Geneva will be led, By a foreign young [wo]man who wants to betray the city: Before his/her death at Augsburg the great suite/flight, And those of the Rhine will come to invade her. C5:Q13 With great fury the Roman Belgian King Will want to vex the barbarian with his phalanx: Fury gnashing, he will chase the African people From the Pannonias to the pillars of Hercules. C5:Q14 Saturn and Mars in Leo Spain captive, By the African chief trapped in the conflict, Near Malta, Herodde taken alive, And the Roman sceptre will be struck down by the Cock. C5:Q15 The great Pontiff taken captive while navigating, The great one thereafter to fail the clergy in tumult: Second one elected absent his estate declines, His favorite bastard to death broken on the wheel. C5:Q16 The Sabaean tear no longer at its high price, Turning human flesh into ashes through death, At the isle of Pharos disturbed by the Crusaders, When at Rhodes will appear a hard phantom. C5:Q17 By night the King passing near an Alley, He of Cyprus and the principal guard: The King mistaken, the hand flees the length of the Rhône, The conspirators will set out to put him to death. C5:Q18 The unhappy abandoned one will die of grief, His conquerers will celebrate the hecatomb: Pristine law, free edict drawn up, The wall and the Prince falls on the seventh day. C5:Q19 The great Royal one of gold, augmented by brass, The agreement broken, war opened by a young man: People afflicted because of a lamented chief, The land will be covered with barbarian blood. C5:Q20 The great army will pass beyond the Alps, Shortly before will be born a monster scoundrel: Prodigious and sudden he will turn, The great Tuscan to his nearest place. C5:Q21 By the death of the Latin Monarch, Those whom he will have assisted through his reign: The fire will light up again the booty divided, Public death for the bold ones who incurred it. C5:Q22 Before the great one has given up the ghost at Rome, Great terror for the foreign army: The ambush by squadrons near Parma, Then the two red ones will celebrate together. C5:Q23 The two contented ones will be united together, When for the most part they will be conjoined with Mars: The great one of Africa trembles in terror, Duumvirate disjoined by the fleet. C5:Q24 The realm and law raised under Venus, Saturn will have dominion over Jupiter: The law and realm raised by the Sun, Through those of Saturn it will suffer the worst. C5:Q25 The Arab Prince Mars, Sun, Venus, Leo, The rule of the Church will succumb by sea: Towards Persia very nearly a million men, The true serpent will invade Byzantium and Egypt. C5:Q26 The slavish people through luck in war Will become elevated to a very high degree: They will change their Prince, one born a provincial, An army raised in the mountains to pass over the sea. C5:Q27 Through fire and arms not far from the Black Sea, He will come from Persia to occupy Trebizond: Pharos, Mytilene to tremble, the Sun joyful, The Adriatic Sea covered with Arab blood. C5:Q28 His arm hung and leg bound, Face pale, dagger hidden in his bosom, Three who will be sworn in the fray Against the great one of Genoa will the steel be unleashed. C5:Q29 Liberty will not be recovered, A proud, villainous, wicked black one will occupy it, When the matter of the bridge will be opened, The republic of Venice vexed by the Danube. C5:Q30 All around the great city Soldiers will be lodged throughout the fields and towns: To give the assault Paris, Rome incited, Then upon the bridge great pillage will be carried out. C5:Q31 Through the Attic land fountain of wisdom, At present the rose of the world: The bridge ruined, and its great pre-eminence Will be subjected, a wreck amidst the waves. C5:Q32 Where all is good, the Sun all beneficial and the Moon Is abundant, its ruin approaches: From the sky it advances to change your fortune. In the same state as the seventh rock. C5:Q33 Of the principal ones of the city in rebellion Who will strive mightily to recover their liberty: The males cut up, unhappy fray, Cries, groans at Nantes pitiful to see. C5:Q34 From the deepest part of the English West Where the head of the British isle is A fleet will enter the Gironde through Blois, Through wine and salt, fires hidden in the casks. C5:Q35 For the free city of the great Seline sea, Which still carries the stone in its stomach, The English fleet will come under the drizzle To seize a branch, war opened by the great one. C5:Q36 The sister's brother through the quarrel and deceit Will come to mix dew in the mineral: On the cake given to the slow old woman, She dies tasting it she will be simple and rustic. C5:Q37 Three hundred will be in accord with one will To come to the execution of their blow, Twenty months after all memory Their king betrayed simulating feigned hate. C5:Q38 He who will succeed the great monarch on his death Will lead an illicit and wanton life: Through carelessness he will give way to all, So that in the end the Salic law will fail. C5:Q39 Issued from the true branch of the fleur-de-lys, Placed and lodged as heir of Etruria: His ancient blood woven by long hand, He will cause the escutcheon of Florence to bloom. C5:Q40 The blood royal will be so very mixed, Gauls will be constrained by Hesperia: One will wait until his term has expired, And until the memory of his voice has perished. C5:Q41 Born in the shadows and during a dark day, He will be sovereign in realm and goodness: He will cause his blood to rise again in the ancient urn, Renewing the age of gold for that of brass. C5:Q42 Mars raised to his highest belfry Will cause the Savoyards to withdraw from France: The Lombard people will cause very great terror To those of the Eagle included under the Balance. C5:Q43 The great ruin of the holy things is not far off, Provence, Naples, Sicily, Sées and Pons: In Germany, at the Rhine and Cologne, Vexed to death by all those of Mainz. C5:Q44 On sea the red one will be taken by pirates, Because of him peace will be troubled: Anger and greed will he expose through a false act, The army doubled by the great Pontiff. C5:Q45 The great Empire will soon be desolated And transferred to near the Ardennes: The two bastards beheaded by the oldest one, And Bronzebeard the hawk-nose will reign. C5:Q46 Quarrels and new schism by the red hats When the Sabine will have been elected: They will produce great sophism against him, And Rome will be injured by those of Alba. C5:Q47 The great Arab will march far forward, He will be betrayed by the Byzantinians: Ancient Rhodes will come to meet him, And greater harm through the Austrian Hungarians. C5:Q48 After the great affliction of the sceptre, Two enemies will be defeated by them: A fleet from Africa will appear before the Hungarians, By land and sea horrible deeds will take place. C5:Q49 Not from Spain but from ancient France Will one be elected for the trembling bark, To the enemy will a promise be made, He who will cause a cruel plague in his realm. C5:Q50 The year that the brothers of the lily come of age, One of them will hold the great 'Romania': The mountains to tremble, Latin passage opened, Agreement to march against the fort of Armenia. C5:Q51 The people of Dacia, England, Poland And of Bohemia will make a new league: To pass beyond the pillars of Hercules, The Barcelonans and Tuscans will prepare a cruel plot. C5:Q52 There will be a King who will give opposition, The exiles raised over the realm: The pure poor people to swim in blood, And for a long time will he flourish under such a device. C5:Q53 The law of the Sun and of Venus in strife, Appropriating the spirit of prophecy: Neither the one nor the other will be understood, The law of the great Messiah will hold through the Sun. C5:Q54 From beyond the Black Sea and great Tartary, There will be a King who will come to see Gaul, He will pierce through 'Alania' and Armenia, And within Byzantium will he leave his bloody rod. C5:Q55 In the country of Arabia Felix There will be born one powerful in the law of Mahomet: To vex Spain, to conquer Grenada, And more by sea against the Ligurian people. C5:Q56 Through the death of the very old Pontiff A Roman of good age will be elected, Of him it will be said that he weakens his see, But long will he sit and in biting activity. C5:Q57 There will go from mount Gaufier & Aventine, One who through the hole will warn the army: Between two rocks will the booty be taken, Of SEXT. mansol the renown to fail. C5:Q58 By the aqueduct of Uzès over the Gard, Through the forest and inaccessible mountain, In the middle of the bridge there will be cut in the fist The chief of Nîmes who will be very terrible. C5:Q59 Too long a stay for the English chief at Nîmes, Towards Spain Redbeard to the rescue: Many will die by war opened that day, When a bearded star will fall in Artois. C5:Q60 By the shaven head a very bad choice will come to be made, Overburdened he will not pass the gate: He will speak with such great fury and rage, That to fire and blood he will consign the entire sex. C5:Q61 The child of the great one not by his birth, He will subjugate the high Apenine mountains: He will cause all those of the balance to tremble, And from the Pyrenees to Mont Cenis. C5:Q62 One will see blood to rain on the rocks, Sun in the East, Saturn in the West: Near Orgon war, at Rome great evil to be seen, Ships sunk to the bottom, & Tridental taken. C5:Q63 From the vain enterprise honor and undue complaint, Boats tossed about among the Latins, cold, hunger, waves Not far from the Tiber the land stained with blood, And diverse plagues will be upon mankind. C5:Q64 Those assembled by the tranquility of the great number, By land and sea counsel countermanded: Near 'Antonne' Genoa, Nice in the shadow Through fields and towns in revolt against the chief. C5:Q65 Come suddenly the terror will be great, Hidden by the principal ones of the affair: And the dame on the charcoal will no longer be in sight, Thus little by little will the great ones be angered. C5:Q66 Under the ancient vestal edifices, Not far from the ruined aqueduct: Of Sun & Luna are the glittering metals, The burning lamp of Trajan engraved with gold. C5:Q67 When the chief of Perugia will not venture his tunic Sense under cover to strip himself quite naked: Seven will be taken Aristocratic deed, Father and son dead through a point in the collar. C5:Q68 In the Danube and the Rhine will come to drink, The great Camel who will not repent about it: To tremble the Rhône & much more so those of the Loire: And near the Alps the Cock will ruin him. C5:Q69 No longer will the great one be in his false sleep, Uneasiness will come to replace tranquility: A phalanx of gold, azure and vermilion arrayed To subjugate Africa and gnaw it to the bone, C5:Q70 Of the regions subject to the Balance, They will trouble the mountains with great war, Captives the entire sex enthralled and all Byzantium, So that at dawn they will spread the news from land to land. C5:Q71 By the fury of one who will wait for the water, By his great rage the entire army moved: Seventeen boats loaded with the noble, The messenger come late along the Rhône. C5:Q72 For the pleasure of the voluptuous edict, One will mix poison in the faith: Venus will be in a course so virtuous As to becloud the whole quality of the Sun. C5:Q73 The Church of God will be persecuted, And the holy Temples will be plundered, The child will put his mother out in her shift, Arabs will be allied with the Poles. C5:Q74 Of Trojan blood will be born a Germanic heart Who will rise to very high power: He will drive out the foreign Arabic people, Returning the Church to its pristine pre-eminence. C5:Q75 He will rise high over the estate more to the right, He will remain seated on the square stone, Towards the south facing to his left, The crooked staff in his hand his mouth sealed. C5:Q76 In a free place will he pitch his tent, And he will not want to lodge in the cities: Aix, Carpentras, L'Isle, Vaucluse 'Mont,' Cavaillon, Throughout all these places will he abolish his trace. C5:Q77 All degrees of Ecclesiastical honor Will be changed to that of Jupiter and Quirinus: The priest of Quirinus to one of Mars, Then a King of France will make him one of Vulcan. C5:Q78 The two will not be united for very long, And in thirteen years to the Barbarian Satrap: On both sides they will cause such loss That one will bless the Bark and its cope. C5:Q79 The sacred pomp will come to lower its wings, Through the coming of the great legislator: He will raise the humble, he will vex the rebels, His like will not appear on this earth. C5:Q80 Ogmios will approach great Byzantium, The Barbaric League will be driven out: Of the two laws the heathen one will give way, Barbarian and Frank in perpetual strife. C5:Q81 The royal bird over the city of the Sun, Seven months in advance it will deliver a nocturnal omen: The Eastern wall will fall lightning thunder, Seven days the enemies directly to the gates. C5:Q82 At the conclusion of the treaty outside the fortress Will not go he who is placed in despair: When those of Arbois, of Langres against Bresse Will have the mountains of Dôle an enemy ambush. C5:Q83 Those who will have undertaken to subvert, An unparalleled realm, powerful and invincible: They will act through deceit, nights three to warn, When the greatest one will read his Bible at the table. C5:Q84 He will be born of the gulf and unmeasured city, Born of obscure and dark family: He who the revered power of the great King Will want to destroy through Rouen and Evreux. C5:Q85 Through the Swiss and neighboring places, They will be at war over the clouds: Swarm of marine locusts and gnats, The faults of Geneva will be laid quite bare. C5:Q86 Divided by the two heads and three arms, The great city will be vexed by waters: Some great ones among them led astray in exile, Byzantium hard pressed by the head of Persia. C5:Q87 The year that Saturn is out of bondage, In the Frank land he will be inundated by water: Of Trojan blood will his marriage be, And he will be confined safely be the Spaniards. C5:Q88 Through a frightful flood upon the sand, A marine monster from other seas found: Near the place will be made a refuge, Holding Savona the slave of Turin. C5:Q89 Into Hungary through Bohemia, Navarre, and under that banner holy insurrections: By the fleur-de-lys legion carrying the bar, Against Orléans they will cause disturbances. C5:Q90 In the Cyclades, in Perinthus and Larissa, In Sparta and the entire Pelopennesus: Very great famine, plague through false dust, Nine months will it last and throughout the entire peninsula. C5:Q91 On the great market where they have told lies, Of the entire Torrent and field of Athens: They will be surprised by the light horses, By Albanois, Mars, Leo, Saturn in Aquarius. C5:Q92 After the seat has been held seventeen years, Five will change within such a period: Then one will be elected at the same time, Who to the Romans will not be too agreeable. C5:Q93 Under the land of the round lunar globe, When Mercury will be dominating: The isle of Scotland will produce a luminary, One who will put the English into confusion. C5:Q94 He will transfer into great Germany Brabant and Flanders, Ghent, Bruges and Boulogne: The truce feigned, the great Duke of Armenia Will assail Vienna and Cologne. C5:Q95 The nautical oar will tempt the shadows, Then it will come to stir up the great Empire: In the Aegean Sea the impediments of wood Obstructing the diverted Tyrrhenian Sea. C5:Q96 The rose upon the middle of the great world, For new deeds public shedding of blood: To speak the truth, one will have a closed mouth, Then at the time of need the awaited one will come late. C5:Q97 The one born deformed suffocated in horror, In the habitable city of the great King: The severe edict of the captives revoked, Hail and thunder, Condom inestimable. C5:Q98 At the forty-eigth climacteric degree, At the end of Cancer very great dryness: Fish in sea, river, lake boiled hectic, Béarn, Bigorre in distress through fire from the sky. C5:Q99 Milan, Ferrara, Turin and Aquileia, Capua, Brindisi vexed by the Celtic nation: By the Lion and his eagle-like phalanx, When the old British chief Rome will have. C5:Q100 The incendiary trapped in his own fire, Of fire from the sky at Carcassonne and the Comminges: Foix, Auch, Mazères, the high old man escaped, Through those of Hesse and Thuringia, and some Saxons.