Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
How Could He Not Comment
besides which his mother is in fine fettle, so not going to be King just yet.
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/u k-46133 114
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Slightly off topic but still interesting.
SCOTLAND had its very own Nostradamus in the form of the Brahan Seer. The pair are thought to have lived around the same time, but while the French futurist had the ear of Renaissance King Henry II the Seer worked as a labourer on the Brahan estate. Details about the Seer are just as sketchy as his predictions, but stories involving this simple man carry a special fascination to this day. The Seer was thought to be born one Coinneach Odhar in Uig on the Isle of Lewis in about 1650. He lived at Loch Ussie near to Dingwall in Ross-shire and worked as a labourer on the Brahan estate, seat of the Seaforth chieftains, from somewhere around 1675. Odhar was said to carry a black and blue stone with a small hole in it, into which he peered to make his predictions. And predict he did.
One of his predictions was apparently that no Charles would ever again reign over Scotland. Nonsense some may say considering there is no evidence that the man even existed. Will Charles pop his clogs before his ma or will Scotland gain independence? Makes for interesting reading.
SCOTLAND had its very own Nostradamus in the form of the Brahan Seer. The pair are thought to have lived around the same time, but while the French futurist had the ear of Renaissance King Henry II the Seer worked as a labourer on the Brahan estate. Details about the Seer are just as sketchy as his predictions, but stories involving this simple man carry a special fascination to this day. The Seer was thought to be born one Coinneach Odhar in Uig on the Isle of Lewis in about 1650. He lived at Loch Ussie near to Dingwall in Ross-shire and worked as a labourer on the Brahan estate, seat of the Seaforth chieftains, from somewhere around 1675. Odhar was said to carry a black and blue stone with a small hole in it, into which he peered to make his predictions. And predict he did.
One of his predictions was apparently that no Charles would ever again reign over Scotland. Nonsense some may say considering there is no evidence that the man even existed. Will Charles pop his clogs before his ma or will Scotland gain independence? Makes for interesting reading.