In my brief life, the world was supposed to come to an end on many different occasions. Since I am
still alive, however, I thought that I should create a list that catalogs many of
the most notable failed attempts to predict the apocalypse. The next time your friend
claims that the world is going to end because some ancient tradition a
Geocities website says so, point them here.
It should be noted, however, that these are not my words. Aside from numbers above 45, the following dates are taken word-for-word from James Randi's Encyclopedia. In fact, only I created this article because the encyclopedia isn't updated but end of the world claims keep popping up. If you want to read more fascinating entries about related topics, I recommend purchasing Mr. Randi's book.
It should be noted, however, that these are not my words. Aside from numbers above 45, the following dates are taken word-for-word from James Randi's Encyclopedia. In fact, only I created this article because the encyclopedia isn't updated but end of the world claims keep popping up. If you want to read more fascinating entries about related topics, I recommend purchasing Mr. Randi's book.
1.
B.C.-A.D. According to the New Testament, The End
should have occurred before the death of the last Apostle. In Matthew
16:28, it says: Verily, I say unto you, there be some standing here
which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of Man coming in his
kingdom.
2.
A.D. 992 In the year 960, scholar Bernard of Thuringia caused
great alarm in Europe when he confidently announced that his calculations gave
the world only thirty-two more years before The End.
3.
December 31, A.D. 999 The biblical Apocrypha says
that the Last Judgment (and therefore, one supposes, the end of the world)
would occur one thousand years after the birth of Jesus Christ.
4.
A.D. 1033 Theorists pressed to explain the A.D. 999 bust decided
that the 1,000 years should have been figured from the death of Christ rather
than from his birth. Bust number two followed.
5.
September
1186 An astrologer known as John of
Toledo in 1179 circulated pamphlets advertising the world's end when all the
(known) planets were in Libra. (If the sun was included in this requirement,
this should have occurred on September 23 at 16:15 GMT, or at that same hour on
October 3 in the new calendar.) In Constantinople, the Byzantine Emperor walled
up his windows, and in England the Archbishop of Canterbury called for a day of
atonement. Though the alignment of planets took place, The End did not.
6.
A.D. 1260 Joaquim of Flore worked out a splendid calculation
that definitely pinpointed A.D. 1260 as The Date. Joaquim had a bent pin.
7.
February 1,
1524 This was one of the most
pervasive Doomsday-by-Flood expectations ever recorded. In June of 1523,
astrologers in London predicted that The End would begin in London with a
deluge. Some 20,000 persons left their homes, and the Prior of St.
Bartholomew's built a fortress in which he stocked enough food and water for a
two-month wait. When the dreaded date failed to provide even a rain shower in a
city where precipitation is very much to be expected, the astrologers
recalculated and discovered they'd been a mere one hundred years off. (On the
same day in 1624, astrologers were again disappointed to discover that they
were still dry and alive.)
8.
1532. A bishop of Vienna, Frederick Nausea, decided a major
disaster was "near" when various strange events were reported to him.
He was told that bloody crosses had been seen in the skies along with a comet,
that black bread had fallen from midair, and that three suns and a flaming
castle had been discerned in the heavens. The story of an eight-year-old girl
of Rome whose breasts, he was told, spouted warm water, finally convinced this
scholar that the world was due to end, and he so declared to the faithful.
9.
October 3,
1533, at Eight A.M. Mathematician and Bible student Michael Stifel (known as
Stifelius) had calculated an exact date and time for Doomsday from scholarly
perusal of the Book of Revelation. When they did not vaporize, the curiously
ungrateful citizens of the German town of Lochau, where Stifel had announced
the dreaded day, rewarded him with a thorough flogging. He also lost his
ecclesiastical living as a result of his prophetic failure.
10.
1533 Anabaptist Melchior Hoffmann announced in Strasbourg,
France, a city which had been chosen by him as the New Jerusalem, that the
world would be consumed by flames in 1533. He believed that in New Jerusalem
exactly 144,000 persons would live on while two characters named Enoch and
Elias would blast flames from their mouths over the rest of the world. The rich
and pious who hoped to be included in that number saved destroyed their rent
records, forgave their debtors, and gave away their money and goods to the
poor. How those commodities were to be used among the flames was not explained,
nor did anyone point out that such sacrifices so near The End were hardly
meritorious.
11.
1537 (And also in 1544, 1801, and 1814) In Dijon, France, a
list of prophecies by astrologer Pierre Turrel was published posthumously. His
predictions of The End were spread over a period of 277 years, but all were
fortunately wrong. He had used four different methods of computation to arrive
at the four dates, while assuring his readers that he had strictly orthodox
religious beliefs——a very wise move in his day.
12.
1544 See 1537.
13.
1572 In Britain, a total solar eclipse and a few impressive
novas seemed to signal something important. Considerable panic ensued, to no
avail.
14.
1584 Astrologer Cyprian Leowitz, who had the distinction in
1559 of being included in the official Index of prohibited writers by Pope Paul
IV, predicted the end of the world for 1584. Taking no chances, however, he
then issued a set of astronomical tables covering celestial events all the way
to the year 1614, in the unlikely event that the world would survive. It did.
15.
1588 The sage Regiomontanus (Johann Müller, 1436-1476),
posthumously a victim of enthusiastic crackpots who delighted in attributing
occult and magical powers to him, was said to have predicted The End for the
year 1588 in an obscure quatrain, but in 1587 Norfolk physician John Harvey
reassured his readers that the calculations ascribed to the master were faulty,
and the resulting prophecy false. Harvey was right.
16.
1624 See 1524.
17.
1648 Rabbi Sabbati Zevi, in Smyrna, interpreted the kabala
to show that he was the promised Messiah and that his advent, accompanied by
spectacular miracles, was due in 1648. By 1665, regardless of the failure of
the wonders to appear, Zevi had a huge following, and his date was now changed
to 1666. Citizens of Smyrna abandoned their work and prepared to return to
Jerusalem, all on the strength of reported miracles by Zevi. Meeting a sharp
reversal when arrested by the Sultan for an attempted coup and brought in
fetters to Constantinople, the new Messiah sat in prison while followers as far
away as Holland, Germany and Hungary began packing up in anticipation of
Armageddon. Unfortunately for these faithful, the Sultan converted the capricious
Zevi to Islam, and the movement ended.
18.
1654 Consulting his ephemeris and considering the nova of
1572, physician Helisaeus Roeslin of Alsace decided in 1578 that the world
would surely terminate in flames in another seventy-six years. He did not
survive to see his prophecy fail. That should have been an evil year indeed. An
eclipse of the sun was predicted for August 12 (it actually occurred on the
11th) and that was also widely believed to bring about The End. Many
conversions to the True Faith took place, physicians prescribed staying
indoors, and the churches were filled.
19.
1665 With the Black Plague in full force, Quaker Solomon
Eccles terrorized the citizens of London yet further with his declaration that
the resident pestilence was merely the beginning of The End. He was arrested
and jailed when the plague began to abate rather than increasing. Eccles fled
to the West Indies upon his release from prison, whereupon he once again
exercised his zeal for agitation by inciting the slaves there to revolt. The Crown
fetched him back home as a troublemaker, and he died shortly thereafter.
20.
1666 See 1648.
21.
1704 Cardinal Nicholas de Cusa, without Vatican
endorsement, declared The End was to arrive in 1704.
22.
May 19, 1719 Jacques (also Jakob I) Bernoulli, the first of a
famous line of Swiss mathematicians who made their home in Berne, predicted the
return of the comet of 1680 and earth-rending results therefrom. The comet did
not come back, perhaps for astronomical reasons, but Bernoulli went on to
discover a mathematical series now called the Bernoulli Numbers. He is renowned
for this and for the eight exceptional mathematicians his line produced in
three generations, but not for Doomsday nor for his astronomical calculations.
23.
October 13,
1736 London was once again targeted
for the "beginning of the end," this time by William Whiston. The
Thames filled with waiting boatloads of citizens, but it didn't even rain.
Another setback.
24.
1757 Mystic/theologian/spiritist and supreme egocentric Emmanuel Swedenborg, ever willing
to be a center of attention for one reason or another, decided after one of his
frequent consultations with angels that 1757 was the terminating date of the
world. To his chagrin, he was not taken too seriously by anyone, including the
angels.
25.
April 5,
1761 When religious fanatic and
soldier William Bell noticed that exactly twenty-eight days had elapsed between
a February 8 and a March 8 earthquake in 1761, he naturally concluded that the
entire world would crumble in another twenty-eight days, that is, on April 5th.
Most suggested that the date should have been four days earlier, in tune with
the probability, but many credulous Londoners believed him and snapped up every
available boat, taking to the Thames or scurrying out of town as if those
actions would save them. History records nothing more of Bell after April 6,
when he was tossed into London's madhouse, Bedlam, by a disappointed public.
26.
1774 English sect leader Joanna Southcott (1750-1814) had
the notion that she was pregnant with the New Messiah, whom she proposed to
name Shiloh. History records that her pregnancy "came to nothing,"
nor did the world end as she had prophesied. She left behind a box of mystical
notes that were to be opened only after her death with twenty-four bishops present.
Perhaps because of a failure to interest that many ecclesiastics of high rank
to attend the occasion, the box was not opened and vanished somewhere. She was
succeeded by several minor would-be prophets, all of whom tried other
End-of-the-World predictions, with the same result. One successor, John Turner,
we will meet up ahead.
27.
1801 Astrologer Pierre Turrel (see 1537)
chose this date, along with three others, for The End. His first two had
already failed by this time. Again, no luck.
28.
1814 Astrologer Pierre Turrel (remember him?) chose this
last date for The End. His three others had already failed, and, again no luck!
As author Charles Mackay wryly noted,
"the world wagged as merrily as before."
29.
October 14,
1820 Prophet John Turner was leader
of the Southcottian movement in Bradford, England. The specialty of this sect
was End-of-the-World prophecies, the first one having been made by the founder
of the group, Joanna Southcott, whom we have already met back in 1774. His
failed prediction turned his congregation against him, and John Wroe (see 1977,
up ahead) took over the movement.
30.
April 3,
1843 (And also July 7, 1843, March
21 and October 22, 1844) William Miller, founder of the
Millerite church, spent fifteen years in careful study of the scriptures and
determined that the world would conclude sometime in 1843. He announced this
discovery of what he called "the midnight cry" in 1831. When there
was a spectacular meteor shower in 1833, it seemed to his followers that his
prediction was close to being fulfilled, and they celebrated their imminent
demise. Then, as each date he named failed to produce Armageddon, Miller moved
it up a bit. The faithful continued to gather by the thousands on hilltops all
over America each time one of the new dates would dawn. Finally, on October 22,
1844, the last day that Miller had calculated for The End, the Millerites
relaxed their vigils. Five years later, Miller died, still revered and not at
all concerned at his failed prophecies. The movement eventually changed
its name and broke up into a number of modern-day churches, among them the
Seventh-Day Adventist Church, which today has over three million members.
31.
1874 A date calculated by Charles Taze Russell of the Jehovah's Witnesses (which
see) for The End.
32.
1881 Those who delighted in measuring the various passages
of the Great Pyramid of Giza, presumed to
be the tomb of Cheops, calculated that all would be over in 1881. Careful
remeasuring and some imagination gave a better (but not much better) date of
1936. That was improved upon by other students who decided upon 1953 as the
terminal year. Further refinements and improvements of technique are still
being made. If we get a new date, we'll let you know.
33.
1881 Mother Shipton is supposed to
have written: The world to an end will come in eighteen hundred and
eighty-one. The prediction, as well as the rhyme, are faulted. A book
titled, The Life and Death of Mother Shipton, written in 1684 by
Richard Head, was reprinted in a garbled and freely "improved"
version in 1862 by Charles Hindley. In 1873 Hindley admitted having forged that
rhyme and many others, but his confession caused no lessening of the great
alarm in rural England when 1881 arrived.The world not having ended in that
year, the above spurious verse has since been published in a refreshed version
which substitutes "nineteen" for "eighteen" and
"ninety" for "eighty." The world, according to most
authorities, did not end then, either.
35.
1914 One of three dates the Jehovah's Witnesses promised
The End. The others were 1874 and 1975.
36.
1947 In 1889, "America's Greatest Prophet," John
Ballou Newbrough, said that for sure in 1947: all the present governments,
religions and all monied monopolies are to be overthrown and go out of
existence. . . . Our present form of so-called Christian religion will overrun
America, tear down the American flag, and trample it underfoot. In Europe the
disaster will be even more terrible. . . . Hundreds of thousands of people will
be killed. . . . All nations will be demolished and the earth be thrown open to
all people to go and come as they please. It wasn't a great year,
but it wasn't all that bad.
37.
1953 Again, a group of Great Pyramid nuts with their
tape-measures figured out this year as the last. Back to the King's Chamber,
guys.
38.
1974 Interestingly enough, the conjunction of heavenly bodies
that occurred back in 1524 was far, far more powerful than the more recent one
described in a silly book titled The Jupiter Effect, written by two
otherwise sensible astronomers who, in 1974, predicted dreadful effects on our
planet as a result of a March 10, 1982, "alignment" of planets. Other
astronomers denied that any effect would be felt, and when the date came and
went, as you may have noticed, no one noticed. One of the authors reported that
some earthquakes which had occurred in 1980 had been the "premature result
of The Jupiter Effect," and the public yawned in amazement.
40.
1977 John Wroe, who is described by the kindliest historian
we can find as a "foul-mouthed, ugly, dirty lecher," in 1823
inherited the leadership of the Southcottian sect in England when an
End-of-the-World prophecy by John Turner failed. Learning from the example,
Wroe took no chances. He made his Armageddon prophecy for 1977. A 1971
book, Prophets Without Honor, says of Wroe: At a time when
thermo-nuclear powers face each other across the Iron and Bamboo Curtains, it
is well to remember that——as far as can be judged from the scanty records——John
Wroe, indeed, was a true prophet!
41.
1980 A very old Arabic astrological presage of doom
specified that when the planets Saturn and Jupiter would be in conjunction in
the sign Libra at 9 degrees, 29 minutes of that sign, we could kiss a big
bye-bye to everything——camels, sand, mosques, the whole bag. That astronomical
configuration almost took place at midnight of December 31
(new calendar), 1980, a date calculated by astrologers many years ago as the
one spoken of. Jupiter was at 9 degrees, 24 minutes, and Saturn was at 9
degrees, 42 minutes, so the calculation was close to correct. However, nary a
camel blinked an eye.
42.
1980s The unsinkable Jeane Dixon, ever optimistic and
daring, predicted in 1970 that a comet would strike the earth in the
"mid-80's" at a place that she knew, but did not deign to tell. That
information was to be held until a "future date." Perhaps she
is now prepared to tell us? She said of this event that it
"may well become known as one of the worst disasters of the 20th
century." But then Jeane also said that, "I feel it will surely be in
the 1980's that [an un-named person] will become the first woman president in the
United States." Back to that ephemeris, Jeane.
43.
1996 It has been reasoned by biblical scholars that since
one day with God equals one thousand years for Man, and that God labored at the
creation of the universe for six days, Man should labor for six thousand years
and then take a rest. Thus, using other scripturally derived numbers, the world
should end sometime in 1996. It didn't.
44.
July 1999 In Quatrain X-72, Nostradamus declared: The
year 1999, seven months, From the sky will come a great King of Terror: To
bring back to life the great King of the Mongols, Before and after Mars to
reign by good luck.
45.
December 31,
1999 Many people from around the world
thought that a programming bug would cause financial systems to meltdown and
nuclear weapons to be launched. Despite their fears, none of this happened (see Wiki's fuller explanation).
46.
April 29,
2007 Preacher Pat Robertson
suggested in his 1990 book The New Millennium that the world
would end on this date. Alas, we are still here.
47.
May 21,
2011 American preacher Harold camping
predicted that Jesus would come back on this day and the apocalypse would begin.
Despite sounding crazy, he convinced many of his followers to sell all of their
possessions, quit their jobs, and to donate their life saving to his group.
Camping later admitted that this date was incorrect, and he had been
wrong.
48.
December 21,
2012 Members of the New Age movement
interpreted the end of the Mayan Long Count Calendar to
indicated the end of the world. This end was postulated to come through many
different mechanisms, including solar flares and a mysterious planet X. It should be noted that Mayan
scholars argued that these predictions were a brutal misinterpretation of the
Mayan calendar.
49.
August 23, 2013 The famed Russian monk Grigory Rasputin predicted that
the world would end and Christ would come back (link).
Rational Wiki maintains a pretty good list.
ReplyDeletehttps://rationalwiki.org/wiki/List_of_predictions_of_the_end_of_the_world