Mirabilis Liber
The Mirabilis liber is an anonymous and formerly very popular compilation of predictions by various Christian saints and diviners first printed in France in 1522 and reprinted several times thereafter. It is not to be confused with the almost contemporary Liber mirabilis. Its unwitting contributors include:
- Bishop Bemechobus
- The Tiburtine Sibyl
- ‘St Augustine of Hippo’
- ‘St Severus’
- Johann Lichtenberger
- A set of papal prophecies
- Telesphorus of Cosenza
- Another anthology including St Brigid of Sweden, St Hildegard of Bingen, the Cretan Sibyl, the Hermit Reynard, St Cyril and the celebrated Abbot Joachim of Fiore
- Joannes de Vatiguerro
- Joachim of Fiore himself
- ‘St Vincent’
- St. Catald of Taranto
- Jerome of Ferrara
- Fra Bonaventura
- Johannes de Rupescissa
- St Bridget of Sweden
As the above indicates, the book—whose only known complete translation was published in French in 1831—had two parts, the first in Latin and the second, shorter, in French. It contained prophecies of fire, plague, famine, floods, earthquakes, droughts, comets, brutal occupations and bloody oppressions. The Church would collapse, the Pope be forced to flee Rome. Such predictions made it extremely popular at the time of the French Revolution, when crowds besieged the French Bibliothèque Nationale to see it. Indeed, many nineteenth-century catalogues suggested that it had predicted the Revolution itself. But above all the book predicted a supposedly imminent Arab invasion of Europe, the advent of the Antichrist and the subsequent End of the World.
The Mirabilis liber seems to have served as a major source for the prophecies of Nostradamus, and was placed on the Lisbon version of the Church's Index of Forbidden Books in 1581.