What really happened to Adoph Hitler?
 

No one knows, for certain, what really ever became of Adolf Hitler. Some say he died in the bunker along with his mistress when it was bombed by the allies. Some say he committed suicide. Some say he escaped to live another day somewhere else. But no one has ever found his remains, and no one, if they knew, has ever told the true story.

Nostradamus tells us that some of his own people caught up with him, dragged him in an iron cage, and then threw him into the Rhine river - this is a possibility which quite likely happened.  When the war started going badly for the Germans, the people blamed their leader, as is usually the case. Indeed, at one point, it is documented that several of his own generals tried to assassinate him.

        2-24 Beasts ferocious with hunger will swim across rivers
        The greater part of the camp will be against Hister.
        They will drag him in an iron cage
        When the German child will observe nothing.

        Bestes farouches de faim fleuues tranner;
        Plus part du champ encontre Hister sera,
        En cage de fer le grand fera treisner,
        Quand rien enfant de Germain obseruera.

 Note that this is another Hister quatrain, Hister being an obvious anagram for Hitler. This quatrain indicates that towards the end of the war, most of the German people will be against their leader. The last two lines indicate that some of them will drag him in an iron cage, and get rid of him themselves. The last line also says that the German child will observe nothing - that is to say, that it will be done in secret, and that the ones who are responsible for it will never admit it publicly to the German people, never mind the rest of the world.

 Another quatrain which mentions the end of Adolf Hitler, tells us that he will be thrown into the Rhine river by his own people.

        6-40 To quench the great thirst, the great one of Mainz
        Will be deprived of his dignity
        Those of Cologne will come to complain so loudly,
        That the great groppe will be thrown into the Rhine.
 
        Grand de Magonce pour grande soif esteindre,
        Sera priué de sa grande dignité:
        Ceux de Cologne si fort le viendront plaindre,
        Que la grand groppe au Rhin sera ietté.

 Notice in this quatrain the reference to the great thirst in the first line - this echoes the line in the previous quatrain which says that the hungry beasts will swim the rivers.  It is those of Cologne who do this deed - they get rid of their own leader, and throw him into the Rhine river.  The word groppe in the last line is low Latin for haunch, or rump - in this case, it is Nostradamus polite way of calling this man an ass! But even more curious, is the fact that Adolph Hitler’s father, Alois, was the ‘illegitimate’ son of Maria Anna Schicklgruber—she refused to name the father. Mainz is the capital of the Rhineland-Palantinates.
 

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