There is no verified Nostradamus prophecy that specifically says “3 countries will fall before the end of 2026.”
What you’re seeing online comes from modern interpretations, YouTube videos, and social media content, not historical records of Nostradamus’ writings.
What Nostradamus actually wrote
Nostradamus (1503–1566) wrote Les Prophéties, which are short, poetic quatrains. They are:
- Very vague and symbolic
- Not dated in a clear modern calendar system
- Open to many different interpretations
Because of this, people often retrofit current events into his verses.
Where the “3 countries will fall” idea comes from
The claim you mentioned usually appears in:
- YouTube “prophecy” videos
- TikTok / social media edits
- Blogs interpreting his quatrains loosely
Some of these sources randomly name countries like the US, UK, Russia, etc., but:
- There is no original quatrain listing countries that will “fall” in 2026
- There is no credible historical or academic support for exact country-collapse predictions (Dailyhunt)
Why these claims spread
These ideas go viral because:
- Nostradamus predictions are written in cryptic language
- People link them to current wars or tensions
- Content creators exaggerate for views
Even reputable analyses note his verses are often reinterpreted after events happen, not before them (Firstpost)
Bottom line
The “3 countries falling before 2026 ends” claim is:
- ❌ Not an authentic Nostradamus prediction
- ❌ Not supported by historical texts
- ✔️ A modern internet interpretation / myth
If you want, I can break down the most famous real Nostradamus quatrains and what historians think they actually meant—some of them are surprisingly different from the internet versions.