Signs of the End Times
1820 AD — Fließ, Tyrol, Austria
Partial
When the world is encircled with wire and iron, there will be small people. When children dress like apes, Lutheranism will enter Tyrol. When luxury grows so great that men and women can no longer be told apart by their clothing, and a maidservant stands under every stable door dressed as finely as a tavern waitress — then take heed, the final times are near. When vanity comes into the cemetery, Christianity departs from the homes. When one can travel around the whole earth without a horse, the end of the world draws near.
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Reality: Many signs have visibly come to pass: the world encircled by wire and iron (telegraph, electricity, railways, fences); travel around the earth 'without a horse' (cars, aircraft); unisex clothing where men and women are hard to tell apart; an established Protestant (Lutheran) presence in historically Catholic Tyrol.
The Inn River and the Tyrolean Villages
1820 AD — Fließ, Tyrol, Austria
Pending
When the Inn flows through the mountain past Landeck, not much time remains. Prutz will waste away, Kauns will burn, and Zams will become an ox pasture.
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The Reschen Pass Railway and the Great Catastrophe
1820 AD — Fließ, Tyrol, Austria
Partial
Three times an attempt will be made to build the railway over the Reschen Pass, and three times it will fail, because at each beginning a war breaks out. A bridge spanning from the Inn Valley to the Pitztal will be begun but will remain unfinished — and before it is completed, the great world catastrophe will begin.
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Reality: The Reschenscheideck railway over the Reschen Pass was surveyed and planned several times across the 19th and 20th centuries but was never completed — projects were repeatedly interrupted by war and political upheaval.