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Madame de Thèbes
French clairvoyant / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Madame de Thèbes (1860–1937), pseudonym of Anne Victorine Savigny was a French clairvoyant and palm reader. She plied her trade from her living room at No. 29 Avenue de Wagram in Paris.[1] Every Christmas, she published her prophecies in an Almanac, which enjoyed wide circulation. She was said to have predicted:[2]
- The Boer War;
- The Russo-Japanese War;
- Triggers of World War I;
- The violent death of General Boulanger;
- The tragic death of Catulle Mendès;
- The death of William Thomas Stead;
- The case of Caillaux.
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She published the book The Enigma of the Dream: Explanation of Dreams in 1908.[3] She died in Paris in 1937 at the age of 77. [4]