The first recorded use of the term "Naacal" is contained in
Augustus Le Plongeon's work from 1896, "Queen Moo and the
Egyptian
Sphinx." From pages xxiii - xxiv of the preface: "Perhaps also will be felt the necessity of recovering the libraries of the
Maya sages (hidden about the beginning of the
Christian era to save them from destruction at the hands of the devastating hordes that invaded their country in those times), and to learn from their contents the wisdom of those ancient philosophers, of which that preserved in the books of the
Brahmins is but the reflection. That wisdom was no doubt brought to
India, and from there carried to
Babylon and
Egypt in very remote ages by those
Maya adepts (Naacal—'the exalted'), who, starting from the land of their birth as missionaries of religion and civilization, went to
Burmah, where they became known as
Nagas, established themselves in the
Dekkan, whence they carried their civilizing work all over the earth." According to Augustus Le Plongeon, the Naacals were the missionaries of Mayan religion and civilization. Le Plongeon advocated that the original, great civilization was in Central America, which contrasts with Churchward's view. == James Churchward's description of the Naacal ==