Benutzer:Kurst/Entwurf
Strurmbringer (Begriffsklärung)
Sturmbringer (engl. Stormbringer) steht für:
- den deutschen Titel eines Romans von Michael Moorcock
- den Namen des Schwertes aus dieser Romanreihe, das von der Figur Elric von Melniboné geführt wird
- den Titel des Rollenspiels Sturmbringer, das die Welt von Elric von Melniboné zum Hintergrund hat und nach dem Schwert dieser Figur benannt wurde.
Naacal
--> Wikipedia:Richtlinien Fiktives
Naacal ist der Name eines Volkes bzw. einer Kultur die nach Augustus Le Plongeon und später auch James Churchward existiert haben sollen. Weder Volk noch Kultur sind archäologisch oder anderweitig wissenschaftlich belegt, sie wurden aber in verschiedenen fiktionalen Werken verwendet.
Augustus Le Plongeons Beschreibung der Naacal
Zum ersten Mal erwähnt wurde der Begriff "Naacal" in "Queen Moo and the Egyptian Sphinx." von Augustus Le Plongeon, das 1896 veröffentlicht wurde. Hier heißt es auf den Seiten xxiii - xxiv des Vorwortes:
"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."
Augustus Le Plongeon zufolge waren die Naacal die Missionare der Maya Religion und Kultur. Le Plongeon war der Ansicht, dass die Kultur von Zentralamerika ausging, was sich nicht mit der Meinung von Churchward deckt.
James Churchward's description of the Naacal
The next known published use of the word occurred in 1926 when James Churchward used the term in his book, The Lost Continent of Mu, Motherland of Man.
According to James Churchward, the Naacal were the people and civilization of the lost continent of Mu, as well as the name of their language.
According to Churchward, the population of the Naacal civilization was as high as 64 million. Their civilization, which flourished 50,000 years ago, was technologically more advanced than the civilization of Churchward's own time (late 19th to early 20th century), and the ancient civilizations of India, Babylon, Persia, Egypt and the Mayas were merely the decayed remnants of Naacal colonies.
Churchward claimed to have gained his knowledge of the Naacals after befriending an Indian priest, who taught him to read the ancient dead language of the Naacals, spoken by only three people in all of India. The priest disclosed the existence of several ancient tablets, written by the Naacals, and Churchward gained access to these records after overcoming the priest's initial reluctance. His knowledge remained incomplete, as the available tablets were mere fragments of a larger text, but Churchward claimed to have found verification and further information in the records of other ancient peoples.
Churchward claimed that the ancient Egyptian sun god Ra originated with the Naacals; he claimed that "Rah" was the word which the Naacals used for "sun" as well as for their god and rulers.
Mention in "The Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East" Vol. 2 (1927)
In volume 2 of "The Life and Teaching of the Masters of the Far East," Baird T. Spalding makes this remark about the 'Naacals':
"The teachings that Buddha received came from the same source as did those of Osiris but in a different way. The teachings that Buddha contacted came from the Motherland direct to Burma, brought there by the Naacals. Osiris' teachings came direct to him, as his forefathers lived in the Motherland and when he was a young man he had gone to the Motherland to study."
David Bruton, Spalding's biographer revealed in "Baird T. Spalding As I Knew Him" (IEP, 1956) that Spalding's books were a magical autobiography and essentially fiction. Therefore the inference that the Naacals themselves are a fiction or modern myth is strengthened.
In modern fiction
- In the H. P. Lovecraft story "Through the Gates of the Silver Key", the occultist Harley Warren is said to be an expert linguist of the Naacal language.
- In the anime series RahXephon, Ernst Von Bähbem, a Mulian, is sometimes called the "Brother of Naacal" and was the founder of the Naacal Company, which eventually became the Bähbem Foundation.
- In Andre Norton's Central Asia novels, two main characters are Nacaals. She identifies Draupadi from the Mahabharata and the Hindu deity Ganesha as Nacaal survivors who advise humanity. She describes two warring factions among the Nacaals who have different aims and pursuits. Her Nacaal civilization existed as islands in an inner Asian sea which eventually perished.
- In "The Dweller in the Tomb," Lin Carter describes engraved pieces of black jade called the Zanthu Tablets, which are written in Nacaal.
Literatur
- Augustus Le Plongeon: Queen Móo and the Egyptian Sphinx. Kegan Paul, 1896, OCLC 500311423 (online bei HathiTrust.org, Cornell University Library PDF [abgerufen am 2. Mai 2011]).