The Influence Of Sea Power Upon History: 1660-1783 ✦
translated it and used it as a manual to build the fleet that would eventually shock the world at the Battle of Tsushima.
The book was an overnight sensation, but not just in America. The Influence of Sea Power upon History: 1660-1783
Mahan wasn't a hero of the high seas; he was a quiet, bookish instructor at the Naval War College who preferred libraries to gales. But when he published The Influence of Sea Power upon History: 1660-1783 , he didn't just write a history book—he wrote a blueprint for the 20th century. The Big Idea: The Ocean as a Highway translated it and used it as a manual
used his logic to justify building the Panama Canal and seizing Hawaii, transforming the U.S. from an isolated continent into a global superpower. The Legacy But when he published The Influence of Sea
By looking back at the age of sail (1660–1783), Mahan actually predicted the age of steel—and every aircraft carrier patrolling the globe today is, in a way, a ghost of his 1890 theories.
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