top of page

1660-1783 | The Influence Of Sea Power Upon History:

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.

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 The Influence of Sea Power upon History: 1660-1783

The year was 1890, and the United States Navy was, quite frankly, a mess. While European powers were building steel monsters, American sailors were still scrubbing the decks of rotting wooden ships left over from the Civil War. Then came . By looking back at the age of sail

yt_logo_rgb_light.png
Discord-Logo-Color (1).png
Flickr2.png
gumroad.png
paypal-logo-png-transparent.png

© 2026 — Prime River

bottom of page