![]() The Greek list of successive thalassocracies begins from Lydians, then Pelasgians, then Thracians, then Rhodians, then Phrygians, then Cypriots, then Phoenicians, then Egyptians, then Milesians, then Lesbians, then Phocaeans, then Samians, then Spartans, then Naxians, then Eretrians, and finally Aeginetans. History and examples of thalassocracies Ancient and Classical Mediterranean ![]() The list was then further surveyed by John Myres in 1906-07 and extensively studied by Molly Miller in the 1970s. ![]() German classical scholar Christian Gottlob Heyne reconstructed the list through fragments in 1771. Įusebius' list survived through fragments of Diodorus Siculus' works, while also appeared in 4th-century theologian and historian Jerome's Chronicon, and Byzantine chronicler George Syncellus' Extract of Chronography. Since it does not mention Aegina's final submission of its naval force to Athens, the original list was likely compiled before the consolidation of the Athenian-led Delian League. The list therefore presents a series of the successive exclusive naval domains, as the total control of the seas changed hands between these thalassocracies. The list includes a successive series of "thalassocracies", begins from the Lydians after the fall of Troy, and ends with Aegina, each controlled the sea for a number of years. Eusebius categorized several historical polities in the Mediterranean as "sea-controlling", and listed them in a chronology. The list was in the Chronicon, a work of universal history of Eusebius, an early 4th century bishop of Caesarea Maritima. Thalassocracy was a resurrection of a word known from a very specific classical document, which British classical scholar John Linton Myres termed "the List of Thalassocracies". Its realization and ideological construct is called maritimism (as in the case of the Estado Novo), contrasting continentalism. Herodotus distinguishes sea-power from land-power and spoke of the need to counter the Phoenician thalassocracy by developing a Greek "empire of the sea". The Ancient Greeks first used the word thalassocracy to describe the government of the Minoan civilization, whose power depended on its navy. ![]() The term thalassocracy can also simply refer to naval supremacy, in either military or commercial senses. Thalassocracies can thus be distinguished from traditional empires, where a state's territories, though possibly linked principally or solely by the sea lanes, generally extend into mainland interiors in a tellurocracy ("land-based hegemony"). Examples of this were the Phoenician states of Tyre, Sidon and Carthage the Italian maritime republics of Venice and Genoa of the Mediterranean the Chola dynasty of Tamilakam the Omani Empire of Arabia and the Austronesian empires of Srivijaya and Majapahit in Maritime Southeast Asia. Traditional thalassocracies seldom dominate interiors, even in their home territories. Not to be confused with Hydraulic empire or Maritime power.Ī thalassocracy or thalattocracy sometimes also maritime empire, is a state with primarily maritime realms, an empire at sea, or a seaborne empire. ![]()
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