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See also: American See also: naval officer and historian, was See also: born on the 27th of See also: September 1840 at West Point, New See also: York
.
His See also: father, See also: Dennis See also: Hart See also: Mahan (18o2-1871) was a professor in the military See also: academy, and the author of textbooks on See also: civil and military See also: engineering
.
The son graduated at the naval academy in 1859, became See also: lieutenant in 1861, served on the " Congress," and on the " Pocahontas," " See also: Seminole," and " See also: James Adger " during the Civil War, and was instructor at the naval academy for a
See also: year
.
In 1865 he was made lieut.-See also: commander, commander in 1872, captain in 1885
.
Mean-while he saw service in the Gulf of Mexico, the See also: South See also: Atlantic, the Pacific, and See also: Asia, and did See also: shore duty at See also: Boston, New York and See also: Annapolis
.
In 1886-89 he was president of the naval war See also: college at
See also: Newport, Rhode See also: Island
.
Between 1889 and 1892 he was engaged in See also: special service for the bureau of navigation, and in 1893 was made commander of the " See also: Chicago," of the See also: European See also: squadron
.
In 1896 he retired from active service, but was a member of the naval See also: board of See also: strategy during the war between the See also: United States and See also: Spain
.
He was a member of the See also: peace congress at the Hague in 1899
.
This long and varied service gave him extensive opportunities for observation, which he supplemented by See also: constant study of naval authorities and reflection on the interpretation of the problems of maritime See also: history
.
His first See also: book was a modest and compact See also: story of the affairs in The Gulf and Inland See also: Waters (1883), in a series of volumes by various writers, entitled The See also: Navy in the Civil War; in 1890 he suddenly acquired fame by the appearance of his masterly See also: work entitled The Influence of See also: Sea Power upon History, 166o-1783
.
Having been impressed by the failure of historians to allow for the influence of sea power in struggles between nations, he was led to make prolonged investigations of this general theme (see SEA POWER)
.
The reception accorded the See also: volume was instant and hearty; in See also: England, in particular, it was deemed almost an epoch-making work, and was studied by naval specialists, See also: cabinet ministers and journalists, as well as by a large See also: part of the general public
.
It was followed by The Influence of Sea Power upon the French Revolution and See also: Empire (2 vols
.
1892); The See also: Life of Nelson, the Embodiment of the Sea Power of See also: Great Britain (1897) ; and Sea Power in its Relations to the War of 1812 (19o5)
.
The author's general aim in these works—some of which have been translated into French, See also: German and Japanese—was to make the consideration of maritime matters paramount to that of military, See also: political or economic movements, without, however, as he himself says " divorcing them from their surroundings of cause and effect in general history, but seeking to show how they modified the latter, and were modified by them." He selected the year 166o as the beginning of his narrative, as being the date when the sailing-See also: ship era, with its distinctive features, had fairly begun." The series as a whole has been accepted as finally authoritative, sup-planting its predecessors of similar aim, and almost—in the words of See also: Theodore Roosevelt—founding a new school of naval See also: historical writing
.
Other See also: works by Mahan are a Life of See also: Admiral See also: Farragut (1892) ; The See also: Interest of See also: America in Sea Power (1897) ; Lessons of the War with Spain (1899); The Story of the War with South See also: Africa and The Problem of Asia (1900); Types of Naval See also: Officers See also: drawn from the History of the See also: British Navy (1901); Retrospect and Prospect, studies of See also: international relations (1902)
.
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