Naval history is the area of
military
history concerning
war at
sea and the subject is also a sub-discipline of the
broad field of
maritime
history.
Traditionally, the focus has been on direct combat between
ships at sea, rather than the use of ships to
transport
armies or military supplies, although
frequently
naval strategy hinges on
the need to protect transport shipping. Recent writing in naval
history has expanded the scope of the subject to include the full
range of issues associated with
navies,
including matters of
technology,
finance,
bureaucracy,
social history,
shipbuilding,
supply, and
logistics.
Naval history is of interest not only because of the value of
learning how societies of the past dealt with the double challenge
of human enemies and the implacable sea, but also because ships
were the first technology to enable a global civilization. In the
days before
radio,
naval officers at remote locations frequently
had to make singlehandedly decisions which decided the fate of
their nations .
See also
External links
- Naval History & Heritage Command
- Naval
Historical Foundation
- National Museum of the U.S. Navy
- Hampton
Roads Naval Museum
- Great Lakes Naval Museum
- National Naval Aviation Museum
- Naval Museum of Armament and Technology
- Naval Undersea Museum
- Naval War College Museum
- Puget Sound Navy Museum
- Patuxent River Naval Air Museum
- U.S. Navy
Seabee Museum
- Submarine
Force Library & Museum
- U.S. Naval Academy Museum
- U.S. Navy Supply Corps Museum
- Navy Art Collection
- USS Constitution "Old Ironsides"
- Royal Navy
History, extensive source of Royal Naval History.
- International Journal of Naval History, A Global Forum
for Naval Historical Scholarship, an e-journal.
- Naval-History.Net, Naval History of the 20th Century,
World Wars 1, 2, post-war and Falklands War - navies, ships, ship
losses, casualties
- Ottoman Naval History, extensive source of Turkish
Naval History]