1st Edition
Oceans, Seas, Shorelines and Warfare
Introduction
1. Early Warfare from the Sea: The Classical World and the Shaping of a Global Ideology
2. Violence from the Sea, 450–1450
3. The Globalisation of Naval Warfare, 1470–1650
4. The State and Sea Power: The Rise of the Battle Fleet, c.1650–1721
5. Naval Power and Global Reach, 1721–1815
6. Naval Power, the Industrial State and the Great Divergence, 1815–1914
7. Naval Power and Industrialised Warfare, 1914–90
8. War at Sea in the Modern and Post-Modern World, 1945–2022
Biography
Richard Harding is Professor Emeritus at the University of Westminster. His research specialisms are amphibious operations and naval leadership. He is the author of Seapower and Naval Warfare, 1650–1850 (1999), The Emergence of Britain’s Global Naval Supremacy (2010) and Modern Naval History: Debates and Prospects (2016).
Ross Anderson is Curator in the Western Australian Museum’s Department of Maritime Heritage. His archaeological research interests include cross‑cultural contact, borders and conflict. He is a contributing author to From Great Depths: The Wrecks of HMAS Sydney (II) and HSK Kormoran.
Mick de Ruyter is Lecturer in Archaeology at Flinders University and a Royal Australian Navy hydrographic surveyor. With interests in fighting craft and underwater military heritage, he is a lead author on Moluccan Fighting Craft on Australian Shores: Contact Rock Art from Awunbarna, Arnhem Land (2023).






