Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 November 2009
Britain is often thought of as a maritime nation. The history books certainly support this thesis with their chronicles of explorations for trade routes, of the development of overseas commerce, which became rather absentmindedly an empire, of the growth of a navy to defend these interests. As an island race which aspired to global enterprise, maritime affairs have never been far from central policy considerations as our livelihood began to depend increasingly on overseas trade routes for food, raw materials and export markets. And along the way we developed merchant and fighting marines that were supreme in their day. From this global perspective we have been and will, probably, always be a maritime nation.