A
thalassocracy (from
Greek language (
thalassa), meaning "sea", and (
kratein), meaning "to rule", giving (
thalassokratia), "rule of the sea") is a state with primarily maritime realms—an
empire at sea, such as the
Phoenician network of merchant cities. Traditional thalassocracies seldom dominate interiors, even in their home territories (for example: Phoenician
Tyre,
Sidon and
Carthage or
Srivijaya and
Majapahit in
Southeast Asia). One can distinguish this traditional sense of
thalassocracy from an "empire", where the state's territories, though possibly linked principally or solely by the
sea lanes, generally extend into mainland interiors (for example: the
Bruneian Empire (1368–1888) in Asia). Compare to - land-based hegemony.