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{{PolicyCards (Civ6)|title1 = Maritime Industries|enabled_with = Foreign Trade|obsolete_with = Colonialism|type = Military|effect = +100% {{Production6}} Production toward Ancient and Classical era naval {{Link6|unit}}s.}} |
{{PolicyCards (Civ6)|title1 = Maritime Industries|enabled_with = Foreign Trade|obsolete_with = Colonialism|type = Military|effect = +100% {{Production6}} Production toward Ancient and Classical era naval {{Link6|unit}}s.}} |
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+ | == Historical Context == |
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+ | In some ancient places, men took to the seas, exploring, fishing, trading, and fighting. And in some of those places, maritime industries – the construction and outfitting of ships – haphazardly arose, making these men somewhat better at this exploring, fishing, trading, and fighting. Although the Egyptians built the first sea-going ships, the Minoans were the first great seafarers of history, trading as far away as Sicily while their King Minos conquered the other Aegean islands. The Phoenicians built a maritime “empire” of loosely-allied city-states. In far India, the Mauryan Empire (4th Century BC) developed the earliest known state organization for shipbuilding, and “invented” the science of navigation. |
Revision as of 00:48, 30 October 2016
Template:PolicyCards (Civ6)
Historical Context
In some ancient places, men took to the seas, exploring, fishing, trading, and fighting. And in some of those places, maritime industries – the construction and outfitting of ships – haphazardly arose, making these men somewhat better at this exploring, fishing, trading, and fighting. Although the Egyptians built the first sea-going ships, the Minoans were the first great seafarers of history, trading as far away as Sicily while their King Minos conquered the other Aegean islands. The Phoenicians built a maritime “empire” of loosely-allied city-states. In far India, the Mauryan Empire (4th Century BC) developed the earliest known state organization for shipbuilding, and “invented” the science of navigation.