In Alexandr Dugin's theory of tellurocracy, the following civilizational characteristics are traditionally attributed: a sedentary lifestyle (not excluding migratory colonization), conservatism, the permanence of legal norms, the presence of a powerful bureaucratic apparatus and central authority, strong infantry, but a weak fleet. Traditionally, tellurocracy is attributed to the Eurasian states (
Qing Empire,
Mongol Empire),
Mughal Empire, etc. although some, such as the early
United States and the
Brazilian Empire, have come into being elsewhere. In practice, all these qualities are not always present. Moreover, certain peoples and states evolve over time in one direction or another. Russia before the
Russian Empire was a typical tellurocratic state. After
Emperor Peter I, there was a gradual increase in the share of thalassocratic characteristics of the
Russian Empire and then the
Soviet Union, which turned into one of the largest naval powers. The
British Empire, on the contrary, was for a long time a small, largely thalassocratic state outside of its home islands, but during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries it increased its tellurocratic characteristics (expansion into the
Australian Outback and inland Africa, etc.). Dugin based his concept on the works of the crown jurist of the
Third Reich and theorist of
geopolitics,
Carl Schmitt. He associates tellurocracy with
Eurasianism, in contrast to a perceived association of thalassocracy with
Atlanticism. ==Notes==