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The Great Scuttle: The End of the German High Seas Fleet - Witnessing History (Paperback)
Loot Price: R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
You Save: R89
(19%)
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The Great Scuttle: The End of the German High Seas Fleet - Witnessing History (Paperback)
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List price R474
Loot Price R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
You Save R89 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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After the German surrender in November 1918, the German High Seas
Fleet was interned at Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands, the
anchorage for the Royal Navy's Grand Fleet throughout the First
World War. Determined not to see his ships fall into the hands of
the Allied Powers as the protracted peace negotiations at
Versailles dragged on, the German commander, Admiral Von Reuter,
decided to scuttle his fleet and secretly passed orders between his
ships for their skeleton crews to open the seacocks on 21 June
1919. Most ships began to sink within hours, witnessed by a
visiting group of school children suddenly caught up in an event of
international importance. More than fifty of the seventy-four
German ships that had steamed into Scapa Flow were successfully
scuttled and sunk, the remainder having been beached before they
could sink. More than thirty of the sunken warships would later be
raised but the others remain on the seabed, making Scapa Flow one
of the world's top diving destinations. This book follows the
events of that momentous day, drawing on the eyewitness accounts of
those who saw the crisis unfold at first hand. The book makes
extensive use of archive material, personal letters and
contemporary photographs to bring alive the extraordinary events of
that Midsummer's Day in 1919.
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