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The German Army was all-conquering until late 1941 when, only a few
miles short of Moscow, it ran out of steam. Maniacal defence, the
Russian winter and exhaustion all played their part and, although
they didn't realise it, the German forces wouldn't advance further
on this front. While they continued their offensives into 1942,
Soviet defenses had stiffened. Its equipment – notably the T-34
– had improved and the Germans had lost too many of their best
men: the savvy NCOs and experienced junior officers that gave the
Wehrmacht its edge over the opposition. They had lost their moral
compass as well. Complicity in the massacres of the
SS-Einsatzgruppen, the barbarity of the anti-Partisan operations
and summary execution for those who flagged, were the hallmarks of
the German Army's fight for survival against people it considered
less than human. Outnumbered, under attack on many other fronts,
their homeland bombarded unceasingly from the air, the German
servicemen endured the hell of the Eastern Front until their armies
were destroyed in 1945. While the morality of the regime they
fought for and its reprehensible actions should never be forgotten,
what cannot be denied is the indefatigable courage of the German
infantrymen. Fully illustrated with over 200 contemporary
photographs and illustrations – and exploring a broad range of
topics from uniform, weapons and provisions to tactics and
communications – this title provides valuable insights into the
Germans' main theater of operations in World War II.
The Soviet Army was ill-prepared for its erstwhile ally's
treacherous onslaught in 1941. Its officer corps decimated by
Stalin's purges and its men less well-trained than the Germans, the
Red Army was poorly led, hampered by the power of the political
officers and only partly mobilised. But, in spite of the huge
German victories and the speed of the Nazi attack, the Soviets
proved fantastically capable of rolling with the punches. The vast
territory of the Soviet Union and huge population were significant
factors, as was substantial assistance from the West – the United
States and Britain in particular – which was in evidence when the
German columns got to within a few miles short of Moscow and were
held and then forced back. The tide turned thanks to help from
outside and the efforts of the Soviet soldiers, who proved hardy
and durable. And just like its soldiers, Russian infantry equipment
was rugged and effective. While Soviet infantrymen may not have had
the flexibility or tactical nous of the Germans, they did not lack
cunning: deception, camouflage skills and endurance made Russian
snipers, as an example, more than the equal of the Germans. Most
views of the Soviet soldier and campaign are influenced by
self-serving German postwar accounts designed to excuse their loss
by suggesting that Adolf Hitler's meddling and Soviet numbers were
the main reasons for victory: this denigrates the Russian
infantryman whose toughness and ingenuity helped destroy the Third
Reich in spite of the faults of its own regime. Fully illustrated
with over 200 contemporary photographs and illustrations, Soviet
Infantryman on the Eastern Front in the Casemate Illustrated series
provides an insight into the Soviets' main theater of operations in
World War II.
The borders of the Roman Empire were frontiers that were often wild
and dangerous. The expansion of the empire after the Punic Wars saw
the Roman Republic become the dominant force in the Mediterranean
as it first took Carthaginian territories in Gaul, Spain and north
Africa and then moved into Greece with purpose, subjugating the
area and creating two provinces, Achaea and Macedonia. The growth
of the territories under Roman control continued through the rise
of Julius Caesar - who conquered the rest of Gaul - and the
establishment of the empire: each of the emperors could point to
territories annexed and lands won. By AD 117 and the accession of
Hadrian, the empire had reached its peak. It held sway from Britain
to Morocco, from Spain to the Black Sea. And its wealth was coveted
by those outside its borders. Just as today those from poorer
countries try to make their way into Europe or North America, so
those outside the empire wanted to make their way into the Promised
Land - for trade, for improvement of their lives or for plunder.
Thus the Roman borders became a mix - just as our borders are today
- of defensive bulwark against enemies, but also control areas
where import and export taxes were levied, and entrance was
controlled. Some of these borders were hard: the early equivalents
of the Inner German Border or Trump's Wall - Hadrian's Wall and the
line between the Rhine and Danube. Others, such as these two great
rivers, were natural borders that the Romans policed with their
navy. This book examines these frontiers of the empire, looking at
the way they were constructed and manned and how that changed over
the years. It looks at the physical barriers - from the walls in
Britain to the Fossatum Africae in the desert. It looks at the
traders and the prices that were paid for the traffic of goods. It
looks at the way that civil settlements - vici - grew up around the
forts and fortlets and what life was like for soldiers, sailors and
civilians. As well as artefacts of the period, the book provides a
guidebook to top Roman museums and a gazetteer of visitable sites
British soldiers, with their old-fashioned helmets, spring-powered
PIAT anti-tank guns and veneration of heroic defeats, may have lost
the propaganda war, but their record speaks for itself: they may
have started badly in France in 1940 and the Far East in 1941, but
they were victorious in the North African desert, in Europe and in
India and Burma where the 'Forgotten Army' first held the Japanese
and then inflicted at Imphal and Kohima the greatest loss to the
Japanese on land. They held back the might of the Panzers in
Normandy in 1944, chased the Germans back into Holland and came
within a whisker at Arnhem of circumventing the Siegfried Line, and
won battle after battle against a fanatical defence on their way to
final victory. This book doesn't cover the progress of the Second
World War, but looks in detail at the weapons, uniform,
accoutrements, equipment and tactics of the Second World War
British infantryman, following the themes of the Haynes Great War
British Tommy and German Infantryman Manuals.
The D-Day landings of 6 June 1944 were the culmination of months of
meticulous planning and organisation. A vast army had to be trained
and equipped; huge amounts of material - from tin cans to tank
transporters, petrol to parachutes - had to be stockpiled,
distributed and readied for transport to the beaches of Normandy;
bombing missions had to reduce the enemy; fighters, minesweepers
and other naval missions had to clear the English Channel; and,
finally, the men had to embark and the armada had to deliver its
cargo to a strict timetable under enemy fire onto a hostile shore.
For understandable reasons, the emphasis on remembrance of D-Day is
focused on the beaches: that's where the battles took place; that's
where most of the casualties occurred; that's where the remarkable
stories were written in blood, sand and shingle. We should never
forget the sacrifice of those who fell, but equally we shouldn't
forget the sacrifices of those who prepared the way. The hundred
locations chosen for this book are a small collection of those
places in Britain that were involved in the preparations for D-Day.
It would have been easy to choose a hundred others: few parts of
Britain were not part of the war effort. It is perhaps best to see
the chosen 100 as starting points from which the reader can
discover the considerable depth of involvement required to launch
the great invasion.
On 10 May 1940 German Fallschirmj ger stormed the Dutch fort of
Eben-Emael, south of Maastricht. The brilliantly executed operation
was the first signal success by airborne troops in the Second World
War and it made the military world sit up and take notice. Improved
parachutes and the creation of gliders that could carry troops
meant that assault forces could be dropped or landed behind enemy
lines. This was a significant new tactic which had a dramatic
impact on several of the key campaigns, and it is the subject of
Simon and Jonathan Forty's in-depth, highly illustrated history.
They tell the story of the development of airborne forces, how they
were trained and equipped, and how they were landed and put into
action in every theatre of the global conflict. The results were
mixed. German airborne forces were victorious on Crete, but the
cost was so great that Hitler vowed never to use them in the same
way again. The Allies saw things differently. After Crete they
built up elite units who would play important roles in later
battles -in Normandy, for example, where the British 6th Airborne
Division took vital bridges prior to the D-Day landings. These are
just two examples of the many similar operations on the Western and
Eastern Fronts and in the Pacific which are covered in this
wide-ranging book. It offers the reader a fascinating insight into
airborne warfare over seventy years ago.
Caen, a D-Day objective on 6 June 1944, did not fall to the British
and Canadian troops of Second Army until 6 August, by which time
much of the city had been reduced to rubble. The two-month struggle
was a crucial stage in the Normandy campaign and, as Simon Forty
demonstrates in this photographic history, one of the most
controversial. His detailed, graphic account gives the reader a
fascinating insight into the opposing forces, the conditions, the
terrain, the equipment and weaponry deployed-and it illustrates
just how intense and protracted the fighting was on the ground. The
reasons for the slow Allied advance have been hotly disputed.
Deficiencies in British and Canadian equipment and tactics have
been blamed, as has the tenacity of the German resistance.
Ultimately a sequence of Allied operations sapped the defenders'
strength, and it is these operations-Perch, Martlet, Epsom,
Windsor, Charnwood, Jupiter, Atlantic, Goodwood-that feature
strongly in the striking photographs that have been selected for
this book. They record in the most dramatic fashion the character
of the fighting and show how even the SS divisions and heavy tank
battalions were eventually defeated.
It is said that artillery won the Second World War for the Allies -
that Soviet guns wore down German forces on the Eastern Front,
negating their superior tactics and fighting ability, and that the
accuracy and intensity of the British and American artillery was a
major reason for the success of Allied forces in North Africa from
El Alamein, in Italy and Normandy, and played a vital role in the
battles of 1944 and 1945\. Yet the range of weapons used is often
overlooked or taken for granted - which is why this highly
illustrated history by Simon and Jonathan Forty is of such value.
They stress the importance of artillery on every front and analyse
how artillery equipment, training and tactical techniques developed
during the conflict. The selection of wartime photographs - many
from east European sources - and the extensive quotations from
contemporary documents give a graphic impression of how the guns
were used on all sides. The photographs emphasize the wide range of
pieces employed as field, anti-aircraft and anti-tank artillery
without forgetting self-propelled guns, coastal and other
heavyweights and the development of rockets. The authors offer a
fascinating insight into the weapons that served in the artillery
over seventy years ago.
Of the five beaches attacked on 6 June, Omaha saw the sternest
fighting. Well-placed defenders on the high ground and extensive
beach defenses did their job. On top of this, so much had gone
wrong with the first wave: many of the amphibious DD Sherman tanks
didn't reach the beach. They were released from their landing craft
too far away where the greater swell swamped them and the troops
landing on Omaha missed their firepower. Another problem was that
many units landed in the wrong place. Strong tides and winds
carried the landing craft off line and led to confusion. Finally,
the German emplacements and defenses were well-placed on high
ground and the only cover on the beach - the seawal - was over a
killing ground. There were 32 fortified areas located between the
Vire River and Port-en-Bessin: in all, 12 of these strongpoints
were able to direct fire on Omaha Beach. The attacking forces-units
of the US 29th and 1st Inf Divs - suffered over 2,000 casualties,
many of them drowned during the approach, but led by US Rangers,
themselves misplaced (they were the follow-up troops to Rudder's
Rangers who had scaled the Pointe du Hoc) the American troops
pushed forward and by nightfall, they had gained hold of the beach
and its immediate hinterland. Despite the casualties, 34,000 troops
had been landed by the end of the day.
The battle of Normandy ended as the Allied armies crossed the Seine
at the end of August 1944, a month after Operation Cobra had broken
the stalemate. The Allies harried the retreating Germans, who left
their tanks and heavy weapons south of the Seine, and by
mid-September the Allies were coming up against the defences of
Germany itself, the impressive Westwall. As far as the Allies were
concerned, the Germans were beaten. The scent of immediate victory
was in the air, the only question was where to apply the coup de
grace. Logistics demanded that this should be a single thrust
rather than Eisenhower's broad front approach. Montgomery-the
architect of victory in Normandy-proposed a daring plan to
circumvent the Westwall, thrust towards Berlin, and make use of the
newly created 1st Allied Airborne Army. The plan was simple: use
the Paratroopers to hold key bridges along a single route along
which British XXX Corps would make an advance that would be "rapid
and violent, and without regard to what is happening on the
flanks." US 101st Airborne would land north of Eindhoven; 82nd
Airborne at Nijmegen; British 1st Airborne at Arnhem-the so-called
"bridge too far." Unfortunately, the plan was flawed, the execution
imperfect, and the Germans far from beaten. In spite of the
audacious actions of the Paratroopers who would cover themselves
with glory, Operation Market Garden showed that the German ground
forces would still provide the Allies with stiff opposition in the
West. And then, in 1977, A Bridge Too Far came out. With levels of
realism that wouldn't be approached for twenty years, the movie
produced a view of the battle that subverted reality and permeated
public perception. Just as George C. Scott produced the definitive
Patton, so A Bridge Too Far provided an unnuanced view of the
battles that historians have battled to correct ever since. As with
its companion volumes on D-Day, the Bocage, and the Ardennes
battlefields, this book provides a balanced, up-to-date view of the
operation making full use of modern research. With over 500
illustrations including many maps, aerial and then and now
photography, it will provide the reader with an easy-to-read,
up-to-date examination of each part of the operation, benefitting
from on-the-ground research by Tom Timmermans, who lives in
Eindhoven.
The infantry can always be found at the sharp end of the
battlefield. You may be able to crush an opponent with armour or
artillery, but there's only one way to take and hold ground and
that's with riflemen - the 'poor bloody infantry'. And it is the
infantrymen of the Second World War - from all sides, Allied and
Axis - who are the subject of this highly illustrated history. It
uses over 400 wartime photographs plus contemporary documents and
other illustrations to show the developments in equipment, training
and tactical techniques and to give an insight into the experience
of the infantry soldier during the conflict. Although the infantry
were critical to the war effort, their contribution is often
overshadowed by the more dramatic roles played by soldiers with
more specialized skills - like tank crew, paratroopers and special
forces. They also suffered devastating casualties, in particular
during the last phase of the war in the west when around 20 per
cent of an infantry division's riflemen were likely to die and over
60 per cent could expect to be wounded. So as well as describing
how the infantry fought, the authors look at the motivation which
kept them fighting in awful conditions and despite brutal setbacks.
The result is a thorough, detailed and revealing portrait of
infantry warfare over seventy years ago.
While the 6th Airborne Division had landed in France on D-Day and
covered itself in glory, its counterpart, the 1st Airborne
Division, had last seen action during an amphibious assault at
Taranto on September 9, 1943, as part of the invasion of Italy.
Returned to the UK in December 1943, it was held in reserve during
the battle of Normandy and spent three months waiting for action,
as plan after plan was proposed and then discarded, such was the
speed of the Allied pursuit of the Germans. In September 1944,
however, 1st Airborne played a leading role in Operation Market-the
air component of Operation Market Garden, an audacious attempt by
the Allies to bypass the Siegfried Line and advance into the Ruhr.
It was to be 1st Airborne's last action of the war. Encountering
more resistance than expected, including II SS Panzer Corps, the
division landed too far from Arnhem bridge, and fought bravely but
in vain. Held up en route, particularly at Nijmegen, XXX Corps'
advance to Arnhem stuttered and ran late. After nine days of
fighting, 1st Airborne had lost 8,000 men around Arnhem when the
survivors retreated across the Lower Rhine to safety. During those
nine days, however, they had created a legend: first as the small
unit under Lt-Col John Frost held the "bridge too far" and then as
the Oosterbeek perimeter came under sustained attack waiting for
XXX Corps to arrive. The Past& Present Series reconstructs
historical battles by using photography, juxtaposing modern views
with those of the past together with concise explanatory text. It
shows how much infrastructure has remained and how much such as
outfits, uniforms, and ephemera has changed, providing a coherent
link between now and then.
Just as the Anglo-Canadian forces in the east found it difficult to
advance beyond Caen after D-Day, so the US First Army laboured to
advance through the Norman bocage country in the west. The lethal
struggle that developed there was a defining episode in the
Normandy campaign, and this photographic history is a vivid
introduction to it. Through a selection of over 150 carefully
chosen and meticulously captioned�wartime photographs Simon
Forty traces the course of the battle and gives the reader a
graphic impression of the conditions, the terrain and the
experience of the troops. The Germans mounted a tenacious defence.
They fought from prepared positions in the high hedgerows. Each
cramped field and narrow lane became a killing ground. But the
Americans adapted their tactics and brought in special equipment
including bulldozers and tanks with hedgerow cutters to force their
way through. The losses were appalling as the Germans used snipers,
mines, machineguns and artillery to great effect. Inexorably,
however, and with enormous bravery, First Army solved their
tactical problems, inflicted heavy casualties on the defenders and
ground their way to Saint-L�.
The British Eighth Army, which played a decisive role in defeating
the Axis in North Africa, was one of the most celebrated Allied
armies of the Second World War, and this photographic history is
the ideal introduction to it. The carefully chosen photographs show
the men, weapons and equipment of the army during campaigns in
Egypt, Libya and Tunisia. The battles the army fought in the
Western Desert in 1941 and 1942 are the stuff of legend, as is the
second Battle of El Alamein when, under Montgomery, it defeated the
German and Italian forces commanded by Rommel. The book gives a
vivid insight into the fighting and the desert conditions, and it
shows what a varied, multinational force the army was, for it
brought together men from Britain, the British Empire and
Commonwealth as well as Free French, Greeks and Poles.
The Italian campaign was one of the most debated of the Second
World War, splitting the American and British allies, and causing
great disharmony. After the fall of Rome and the surrender of
Italy, the invasion of Normandy led to the Italian campaign
becoming a sideshow as the D-Day Dodgers' fought their way through
Italy to the Alps against a grinding defence and extreme weather.
In a sequence of 200 wartime photographs Simon Forty sums up the
major events of the conflict - from the landings on Sicily to the
crossing of the Po. Commanded first by Sir Harold Alexander and
then Mark Clark, the Allied armies (US Fifth and British Eighth)
drew men not only from Britain, the United States, France and
Poland but from all over the Commonwealth - from Australia, Canada,
India, New Zealand and South Africa - as well as such other
countries as Brazil, Czechoslovakia, Greece and Palestine. The
devastation caused by the war in the cities, towns and countryside
is part of the story, but perhaps the most powerful impression is
made by the faces of the soldiers themselves as they look out from
the Italian front of so long ago.
On the battlefields of Europe and North Africa during the Second
World War tanks played a key role, and the intense pressure of
combat drove forward tank design and tactics at an extraordinary
rate. In a few years, on all sides, tank warfare was transformed.
This is the dramatic process that Simon and Jonathan Forty
chronicle in this heavily illustrated history. They describe the
fundamentals of pre-war tank design and compare the theories
formulated in the 1930s as to how they should be used in battle.
Then they show how the harsh experience of the German blitzkrieg
campaigns in Poland, France and the Soviet Union compelled the
Western Allies to reconsider their equipment, organization and
tactics - and how the Germans responded to the Allied challenge.
The speed of progress is demonstrated in the selection of over 180
archive photographs which record, as only photographs can, the
conditions of war on each battle front. They also give a vivid
impression of what armoured warfare was like for the tank crews of
75 years ago.
A fascinating examination of every aspect of the Roman soldier, at
the height of Rome's imperial might, this highly illustrated manual
gets to grips with what we know about the men of the legions. Every
detail of a legionary's life is shown, from what they wore and
carried and how ranks were signified to where they slept at night
and ate round the camp fire. * Includes fascinating detail on kit,
equipment, weapons and insignia * Examines how their unique tactics
helped the legions win over and over again * Covers infantry,
cavalry and engineers, as well as officers and the chain of command
* Details battlefield tactics and fighting strategies, war machines
and fighting formations
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