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The bombing of Hamburg during 1943. 18 January – World War II: Soviet officials announce they have broken the Wehrmacht's siege of Leningrad. 18 January – The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising begins. 27 January – World War II: 64 bombers mount the first all American air raid against Germany (Wilhelmshaven is the target).
March – The self-illustrated children's novella The Little Prince by the exiled French aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, the all-time best-selling book originated in French, is published in New York.
Listen, Germany! is a published collection of letters by exiled German author Thomas Mann to his former country during World War II. [1] Originally published in 1943 by Alfred A. Knopf Inc., the collection contains twenty-five letters that were read over long and medium wave radio broadcasts by the BBC German Service into Nazi Germany, as part of the Allied propaganda effort, from October 1940 ...
First book edition of the Stroop Report from 1948 by Stanisław Piotrowski The Report was a 125-page typed document, bound in black pebble leather, with 53 photographs. It consisted of the following sections: Summary, with title page; list of soldiers/Police killed and wounded; the list of combat units involved, and
Nazi Germany and racial investigators supported the Finnish irredentists (specially the Patriotic People's Movement and Academic Karelia Society) as they could be useful to weaken the Soviet-Russian control (also due to wanting the German conquest of Northern Russia until Arkhangelsk) and even helped Finnish ethnologists to find out what part ...
July 26, 1943 Command and defence measures in the southeast 49 July, 1943 Believed to be a contingency plan to seize Italian positions in the event of their withdrawal from the war. Did not survive? 50 September 28, 1943 Concerning the preparations for the withdrawal of 20th Mountain Army to Northern Finland and Northern Norway 51 November 3, 1943
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They were written by assistants of Heinrich Himmler and contain Himmler's daily schedule in 1937–1938, the year of the Kristallnacht, and also the critical year between 1943 and 1944. [2] The diaries were confiscated by the Red Army after the war with other documents seized from German military installations around Berlin. There is also ...