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  2. Black Horror on the Rhine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Horror_on_the_Rhine

    "Brutality, Bestiality, Equality". German postcard sent in January 1923, depicting a Senegalese soldier of the French army alongside a Czech one. The verse text reads: The one is from Senegal / The other's name is Dolezal (Doležal is a common Czech surname) / The Negro steals in the Rhineland / The Czech in Prague and Eger / Each in his way looks out for / France's honor, glory and praise.

  3. Operation Spring Awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Spring_Awakening

    The 26th Army's Corps' would be layered in two belts whose defensive preparations had originally begun back on 11 February, [56] prior to any sign of German offensive intentions. The 57th Army's one Guards Rifle and one Rifle Corps were spread along a 60 km front and 10–15 km deep; the Army would receive another Rifle Corps during the ...

  4. Stab-in-the-back myth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stab-in-the-back_myth

    Further "proof" of the myth's validity was found in British general Frederick Barton Maurice's book The Last Four Months, published in 1919. German reviews of the book misrepresented it as proving that the German Army had been betrayed on the home front by being "dagger-stabbed from behind by the civilian populace" (von der Zivilbevölkerung ...

  5. German spring offensive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_spring_offensive

    The German armies involved were—from north to south—the Seventeenth Army under Otto von Below, the Second Army under Georg von der Marwitz and the Eighteenth Army under Oskar von Hutier, with a Corps (Gruppe Gayl) from the Seventh Army supporting Hutier's attack. Although the British had learned the approximate time and location of the ...

  6. Battle of Amiens (1918) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Amiens_(1918)

    The German General Erich Ludendorff described the first day of Amiens as the "Schwarzer Tag des deutschen Heeres" (the "black day of the German Army"), not because of the ground lost to the advancing Allies, but because the morale of the German troops had sunk to the point where large numbers of troops began to capitulate. [7]

  7. Persecution of black people in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_black...

    Hitler's Black Victims: The Historical Experiences of European Blacks, Africans and African Americans During the Nazi Era. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-93295-5. Scheck, Raffael (2006). Hitler's African Victims: The German Army Massacres of Black French Soldiers. New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-73061-9. Further reading

  8. Remembering the horrors of Auschwitz, German chancellor ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/remembering-horrors-auschwitz...

    On that day in 1945, Soviet Red Army troops liberated some 7,000 prisoners at Auschwitz in German-occupied Poland. The Nazis murdered more than a million people in Auschwitz, most of them Jews.

  9. Battle of Berlin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Berlin

    By 6 May many German Army units and individuals had crossed the Elbe and surrendered to the US Ninth Army. [109] Meanwhile, the XII Army's bridgehead, with its headquarters in the park of Schönhausen, came under heavy Soviet artillery bombardment and was compressed into an area eight by two kilometres (five by one and a quarter miles). [122]