German Army essay topics

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  • 6th Army In Two
    1,959 words
    The Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of Normandy were two vital battles in World War II. Stalingrad was the site of a critical WWII Soviet victory that terminated Germany's advance to the east. Peaceful Normandy took it's place in history as the starting point in the triumphant march across Europe. Both these intense events were extremely significant in the outcome of the second world war. After the Germans failed to win the war totally in 1941, they decided to start a fresh effort, and hoped...
  • Meinecke Notes Hitlers
    3,137 words
    How Convincing Do You Find Meineckes Explanation For The Rise Of National Socialism As a historian, I appreciate the absurdity of the rise of Nazism, however I have found Meineckes explanation of the rise of Nazism, given its date of publication, to be not so much a disclaimer on behalf of the German people, as others have found it to be, but almost an attempt at academic vindication of the Anglo-American post-war view of Germany, often supported by uncheckable sources. Before assessing the book...
  • German Air Force Enigma Message
    3,731 words
    During the 1930's, isolationism and the depression swept through the United States. But before the fall of France in 1940, the United States was starting to pull away from being neutral, which they claimed at the beginning of the European war. Americans and the British would hold conversations between themselves known as the ABC talks. It was there that they both targeted Germany as their prime enemy. Even though there was tension in the Pacific in 1941, American leaders had agreed that any war ...
  • Southern England For The Invasion F Normandy
    1,595 words
    "On the evening of June 6, 1944, over five thousand ships carrying 150,000 soldiers, the greatest armada ever assembled, left southern England for the invasion f Normandy. In the morning, across the English Channel, a great battle would begin for the liberation of Europe". -- New York Times [Document I] In the spring of 1943 the American ships began to arrive in great numbers in England. Some troops had seen combat in North Africa and Sicily, but most were untested, fresh from the training camps...
  • French Attackers Back Into France The Germans
    2,806 words
    Due to the complexity of this question, it must be broken down before an attempt at answering it can be made. Following this, it will be easier to understand the exact context in which this article will consider this question. By asking 'Why was there stalemate on the Western front' two questions are actually being asked. Firstly, why did a stalemate start and secondly why did the stalemate continue between 1914 and 1918. The second issue within the question is the section that specifically refe...
  • Ike And His Brothers
    4,873 words
    On October 14, 1890, Mrs. Ida Elizabeth Eisenhower gave birth to her third son, Dwight David. He was a younger brother to Arthur B. and Edgar A. Eisenhower. Dwight was born in Denison, Texas, where his family was living at the time. After his father's general store went out of business in Abilene, Kansas, they were forced to move to Texas, where Mr. David Eisenhower landed a forty-dollar a month job at a small railroad there. Back in Abilene, a new creamery plant was built and an old friend of M...
  • Day Of Invasion For Overlord
    1,002 words
    The battle of Normandy was the major turning point in the Second World War. It was a very well planned out attack of the Allies on western France against the Germans. Many people know a little about the day, but few know about the long planning, strategy, and results for both sides. At the end of November, Roosevelt and Churchill journeyed to Tehran for their first meeting with Stalin. The president and the Prime Minister had already approved, under the code name Overlord, a plan for a cross-cha...
  • Friendly To The Germans Before Stalingrad
    4,872 words
    Stalingrad: The Greatest Victory " Stalingrad is the scene of the costliest and most stubborn battle in this war. The battle fought there to its desperate finish may turn out to be among the decisive battles in the long history of war... In the scale of its intensity, its destructiveness, and its horror, Stalingrad has no parallel. It engaged the full strength of the two biggest armies in Europe and could fit into no lesser framework than that of a life-and death conflict which encompasses the e...
  • Third French Republic And The German Empire
    3,601 words
    The Franco-Prussian War, was a war in 1870-1871, which the French lost to the German states while they were under the leadership of Prussia. The underlying causes of the conflict were the Prussian statesman Prince Otto Edward Leopold von Bismarck's desire to unify Germany under Prussian control and, to eliminate French influence over Germany. On the other hand, Napoleon, emperor of France from 1852 to 1870, wanted to regain the prestige he had lost, both at home and abroad, as a result of numero...
  • First Days Of The Attack Beevor
    1,159 words
    Stalingrad by Antony Beevor is a very simple and easily read book on the fateful battle for the city on the Volga during World War II. Beevor uses many records, letters and his own inturpratation of facts to present the reader with a very a extremely captivating account of the advance of the German army, the battle for the city, and the eventual destruction of the Sixth army. Beevor has split his book into Five parts. The first to parts of the book deal with the attack on Russia and the advance ...
  • Scale Of A Soviet German War
    3,034 words
    The First Phase: Dominance of the Axis Man for man, the German and Polish forces were an even match. Hitler committed about 1.5 million troops, and the Polish commander, Marshal Edward S mig y-Ryde, expected to muster 1.8 million. That was not the whole picture, however. The Germans had six panzer (armored) and four motorized divisions; the Poles had one armored and one motorized brigade and a few tank battalions. The Germans' 1600 aircraft were mostly of the latest types. Half of the Poles' 935...

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