Zerstörung deutscher Städte im Zweiten Weltkrieg

Von Homesanto

16 Comments

  1. voiceofgromit on

    With the exception of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, area bombing of civilian targets never once shortened a war.

    The politicians aren’t affected and the civilians have no voice in wartime.

  2. Remarkable-Base-2019 on

    I’ve just finished listening to the audiobook Clean Sweep VIII Fighter Command Against the Luftwaffe 1942-45 by Thomas Cleaver and they describe the cities bombed and some repeatedly and this gives me a visual of it.

  3. 1000LiveEels on

    Just googled Wesel. Crazy. 97% damaged, populated down from 45k to 1k by the end of the war. Almost completely annihilated basically.

  4. OnlyOneChainz on

    Göttingen should not be black, the city centre is completely preserved and has a lot of houses from the 15th and 16th century.

  5. Infinite-Condition41 on

    Feel bad for Wessel and Duren.

    Okay. We tried that. Can we stop bombing civilians now?

  6. So many beautiful cities lost. Everywhere in Europe though… WW2 wiped out so many beautiful places.

    At least, Dresden and Munich (and also smaller ones like Potsdam) tried to rebuilt their altstadt… Magdeburg, Stuttgart and Köln are so sad.

    But there still are beautiful towns in Germany. Visited Bamberg and Coburg during Easter hollidays… I really loved it. 😊
    Germany is such a beautiful, underrated country. 🇧🇪🍻🇩🇪

  7. PaulisPrusan on

    Why didn’t their allies, Molotov and Ribbentrop ruSSians get destroyed and split up also, answer western FAIL

  8. AtomicOpinion11 on

    This is a map of modern Germany, not the Germany of the war. So this doesn’t make sense, it’s not showing a huge amount of the actual fighting area

  9. OkCartographer7677 on

    Dresden 60%?

    From the stories I read I thought it would be worse.

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