Books+ Search Results

From the realm of a dying sun

Title
From the realm of a dying sun / Douglas E. Nash SR.
ISBN
1612006353
9781612006352
9781612008738
1612008739
Publication
Philadelphia : Casemate, 2019-2020.
Physical Description
2 volumes : illustrations ; 24 cm
Summary
During World War II, the armed or Waffen-SS branch of the Third Reich's dreaded security service expanded from two divisions in 1940 to 38 divisions by the end of the war, eventually growing to a force of over 900,000 men. Not satisfied with allowing his nascent force to be commanded in combat by army headquarters of the Wehrmacht, Heinrich Himmler, chief of the SS, began to create his own SS corps and army headquarters beginning with the SS-Panzerkorps in July 1942. As the number of Waffen-SS divisions increased, so did the number of corps headquarters, with 18 corps and two armies being planned or activated by the war's end. The histories of the first three SS corps are well known--the actions of I., II., and III. (Germanic) SS-Panzerkorps and their subordinate divisions, including the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler, Das Reich, Hitlerjugend, Hohenstaufen, Frundsberg and Nordland divisions, have been thoroughly documented. Overlooked in this pantheon is another SS corps that never fought in the west or in Berlin but did participate in many of the key battles on the Eastern Front during the last year of the war--the IV. SS-Panzerkorps. Activated during the initial stages of the defense of Warsaw in late July 1944, IV. SS-Panzerkorps, consisting of both the 3. SS-Panzer Division Totenkopf and 5. SS-Panzer Division Wiking, was born in battle and spent the last ten months of the war in combat. It was renowned for its tenacity, high morale and, above all, its lethality, whether conducting a hard-hitting counterattack or a stubborn defense even when outnumbered. The corps commander, Herbert Otto Gille, was often embroiled in heated disputes with the corps' immediate Wehrmacht higher headquarters over his seemingly cavalier conduct of operations, but his corps remained to the bitter end one of the Third Reich's most reliable and formidable field formations.
This is the first volume in a new account of the part that IV. SS-Panzerkorps played in the almost continuous battles raging outside Warsaw in the second half of 1944, based on previously unpublished material--including man contemporary German records that had been thought lost but have been recently rediscovered in Russia and made available for researchers. -- Dust jacket flap.
Variant and related titles
SS-Panzerkorps and the battles for Warsaw, July-November 1944.
SS-Panzerkorps from Budapest to Vienna, December 1944-May 1945.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
March 27, 2021
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Contents
Volume 1. IV. SS-Panzerkorps and the battles for Warsaw, July-November 1944
volume 2. IV. SS-Panzerkorps from Budapest to Vienna, December 1944-May 1945.
Genre/Form
History.
Citation

Available from:

Loading holdings.
Unable to load. Retry?
Loading holdings...
Unable to load. Retry?