“…this book provides a great deal of photographic insight about
the siege. …there appears to be a wealth photographic history, much
of which could serve as references needed by those modelers in
dioramas and period staging for models themselves.” - IPMS/USA The
siege of Leningrad was the longest ever endured by a modern city, and
the deadliest siege in recorded history. It lasted for nearly 900
days, from late August 1941 to late January 1944, bringing
unparalleled hardship to the population. Out of over three million
persons in the city more than one million lost their lives through
cold, disease and starvation, bombs and artillery fire. The severe
winter of 1941-42 was by far the worst period of the siege, when food
reserves ran out, rations dropped to a little over three ounces of
bread per person per day and regular supplies of water, fuel, and
electricity stopped. Its epic suffering and endurance earned
Leningrad the title of ‘Hero City of the Soviet Union’. This book
is from an article in issue 123 of After the Battle magazine, the
joint authors were Karel Margry and Ron Hogg.
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Then and Now
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781399031189
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Vendor
After the Battle
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter