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Playlista - Rumunia w II wojnie światowej https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PNhQoZvpVHg&list=PLso51laXMufwCRyoQK0n0m3d-8lZnzF1aW odcinku omawiam udział armii rumuńskiej w bitwie o Stalingrad. Mówię też o innych walkach w 1942 r.
W jaki sposób upadł Stalingrad? Jaki był los żołnierzy niemieckich? Jak próbowano ratować 6. Armię przed ostatecznym upadkiem? Dowiecie się słuchając tego odcinka!Kontakt: prochubeczka@gmail.com Dla dodatkowych korzyści rozważ wsparcie naszej działalności na patronite: https://patronite.pl/beczkaprochu
Co czuli Niemcy podczas oblężenia Stalingradu? Jak zaplanowano i dokonano okrążenia armii niemieckiej w rejonie miasta? Posłuchaj, aby się dowiedzieć!Dla dodatkowych korzyści rozważ wsparcie naszej działalności na patronite: https://patronite.pl/beczkaprochu
Pierwszy odcinek "trylogii stalingradzkiej". Dlaczego doszło do jednej z najważniejszych bitew w historii świata? Jak realizowano niemieckie plany wojenne? Czy Stalingrad pełnił jedynie funkcję propagandową? Posłuchajcie, aby się dowiedzieć!Bibliografia:Beevor A., Druga wojna światowa, Kraków 2013.Beevor A., Stalingrad, Kraków 2015. Citino R., Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942, Kaunas 2007.Domarus M., Hitler, Speeches and Proclamations: 1932-1945, Vol IV, Wauconda 2007.Dunn W., The soviet economy and the red army: 1930-1945, Westport 1995.Goebbels J. Dzienniki. Tom 2: 1939-1943. Warszawa 2021.Nagorski A., 1941. Rok, w którym Niemcy przegrały wojnę, Poznań 2019. Pietrzykowski S., Wojna na wyniszczenie. Operacja “Barbarossa”, 2022. Stahel D., Operation Barbarossa and Germany's Defeat in the East, Cambridge 2009.
Military Historians are People, Too! A Podcast with Brian & Bill
Join Brian and Bill as they chat with Rob Citino, the Samuel Zemurray Stone Senior Historian at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. Dr. Citino earned his Ph.D. from Indiana University and is an award-winning scholar of German military history and World War II, who has published numerous books, including The Wehrmacht Retreats: Fighting a Lost War, 1943, Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942, and The German Way of War: From the Thirty Years' War to the Third Reich, as well as numerous articles covering World War II and 20th-century military history. His book awards include the New York Symposium on Military History's Arthur Goodzeit Prize and the American Historical Association's Birdsall Prize. He has twice been honored with the Distinguished Book Award by the Society for Military History. Dr. Citino has taught at Eastern Michigan University (where in 2007 ratemyprofessor.com named him the "Number 1 Professor in the Country") and the University of North Texas, and has also held the Charles Boal Ewing Visiting Chair in Military History at the US Military Academy and the prestigious General Harold K. Johnson Chair of Military History and Strategy at the US Army War College. In 2021, the Society for Military History awarded Dr. Citino its Samuel Eliot Morison Prize for Scholarly Achievement. We'll talk to Rob about how one gets from Cleveland to Bloomington, Indiana, why the Wermacht, becoming a minor MTV celebrity, being the senior historian at the fabulous National World War II Museum in New Orleans, and playing guitar and buying vinyl records. Join us! Rec. 10/26/2021
Robert Citino is one of a handful of scholars working in German military history whose books I would describe as reliably rewarding. Even when one quibbles with some of the details of his argument, one is sure to profit from reading his work. When a Citino book appears in print, it automatically goes in my “to read” pile. Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942 (UP of Kansas, 2007), which recently appeared in a paperback edition for the first time, was one of the first books I wanted to review for New Books in Military History. The book is operational history at its best. It is written with both clarity and drama, as good operational history should be; it adds to our understanding of the German war in the East through its careful synthesis of the best research in German and English on the subject in the last ten or fifteen years; it mines Wehrmacht military journals for insights into “the German Way of War” (a topic discussed in an early Citino book of that title – see the interview for more). Even avid readers on the subject will learn much that they did not know about Manstein in Crimea, Rommel in North Africa, Hoth approaching Stalingrad, and many of the other campaigns of 1942. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Citino is one of a handful of scholars working in German military history whose books I would describe as reliably rewarding. Even when one quibbles with some of the details of his argument, one is sure to profit from reading his work. When a Citino book appears in print, it automatically goes in my “to read” pile. Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942 (UP of Kansas, 2007), which recently appeared in a paperback edition for the first time, was one of the first books I wanted to review for New Books in Military History. The book is operational history at its best. It is written with both clarity and drama, as good operational history should be; it adds to our understanding of the German war in the East through its careful synthesis of the best research in German and English on the subject in the last ten or fifteen years; it mines Wehrmacht military journals for insights into “the German Way of War” (a topic discussed in an early Citino book of that title – see the interview for more). Even avid readers on the subject will learn much that they did not know about Manstein in Crimea, Rommel in North Africa, Hoth approaching Stalingrad, and many of the other campaigns of 1942. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Citino is one of a handful of scholars working in German military history whose books I would describe as reliably rewarding. Even when one quibbles with some of the details of his argument, one is sure to profit from reading his work. When a Citino book appears in print, it automatically goes in my “to read” pile. Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942 (UP of Kansas, 2007), which recently appeared in a paperback edition for the first time, was one of the first books I wanted to review for New Books in Military History. The book is operational history at its best. It is written with both clarity and drama, as good operational history should be; it adds to our understanding of the German war in the East through its careful synthesis of the best research in German and English on the subject in the last ten or fifteen years; it mines Wehrmacht military journals for insights into “the German Way of War” (a topic discussed in an early Citino book of that title – see the interview for more). Even avid readers on the subject will learn much that they did not know about Manstein in Crimea, Rommel in North Africa, Hoth approaching Stalingrad, and many of the other campaigns of 1942. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Citino is one of a handful of scholars working in German military history whose books I would describe as reliably rewarding. Even when one quibbles with some of the details of his argument, one is sure to profit from reading his work. When a Citino book appears in print, it automatically goes in my “to read” pile. Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942 (UP of Kansas, 2007), which recently appeared in a paperback edition for the first time, was one of the first books I wanted to review for New Books in Military History. The book is operational history at its best. It is written with both clarity and drama, as good operational history should be; it adds to our understanding of the German war in the East through its careful synthesis of the best research in German and English on the subject in the last ten or fifteen years; it mines Wehrmacht military journals for insights into “the German Way of War” (a topic discussed in an early Citino book of that title – see the interview for more). Even avid readers on the subject will learn much that they did not know about Manstein in Crimea, Rommel in North Africa, Hoth approaching Stalingrad, and many of the other campaigns of 1942. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Robert Citino is one of a handful of scholars working in German military history whose books I would describe as reliably rewarding. Even when one quibbles with some of the details of his argument, one is sure to profit from reading his work. When a Citino book appears in print, it automatically goes in my “to read” pile. Death of the Wehrmacht: The German Campaigns of 1942 (UP of Kansas, 2007), which recently appeared in a paperback edition for the first time, was one of the first books I wanted to review for New Books in Military History. The book is operational history at its best. It is written with both clarity and drama, as good operational history should be; it adds to our understanding of the German war in the East through its careful synthesis of the best research in German and English on the subject in the last ten or fifteen years; it mines Wehrmacht military journals for insights into “the German Way of War” (a topic discussed in an early Citino book of that title – see the interview for more). Even avid readers on the subject will learn much that they did not know about Manstein in Crimea, Rommel in North Africa, Hoth approaching Stalingrad, and many of the other campaigns of 1942. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices