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The German Army invaded France on 10th May 1940, and in just over ten days their rapid advance, led by three panzer corps, had left three French field armies, Belgian forces and the British Expeditionary Force with their backs to the sea, trapped along the northern coast of France. General Gort realized that evacuation was the only option, and so began a chaotic withdrawal towards the port of Dunkirk.While the Luftwaffe continued to attack pockets of Allied forces, the German ground forces were ordered to halt their advance on 22 May. These orders were changed four days later, but these crucial four days of inaction allowed the Allies time to retreat into Dunkirk and prepare a defensive perimeter.The fighting during the last days of May was desperate, with the remnants of the French First Army surrounded at Lille, holding off seven German divisions until finally forced to surrender, and the Belgian Army forced to capitulate to the east of Dunkirk. Though the cost was devastatingly high, Dunkirk was held long enough for over 300,000 Allied troops to be evacuated back to England, with the remainder of the rearguard of French troops surrendering on 4 June. The British narrative of the retreat and evacuation that prompted perhaps Winston Churchill's most famous wartime speech has always been well-known; however only now is Hans-Adolf Jacobsen's detailed account of the battle from the German perspective available in English.
How was it possible for the British and French to escape from the cauldron of Dunkirk? The author focuses on the decisive days from Hitler's order to the German armoured troops to halt until the fall of Dunkirk on 4 June 1940.
How was it possible for the British and French to escape from the cauldron of Dunkirk? The author focuses on the decisive days from Hitler's order to the German armoured troops to halt until the fall of Dunkirk on 4 June 1940.
- Group
- Books (first-hand)
- Author
- Jacobsen, Hans-Adolf
- Title
- Dunkirk. German Operations in France 1940
- Details
- English text, 14 bw-maps. 234 pages.
- State
- New
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106-108 Cowley Road
OX4 1JE Oxford
Vereinigtes Königreich
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website: www.casematepublishing.co.uk
Responsible person
Berliner Zinnfiguren
Knesebeckstr. 88
10623 Berlin
Deutschland
[email protected]
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