Hitler & the Bomb Plot Part I: In the Wolf 's Lair
John Wheeler-Bennett's account, with many illuminating details, of the attempt that nearly put an end to the Third Reich.
John Wheeler-Bennett's account, with many illuminating details, of the attempt that nearly put an end to the Third Reich.
Even after the Bomb-plot had failed, John Wheeler-Bennett shows how the Wehrmacht conspirators in Berlin had it in their grasp to overthrow Hitler and stop the war.
Only the infirmity of purpose displayed by the key-figure at the top, John Wheeler-Bennett writes, prevented the revolt against Hitler, which had failed in Berlin, from being continued successfully from Paris
Colin Smith recounts the Allied invasion of French North Africa, which commenced on November 8th, 1942.
James Barker describes the impact of an SOE mission in wartime Greece 70 years ago this month to demolish the Gorgopotamos railway bridge.
Roger Hudson sheds light on a haunting photograph from the Greek Civil War.
‘Black’ propaganda in south-east Europe took many forms during the Second World War. Ioannis Stefanidis looks at top secret British attempts to undermine Nazi domination of the Balkans via the airwaves.
The story of penicillin is well known, as are those Nobel Prize winners who were honoured for their part in its discovery. But one man’s contribution has been overlooked. Malcolm Murfett sets the record straight on the biochemist Norman G. Heatley.
Clare Mulley takes issue with an article on Second World War resistance movements, first published in 1984.
Antony Beevor, author of a new account of the Second World War, talks to Roger Moorhouse about the importance of narrative and why he thinks new technology is not the future for history in a post-literate age.