This WWII pictorial history illustrates the wide array of armored
vehicles deployed by Allied and Axis powers in Italy. The Second World
War campaigns in North Africa, on the Eastern Front and in northwest
Europe were dominated by armored warfare, but the battles in Italy
were not. The Italian peninsula’s mountainous terrain was best
suited to an infantry war. Yet from the Allied landings in Sicily in
1943 to the German surrender after the crossing of the Po in 1945,
tanks, self-propelled guns and armored cars were essential elements in
the operations of both sides. Anthony Tucker-Jones’s selection of
rare wartime photographs shows armor in battle at Salerno, Anzio and
Monte Cassino, during the struggle for the Gustav Line, the advance on
Rome and the liberation of northern Italy. These dramatic images
reveal the full array of Axis and Allied armored vehicles that was
deployed, including German Panzers, Panthers, and Tigers and Allied
Stuarts, Chafees, Shermans and Churchills. They also vividly
illustrate the Italian landscapes over which the campaign was fought
and the grueling conditions endured by the men who fought in it.
Les mer
Rare Photographs from Wartime Archives
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783468980
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter