THIS FULLY ILLUSTRATED STUDY EXAMINES THE GERMAN, ITALIAN AND
BULGARIAN OCCUPATION FORCES IN GREECE DURING 1941–44 AS WELL AS
THOSE OF THE TWO GREEK RESISTANCE ORGANIZATIONS.
Italy's failed invasion of Greece in 1940–41 led to the German
invasion of Yugoslavia in spring 1941 being extended into Greece, and,
after the fall of Athens and Crete in April and May, the division of
the country under German, Italian and Bulgarian occupation. The royal
government and Army survivors withdrew to British-ruled Egypt, but at
home resistance organizations of differing political character soon
sprang up, forming guerrilla forces that exploited Greece's rugged
terrain and limited communications.
The strongest resistance force was the Communist-dominated National
Liberation Front (EAM) with its partisan Greek Popular Army (ELAS).
Agents of the Western Allied powers had only brief success in
mediating cooperation between the mutually hostile EAM/ELAS, and the
National Republican Greek League (EDES) with its EOEA. Foreshadowing
the Greek Civil War that would follow liberation, ELAS and EOEA
clashed, in the background to their separate operations against the
Axis occupiers.
Drawing upon a wide range of sources, Phoebus Athanassiou charts the
development of the fighting in occupied Greece: a struggle as
ferocious as that fought in neighbouring Yugoslavia, which cost both
the resistance and the Axis forces some 15,000 men killed.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472867537
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter