The First Battle of the First World War: Alsace-Lorraine by Karl Deuringer.PDF
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Divisions (Part IV) (Divisions 22-57)
GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA, No. 64. Records of German Field Commands: Divisions (Part IV) (Divisions 22-57) The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1970 This finding aid has been prepared by the National Archives as part of its program of facilitating the use of records in its custody. The microfilm described in this guide may be consulted at the National Archives, where it is identified as Microfilm Publication T315. Those desiring to purchase microfilm should write to the Publications Sales Branch, NARS, GSA, Washington, DC 20408. Some of the papers reproduced on the microfilm referred to in this and other guides of the same series may have been of private origin. The fact of their seizure is not be- lieved to divest their original owners of any literary property rights in them. Anyone, therefore, who publishes them in whole or in part without permission of their authors may be held liable for infringement of such literary property rights. GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA. No. 64-. Records of German Field Commands-. Divisions (Part IV) (Divisions 22-57) The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1970 P R E C E The Guides to German Records Microflined at Alexandria, VaV 1943, and occupation duty and antipartisan warfare in the Bal- constitute a series of finding aids describing National Archives kans, from 1941 to 1945. microfilm that reproduces seized records of German central, re- gional, and local government agencies, and of military commands The provenance to which each record item is attributed is the and units, as well as of the Nazi Party, its formation, affili- unit .headquarters that created it (i.e., kept it on file , al- ated associations, and supervised organizations. -
Appelbaum , Günther
1 Beiträge zu einem Biographischen Lexikon der Deutschen aus dem Raum der Provinz Posen - Schriftstellerinnen und Schriftsteller – ein biographisch-bibliographisches Verzeichnis- Erstellt von Harald Schäfer Die Erstellung dieser Publikation wurde ermöglicht durch die Förderung des Kulturreferates für Westpreussen, das Posener Land und Mittelpolen. Außerdem haben Bücher aus den Beständen der Martin –Opitz-Bibliothek in Herne, der Hessischen Landesbibliothek Fulda und der Forschungsbibliotek des Herder – Institutes zur Erstellung dieser Publikation nicht unwesentlich beigetragen. 1 2 Einführung Bis heute ist das Desiderat einer umfassenden Literaturgeschichte der Deutschen aus der ehemaligen Provinz Posen zu konstatieren, die zwischen den Teilungen Polens im 18. Jahrhundert bis zum Ende des Jahres 1918 als Teil des preußischen Staates bzw. des Deutschen Reiches bestanden hat. Im Gegensatz zu anderen altostdeutschen Provinzen und Siedlungsgebieten der Deutschen im östlichen Europa (1) gibt es keine gattungsübergreifende und umfassende Gesamtdarstellung der deutschsprachigen Literatur, die aus dem Raum der preußischen Provinz Posen hervorgegangen ist. Die polnische Germanistik hat exemplarisch einen Aspekt der Regionalliteratur (2) Posens intensiver dargestellt – nämlich den der „Ostmarkenliteratur“. Mithilfe dieser speziell definierten Literatur sollten die Germanisierungsbestrebungen der deutschen Polenpolitik literarisch flankierend unterstützt werden. Literarische Texte nahmen diesen politischen „mainstream“ auf und glorifizierten den -
Stefan Berleb Thesis (PDF 2MB)
Stefan Berleb, B.A. (Hons) Queensland University of Technology School of Humanities and Human Services Doctoral Dissertation: ‘… for China’s Benefit’: The Evolution and Devolution of German Influence on Chinese Military Affairs, 1919 – 1938 Brisbane 2005 2 Statement of Original Authorship The work contained in this thesis has not been previously submitted for a degree or diploma at any other higher education institution. To the best of my knowledge and belief, the thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made. Date: Signature: 3 Abstract In the years between 1919 and 1938, Germany and China, two nations each plagued in its own way by the foreign political fall-out of World War I, by internal unrest and by the disastrous global economic situation of the inter-war era, established extraordinarily close military and military economic ties. German military advisers helped in the organisation and training of the troops of several Chinese warlords and, after the re-establishment of the Chinese Republic under Chiang Kaishek, of the Nationalist government’s armed forces. At the same time, German arms manufacturers and German trading companies delivered weapons and other war materials to arm and equip China’s soldiers, who fought first against each other and later against Mao Zedong’s Communist guerillas and Japanese invaders. Still, despite outward appearances, any kind of German military support for China was never official. Successive Weimar German governments tried everything in their power to stop the widely-condemned Sino-German military cooperation, while Adolf Hitler’s National Socialists only tolerated it for as long as it did not interfere with their long- term political agenda. -
M1035 Publication Title: Guide to Foreign Military Studies
Publication Number: M1035 Publication Title: Guide to Foreign Military Studies, 1945-54 Date Published: 1954 GUIDE TO FOREIGN MILITARY STUDIES, 1945-54 Preface This catalog and index is a guide to the manuscripts produced under the Foreign Military Studies Program of the Historical Division, United States Army, Europe, and of predecessor commands since 1945. Most of these manuscripts were prepared by former high-ranking officers of the German Armed Forces, writing under the sponsorship of their former adversaries. The program therefore represents an unusual degree of collaboration between officers of nations recently at war. The Foreign Military Studies Program actually began shortly after V-E Day, when Allied interrogators first questioned certain prominent German prisoners of war. Results were so encouraging that the program was expanded; written questions replaced oral interrogation, and later certain highly-placed German officers were asked to prepare a series of monographs. Originally the mission of the program was only to obtain information on enemy operations in the European Theater for use in the preparation of an official history of the U.S. Army in World War II. In 1946 the program was broadened to include the Mediterranean and Russian war theaters. Beginning in 1947 emphasis was placed on the preparation of operational studies for use by U.S. Army planning and training agencies and service schools. The result has been the collection of a large amount of useful information about the German Armed Forces, prepared by German military experts. While the primary aim of the program has remained unchanged, many of the more recent studies have analyzed the German experience with a view toward deriving useful lessons. -
United States Army European Command, Historical Division Typescript Studies, 1945-1954
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf696nb1jc No online items Register of the United States Army European Command, Historical Division Typescript Studies, 1945-1954 Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563 Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] © 1999, 2012 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. 66026 1 Register of the United States Army European Command, Historical Division Typescript Studies, 1945-1954 Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California Contact Information Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563 Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] © 1999, 2012 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: United States Army European Command, Historical Division Typescript Studies, Date (inclusive): 1945-1954 Collection number: 66026 Creator: United States. Army. European Command. Historical Division Collection Size: 60 manuscript boxes(25.2 linear feet) Repository: Hoover Institution Archives Stanford, California 94305-6010 Abstract: Relates to German military operations in Europe, on the Eastern Front, and in the Mediterranean Theater, during World War II. Studies prepared by former high-ranking German Army officers for the Foreign Military Studies Program of the Historical Division, U.S. Army, Europe. Language: English. Access Collection open for research. The Hoover Institution Archives only allows access to copies of audiovisual items. To listen to sound recordings or to view videos or films during your visit, please contact the Archives at least two working days before your arrival. We will then advise you of the accessibility of the material you wish to see or hear. Please note that not all audiovisual material is immediately accessible. -
This Finding Aid Has Been Prepared by the National Archives As Part of Its Program of Facilitating the Use of Records in Its Custody
GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA, No. 64. Records of German Field Commands: Divisions (Part IV) (Divisions 22-57) The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1970 www.maparchive.ru This finding aid has been prepared by the National Archives as part of its program of facilitating the use of records in its custody. The microfilm described in this guide may be consulted at the National Archives, where it is identified as Microfilm Publication T315. Those desiring to purchase microfilm should write to the Publications Sales Branch, NARS, GSA, Washington, DC 20408. Some of the papers reproduced on the microfilm referred to in this and other guides of the same series may have been of private origin. The fact of their seizure is not be- lieved to divest their original owners of any literary property rights in them. Anyone, therefore, who publishes them in whole or in part without permission of their authors may be held liable for infringement of such literary property rights. www.maparchive.ru GUIDES TO GERMAN RECORDS MICROFILMED AT ALEXANDRIA, VA. No. 64-. Records of German Field Commands-. Divisions (Part IV) (Divisions 22-57) The National Archives National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration Washington: 1970 www.maparchive.ru www.maparchive.ru P R E C E The Guides to German Records Microflined at Alexandria, VaV 1943, and occupation duty and antipartisan warfare in the Bal- constitute a series of finding aids describing National Archives kans, from 1941 to 1945. microfilm that reproduces seized records of German central, re- gional, and local government agencies, and of military commands The provenance to which each record item is attributed is the and units, as well as of the Nazi Party, its formation, affili- unit .headquarters that created it (i.e., kept it on file , al- ated associations, and supervised organizations. -
Foreign Military Studies 1945-54 Catalog & Index
HISTORICAL DIVISION GUIDE TO_FOREIGN MILITARY STUDIES 1945-54_CATALOG & INDEX HEADQUARTERS_UNITED STATES ARMY, EUROPE_1954 AVAILABILITY OF STUDIESCopie Unless otherwise indicated, the studies listed in this guide are Library, Ft. Leslie J. McNair,s Washington 25, D.C.; Armed Forces unclassified. Their release to nonofficial and to non-U.S. Staff College Library, Fortress Monroe, Va.; Army War College agencies and individuals, however, is controlled. Agencies and Library, Carlisle Barracks, Pa.; and Command and General Staff nationals of foreign countries desiring access to the collection College Library, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. should apply for per mission through normal liaison channels. The channels and procedures for loans are as follows: Ninety percent of the studies listed exist only as typed a. U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force Units in the manuscripts. Where multiple copies of studies have been made, areas not specified below. Requests should be forwarded through either through printing or other wise, this fact is noted in the channels to the Office of the Chief of Military History, Department individual catalog entries. Copies of such studies usually can be of the Army, Washington 25, D.C. Historical channels are obtained on loan by official U. S. agencies. Where only single authorized. file copies exist, these must usually be researched in the b. U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force Units in USAREUR, USAFE, repository itself. TRUST; Re quests should be forwarded through channels to All reproduced studies may be ob tained on loan for varying Historical Division, Hq. USAREUR, APO 164, U.S. Army periods. They are also available for limited issue on a while-they- Historical channels are authorized. -
1St and 2Nd WELLE ARMY INFANTRY DIVISIONS (1 September 1939) the GERMAN WORLD WAR II ORGANIZATIONAL SERIES
GERMAN WORLD WAR II ORGANIZATIONAL SERIES Volume 1/II-1 1st AND 2nd WELLE ARMY INFANTRY DIVISIONS (1 September 1939) THE GERMAN WORLD WAR II ORGANIZATIONAL SERIES 1/I 01.09.39 Mechanized Army Formations and Waffen-SS Formations (3rd Revised Edition) 1/II-1 01.09.39 1st and 2nd Welle Army Infantry Divisions 1/II-2 01.09.39 3rd and 4th Welle Army Infantry Divisions 1/III 01.09.39 Higher Headquarters — Mechanized GHQ Units — Static Units (2nd Revised Edition) 2/I 10.05.40 Mechanized Army Formations and Waffen-SS Formations (2nd Revised Edition) 2/II 10.05.40 Higher Headquarters and Mechanized GHQ Units (2nd Revised Edition) 3/I 22.06.41 Mechanized Army Divisions - (2nd Revised Edition) 3/II 22.06.41 Higher Headquarters and Mechanized GHQ Units (2nd Revised Edition) 4/I 28.06.42 Mechanized Army Divisions - (2nd Revised Edition) 4/II 28.06.42 Mechanized GHQ Units and Waffen-SS Formations 5/I 04.07.43 Mechanized Army Formations 5/II 04.07.43 Higher Headquarters and Mechanized GHQ Units 5/III 04.07.43 Waffen-SS Higher Headquarters and Mechanized Formations IN PREPARATION FOR PUBLICATION 2007/2008 7/I 06.06.44 Mechanized Army Formations 2/III 10.05.40 Army Infantry Divisions 3/III 22.06.41 Army Infantry Divisions IN PREPARATION FOR PUBLICATION 01.09.39 Landwehr Division — Mountain Divisions — Cavalry Brigade 10.05.40 Non-Mechanized GHQ Units Static Units 22.06.41 Mechanized Waffen-SS Formations Static Units 28.06.42 Higher Headquarters Army Divisions Static Units 04.07.43 Army Divisions Static Units 01.11.43 Mechanized Army Formations Mechanized