The Blitz: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:
After the fall of France, the [[Battle of Britain]] began in July 1940. From July to September, the Luftwaffe frontally attacked Royal Air Force Fighter Command to gain air superiority as a prelude to invasion. This involved the bombing of fighter airfields to destroy Fighter Command's ability to combat an invasion. Fighter Command had heavy losses and inflicted heavier losses on the Luftwaffe.
After the fall of France, the [[Battle of Britain]] began in July 1940. From July to September, the Luftwaffe frontally attacked Royal Air Force Fighter Command to gain air superiority as a prelude to invasion. This involved the bombing of fighter airfields to destroy Fighter Command's ability to combat an invasion. Fighter Command had heavy losses and inflicted heavier losses on the Luftwaffe.


The RAF came much closer to defeat than was publicly admitted at the time and had the Luftwaffe persisted, it may have achieved air superiority. However, the Germans overestimated the RAF's strength and believed that they first needed to destroy strategic installations such as aircraft factories and dockyards and thus deny the RAF the replacements it required. In late August 1940, before the date normally associated with the start of the Blitz, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial targets in Birmingham and Liverpool.
The RAF came much closer to defeat than was publicly admitted at the time and had the Luftwaffe persisted, it may have achieved air superiority. However, the Germans overestimated the RAF's strength and believed that they first needed to destroy strategic installations such as aircraft factories and dockyards and thus deny the RAF the replacements it required. In late August 1940, before the date normally associated with the start of the Blitz, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial targets in Birmingham and Liverpool. liverpool are crap man u are the best.


During a raid on [[Thames Gateway|Thames Haven]], on [[24 August]] 1940, some German aircraft strayed over London and dropped bombs in the east and north-east of the city, [[Bethnal Green]], [[Hackney]], [[Islington]], [[Tottenham]] and [[Finchley]]. This prompted the British to mount a retaliatory raid on Berlin the next night with bombs falling in [[Kreuzberg]] and [[Wedding, Berlin|Wedding]]. [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] was said to be furious and on [[5 September]] issued a directive stating a requirement "''...for disruptive attacks on the population and air defences of major British cities, including London, by day and night''". The Luftwaffe began day and night attacks of British cities, concentrating on London. This relieved pressure on the RAF's airfields.
During a raid on [[Thames Gateway|Thames Haven]], on [[24 August]] 1940, some German aircraft strayed over London and dropped bombs in the east and north-east of the city, [[Bethnal Green]], [[Hackney]], [[Islington]], [[Tottenham]] and [[Finchley]]. This prompted the British to mount a retaliatory raid on Berlin the next night with bombs falling in [[Kreuzberg]] and [[Wedding, Berlin|Wedding]]. [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] was said to be furious and on [[5 September]] issued a directive stating a requirement "''...for disruptive attacks on the population and air defences of major British cities, including London, by day and night''". The Luftwaffe began day and night attacks of British cities, concentrating on London. This relieved pressure on the RAF's airfields.
Line 133: Line 133:
[[ja:ブリッツ]]
[[ja:ブリッツ]]
[[pt:Blitz]]
[[pt:Blitz]]
[[sv:Blitzen]]
[[sv:Blitzen]]fjndkcnknkdnkndkcndknckdnck,owsmsimii09o3

Revision as of 08:22, 13 June 2006

Template:Otheruses2

German bomber over the Surrey Docks, Southwark, London

The Blitz was the sustained bombing of the United Kingdom by Nazi Germany between 7 September 1940 and 16 May 1941, during World War II. It was carried out by the Luftwaffe across the UK, but their attack was concentrated on London. The Blitz inflicted around 43,000 deaths and destroyed over a million houses, but failed to achieve the Germans' strategic objectives of knocking Britain out of the war or rendering it unable to resist an invasion.The blitz was also a very gay thing it was for all the homeosexuals

Although the word Blitz is a shortening of the German word blitzkrieg, meaning "lightning war", it was not an example of blitzkrieg but was an early example of strategic bombing. The literal translation of the German word "Blitz" is "lightning".

Aerial attacks resumed in 1944 with the V1 and V2.

Prelude

Firefighters put out flames amongst demolished buildings.

After the fall of France, the Battle of Britain began in July 1940. From July to September, the Luftwaffe frontally attacked Royal Air Force Fighter Command to gain air superiority as a prelude to invasion. This involved the bombing of fighter airfields to destroy Fighter Command's ability to combat an invasion. Fighter Command had heavy losses and inflicted heavier losses on the Luftwaffe.

The RAF came much closer to defeat than was publicly admitted at the time and had the Luftwaffe persisted, it may have achieved air superiority. However, the Germans overestimated the RAF's strength and believed that they first needed to destroy strategic installations such as aircraft factories and dockyards and thus deny the RAF the replacements it required. In late August 1940, before the date normally associated with the start of the Blitz, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial targets in Birmingham and Liverpool. liverpool are crap man u are the best.

During a raid on Thames Haven, on 24 August 1940, some German aircraft strayed over London and dropped bombs in the east and north-east of the city, Bethnal Green, Hackney, Islington, Tottenham and Finchley. This prompted the British to mount a retaliatory raid on Berlin the next night with bombs falling in Kreuzberg and Wedding. Hitler was said to be furious and on 5 September issued a directive stating a requirement "...for disruptive attacks on the population and air defences of major British cities, including London, by day and night". The Luftwaffe began day and night attacks of British cities, concentrating on London. This relieved pressure on the RAF's airfields.

The start of the Blitz

File:LondonBombedWWII.gif
Bombed buildings in London.

The first air raids on London were mainly aimed at the Port of London in the East End. The damage was severe, with the raid of 7 September involving 300 bombers escorted by 600 fighters. Another 180 bombers attacked that night. Many of the bombs aimed at the docks fell on neighboring residential areas, killing 436 Londoners and injuring another 1,600.

Children of an eastern suburb of London, who have been made homeless by the random bombs of the Nazi night raiders, waiting outside the wreckage of what was their home. September 1940. (National Archives)

British defences were poor. Few of the defenders' anti-aircraft guns had fire-control systems and the underpowered searchlights were usually ineffective at altitudes above 12,000 ft (3,600 m). Few fighter aircraft were able to operate at night and ground-based radar was limited. During the first raid, only 92 guns were available to defend London. The city's defenses were rapidly reorganised by General Frederick Pile, the Commander-in-Chief of Anti-Aircraft Command and by 11 September twice as many guns were available and under orders to fire at will. The consequent barrage was much more impressive, boosted civilian morale and though it had little effect on the raiders there was something of a deterrent effect, encourging crews to drop early, since the AA fire was visible to the bomber crews.

During this first phase of the Blitz, an average of 200 bombers attacked London every night but one between mid-September and mid-November. Most were German but included some Italian aircraft operating from Belgium. Birmingham and Bristol were attacked on 15 October, while the heaviest attack of the war so far — involving 400 bombers and lasting six hours — hit London. The RAF opposed them with 41 fighters but only shot down one Heinkel bomber. By mid-November, the Germans had dropped over 13,000 tons of high explosive and over 1 million incendiary bombs for a loss of less than 1%.

The second phase

From November 1940 to February 1941, the Luftwaffe attacked industrial and port cities. Targets included Coventry, Southampton, Birmingham, Liverpool, Bristol, Swindon, Plymouth, Cardiff, Manchester, Sheffield, Portsmouth, and Avonmouth. During this period, fourteen attacks were mounted on ports, nine on industrial targets inland and eight on London.

British defences were still fairly weak and German losses were sustainable — only 75 aircraft during these four months. The German High Command became sceptical about the campaign. With the RAF intact, an invasion of Britain was unfeasible. Preparations were underway for Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union, which (in Hitler's eyes) had more priority than reducing Britain.

The third phase

In February 1941, Grand Admiral Erich Raeder persuaded Hitler to attack British ports in support of the Kriegsmarine's Battle of the Atlantic. Hitler issued a directive on 6 February ordering the Luftwaffe to concentrate its efforts on ports, notably Plymouth, Portsmouth, Bristol and Avonmouth, Swansea, Merseyside, Belfast (main article: Belfast blitz), Clydebank, Hull, Sunderland, and Newcastle. 46 attacks were mounted against those cities between 19 February and 12 May, with only seven directed against London, Birmingham, Coventry, and Nottingham.

By this time, the effort was aimed as much against civilians as against industrial targets and the raids were intended to provoke terror. British defenses were much improved by this time. The Bristol Beaufighter, with airborne radar, proved effective against bombers with ground-based radar guiding night fighters to their targets. An increasing number of anti-aircraft guns and searchlights were radar-controlled, improving accuracy. From the start of 1941 the Luftwaffe's losses mounted ( 28 in January, 124 in May). With the impending invasion of Russia requiring the movement of air power to the East, the Blitz ended in May 1941.

One last major attack on London happened on 10 May, where many important buildings were destroyed or damaged, among them the British Museum, Houses of Parliament and St. James's Palace.

Baedeker Blitz

The Baedeker Blitz was a series of raids conducted in mid-1942 as reprisals for the RAF bombing of the German city of Lübeck. The Baedeker raids targeted historic cities with no military or strategic importance such as Bath, Canterbury, Exeter, Norwich and York. Churches and other public buildings were often the targets of these raids in an attempt to break civilian morale.

Result of the Blitz

The Germans failed to defeat Britain, or at least prepare the invasion. It had been widely believed before the war that massive aerial bombardment would undermine morale to the point of government collapse. Hitler had predicted that the working class would be "incited against the rich ruling class to bring about a revolution" by aerial bombardment, he was wrong. The Queen's visits to the East End of London were not greatly appreciated, in fact it was reported that she was sometimes booed by crowds. It did however somewhat boost both public morale and the affection in which the Royal Family was held. After minor damage to Buckingham Palace the Queen was reported to have remarked that she could now "...look the East End in the face."

The Germans inflicted a huge amount of damage. "Bomb sites" — rubble-filled places where buildings had once stood — were common in British cities as late as the 1980s. The attacks forced the diversion resources into defence and greatly disrupted the life of the country. 43,000 civilians are estimated to have died during the campaign, with over 139,000 injured and around a million houses destroyed. German casualties were relatively slight, losing around 600 bombers (a casualty rate of 1.5% of sorties) and many of those were the result of landing accidents on returning to base.

For the British, that the Germans had been able to inflict so much damage at so little cost was an undeniable failure. The country had been severely under-equipped to deal with a strategic bombing campaign and the number of public bomb shelters fell far below the required number, forcing the authorities in London to make use of around 80 London Underground stations to house about 177,000 people. In contrast, the Germans made a much more concerted (but in the end ineffective) effort to shelter their population against the Allied strategic bombing campaign later in the war — perhaps learning from the British experience.

The British weathered the Blitz. Great improvements were made to air defenses during its course. This proved something of a propaganda coup; much was made of the stoicism of the British people, encapsulated in the 1940 propaganda film London Can Take It, made by Humphrey Jennings.

American radio journalist Edward R. Murrow was stationed in London at the time of the Blitz and he made live radio broadcasts to the United States during the bombings.

Live broadcasts from a theater of war had not been heard by radio audiences before and Murrow's London broadcasts made him a celebrity. His broadcasts were enormously important in prompting the sympathy of the American people for Britain's resistance to Nazi aggression.

Major sites, structures, and churches damaged or destroyed in the Blitz

File:StPaulBlitz.jpg
St. Paul's Cathedral in London during a fire bomb raid on December 29, 1940.

See also


References

External links

fjndkcnknkdnkndkcndknckdnck,owsmsimii09o3