German
ROYAL FLY CORP
By the start of WWI only forty-one aircraft were taken from Britain to France as the Germans started their offensive against the Allies. With the advent of the Sopwith Camel and SE5a, the Royal Flying Corps had aircraft to match the German Fokkers and Albatrosses.
Merchant: Motorbooks
Axis Cavalry in World War II
It is often forgotten that the German Wehrmacht of 1939-45 relied heavily upon horses. Not only was the majority of Army transport and much of the artillery dependent on draught horse teams; the Germans also kept a horse-mounted cavalry division in the field until the end of 1941.
Merchant: Motorbooks
REICH LAST GAMBLE
Get the whole story of the last gamble by the Third Reich to win back control of the war on the Western Front. The Battle of the Bulge, as the surprise German counteroffensive came to be known, ended in defeat in just four weeks.
Merchant: Motorbooks
The Road to Falaise-Battle Zone Normandy
By mid-July 1944, the Normandy campaign had apparently degenerated into a bloody attritional war of mat233riel. During late July, however, Operations Cobra and Bluecoat tore the German front wide open.
Merchant: Motorbooks
Siege of Leningrad, 1941-1944 : 900 Days of Terror
The people of this Soviet city endured everything that the German Army could throw at them, and by their success placed a fatal block on Hitler's ambitions to rule Europe.
Merchant: Motorbooks
Wilhelm II and the Germans
This book explores the personification inherent in the notion of "Wilhelmian Germany" by investigating the psychological dimension of Wilhelm II's leadership of the Germans. Despite his historical reputation, many Germans welcomed the Kaiser's leadership.
Merchant: eBooks







