Authors: Martin Gilbert
ISBN-13: 9780415484862, ISBN-10: 0415484863
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Date Published: January 2009
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Sir Martin Gilbert is one of the leading historians of his generation. An Honorary Fellow of Merton College, Oxfordof which he was a fellow for thirty years - he is the official biographer of Winston Churchill and the author of eighty books, among them The Routledge Atlas of the Second World War, The Holocaust: The Jewish tragedy, The Righteous: The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust, and Churchill and the Jews. For more information on his books visit http://www.martingilbert.com.
The graphic history of the Nazi attempt to destroy the Jews of Europe during the Second World War is illustrated in this series of 333 detailed maps.
The maps, and the text and photographs that accompany them, powerfully depict the fate of the Jews between 1933 and 1945, while also setting the chronological story in the wider context of the war itself. The maps include:
• historical backgroundfrom the effects of anti-Jewish violence between 1880 and 1933 to the geography of the existing Jewish communities before the advent of the Nazis
• the beginning of the violencefrom the destruction of the synagogues in November 1938 to Jewish migrations and deportations, the ghettos, and the establishment of the concentration camps and death camps throughout German-dominated Europe
• the spread of Nazi rulethe fate of the Jews throughout Europe including Germany, Austria, Poland, Greece, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Russia, Denmark, Norway, France, Holland, Belgium, Italy, and the Baltic States
• Jewish revolts and resistanceacts of armed resistance, fighting in the forests, individual acts of courage
• Jews in hidingescape routes, Christians who helped Jews
• the death marchesthe advance of the Allies and the liberation of the camps, the survivors, and the final death toll.
This revised edition includes a new section which gives an insight into the layout and organization of some of the most significant places of the Holocaust, including Auschwitz, Treblinka and the Warsaw ghetto, maps that will be especially useful to those visiting the sites.