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Academic literature on the topic 'Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) – Opérations militaires – Allemagne'
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) – Opérations militaires – Allemagne"
Koenig, Geoffrey. "« Sieg um jeden Preis ! » : la ténacité de la Wehrmacht sur le front de l’Ouest et l’idéologie nationale-socialiste (juin 1944 – mai 1945)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Strasbourg, 2025. http://www.theses.fr/2025STRAG001.
Full textThe final episode of the Second World War on the Western Front took place between June 1944 and May 1945. National Socialist Germany fought the Allies in several theaters of operations, and the strategic situation quickly turned to disaster for the Germans. Despite everything, the “Third Reich” held out until it was militarily destroyed. Although many soldiers were exhausted by the war, the German army did not decompose, and the Western Allies faced a significant resistance until the spring of 1945. This thesis looks at the mechanisms that led the Wehrmacht to a such tenacity in the latter part of the Second World War, especially on the Western Front. This work focuses on the role played by National Socialist ideology in this phenomenon
Coutu, Éric. "Les missions effectuées par le Quartier général des opérations combinées de 1940 à 1942." Paris 3, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA030020.
Full textAs soon as the war started, the British actively worked at developing the tactics and techniques required to carry out operations implying the joined participation of the Army, the Navy and the Air force. This thesis aims at retracing and analysing the missions and the evolution of the inter-service cooperation during the first two years of the Combined Operations Headquarters (1940-1942). Before resulting in the first important operation on Dieppe in August 1942, the years 1940 and 1941 were devoted to various reconnaissance operations of the French coast as well as to four political and strategic expeditions to Norway. After the appointment of Mountbatten as head of the service, the main objective of the missions, which had become more important and more offensive, was to improve the methods the three Arms had in common, in order to guarantee the success of such full-size landing operations as the ones in North Africa, Sicily or Normandy
Strauß, Christof. "Kriegsgefangenschaft und Internierung : die Lager in Heilbronn-Böckingen 1945-1947 /." Heilbronn : Stadtarchiv Heilbronn, 1998. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37193993d.
Full textBibliogr. p. 441-461. Index.
Pascual, Fanny. "La Brigade du "Special Air Service" pendant la seconde guerre mondiale. Institution, individus et mythes." Montpellier 3, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007MON30026.
Full textThe S. A. S. Has gained a major following, yet what do we really really know about the Special Air Service? In July 1941, David Stirling founded the L Detachment of the Special Air Service Brigade in the Middle East. The initial concept saw the light of day with special missions behind enemy lines thanks to their ability to adapt to each one individually. On leaving the Middle East, the S. A. S. Got involved in the Mediterranean, Italy, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany and Norway. Further to various administrative changes, in 1944 a brigade was made up of two British regiments, two French battalions and a Belgian company as its fighting units. The name S. A. S. Stands for both the unit and the man. On trying to define these two bodies (man and institution), not only prosopographic and sociological studies but also statistical and memorial analysis of the different S. A. S. Missions based on the chronological events, were carried out on the front. The myth, having taken a disproportional place, historically speaking, is necessary in order to identify the emblematic characters and the legendary events. The brigade disbanded the 5th October 1945; its memory relates the historical facts: the French, Belgian and British partnership had retrieved their own lands now to be self-governed. By pitting the myth against the facts, the birth of this unit, still active today in the United Kingdom, recovers its rightful place in the history of the Second World War
Klingbeil, Pierre-Emmanuel. "Les Alpes-Maritimes : étude d'un front oublié : (15 août 1944-2 mai 1945)." Nice, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003NICE2024.
Full textThis study is a contribution to the commission "Nouvelle Histoire Bataille" set up by the "Centre d'Études d'Histoire de la Défense". The Alpes-Maritimes area, with its limited and unstudied geographical area, appears to be the ideal base for an analysis of a minor front in all its various aspects : geostrategic, geopolitical and operational. By bringing together the methodology and practices of the humanities, and by restoring the actual event over its entire duration, with reference to the past conflict, particular attention is drawn to the history of strategy based on the systematic and intertwined analyses of the various belligerents sources. The strategical analysis of this front can be divided into three parts. The first part deals with the problem of the perception of the geostrategic stake in the Alpes-Maritimes and the subsequent consequences at the time of the Liberation. The second part focuses on the campaign during winter, more particularly on mountain warfare. The study concludes with a new analysis of the French offensive in the spring of 1945
Foucrier, Jean-Charles. "Le Transportation Plan, aspects et représentations : une histoire des bombardements aériens alliés sur la France en 1944." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 4, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PA040158.
Full textIn spring 1944, Allied bombing of France was to reach its maximum intensity since the beginning of World War II. Nearly two years after the great turning points in 1942, the military situation was now largely in favour of the Allies. The final defeat of the Third Reich now appeared inevitable. The preparation of OVERLORD, the renewed application of large-scale power on the European continent, faced strategic challenges and required novel techniques. A little-known scientist, Solly Zuckerman, a brilliant zoologist but also a civilian unknown in military circles, persuaded the Allied high command of the validity of his air plan. This “Transportation Plan” proposed to strike decisively at the French railway system in order to disrupt the flow of enemy reinforcements to the Allied beachhead during the landings. Daring by strategic innovation, risky by the obvious threat to French civilians, Zuckerman's plan ran immediately into the hostile scrutiny of the great chiefs of strategic bombing, who were engaged in their almost "private" air campaign against Germany. The issue of civilian casualties brutally shook politicians including Winston Churchill, and ultimately went back to Franklin Roosevelt. Unknown in historiography, the “Transportation Plan” represents a fascinating history of the preparation of the Normandy landings
Moné, Thierry. "15 mai 1940, le mercredi de La Horgne : de la mémoire à l’histoire. La campagne de mai-juin 1940 de la 3e Brigade de Spahis." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040090.
Full textWednesday, May 15, 1940, in the small Ardennes village of La Horgne, west of Sedan, the troopers of the 3rd [Cavalry] Brigade of Spahis (2nd Regiment of Algerian Spahis from Tlemcen and 2nd Regiment of Moroccan Spahis from Marrakech) try to stop a part of the most modern Panzer-Division of the Wehrmacht. Commemorative History has focused on a 3rd Brigade of Spahis that was simply "annihilated" in about ten hours of fighting, but not before putting out of action a thousand German soldiers. For its part, the scientific History takes into account 50 Spahis and 31 German soldiers killed in action. More than 76 years after the fact, it is more than time to put an end to the legend of the "useless slaughter of 700 Spahis charging German tanks on horseback at La Horgne"
Arbarétier, Vincent. "La stratégie militaire de l'Axe en Méditerranée (octobre 1940-septembre 1943)." Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006IEPP0007.
Full textTurcotte, Jean-Michel. "Comment traiter les "soldats d'Hitler"? : la détention des prisonniers de guerre allemands au Canada, aux États-Unis et en Grande-Bretagne (1939-1945) : divergences et enjeux dans les relations interalliées." Doctoral thesis, Université Laval, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/31744.
Full textThis doctoral thesis explores the captivity of German prisoners of war in the hands of the three main Western Allies during the Second World War. More specifically, this work focuses on the relationships between the Canadian, British and American authorities regarding the treatment of some 600,000 “Hitler soldiers” held on their respective territories between 1940 and 1945. Such approach allows an international and transnational regard on war captivity. The relationship between the North Atlantic Allies according to captured enemy militaries indicates the political dynamics within the Alliance. Although each State applied its own detention measures and maintained its own diplomatic relation with the neutral organizations responsible for prisoners, in particular the International Committee of the Red Cross, as well as with Switzerland, the handling of these enemy soldiers was the object of a large inter-allied collaboration, while provoking important disagreement between the three holding powers. Contrary to the existing historiography, which often analyzes war detention in a national context, this thesis shows that the Allies established and developed war captivity as a transnational phenomenon. They corresponded with each other, contributed to their respective policies, participated in inter-allied projects, established common policies, met periodically for a better coordination of their actions and discussed their problems related to the detention of war, the solutions provided, and finally to share their positions on the Geneva Convention of 1929, the labour program, the denazification attempts and the repatriation of the captives by the end of 1945. The captivity of the German soldiers is thus the result of a mutual influence between the three North Atlantic Allies, resulting from the experiences of each Detaining Power. Following this approach, this study indicates that Canada, often considered a secondary power in historiography, played a determining role in the treatment of German prisoners. Through their experience as a detaining power with more than 35,000 prisoners on their territory, Canadian authorities strove to respect international law and widely shared their jailer expertise with their Allies. This research suggests that Canadian authorities’ experience had contributed to US and British policies. This point challenge the argument that Canadians played only a “spectator” role ...
Fournier, Ismaël. "La préparation pré-déploiement de l'infanterie canadienne avant le débarquement allié en Sicile : doctrine et entraînement des armées canadiennes et allemandes 1919-1944." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/26015.
Full textBooks on the topic "Guerre mondiale (1939-1945) – Opérations militaires – Allemagne"
Brézet, François Emmanuel. Histoire de la Marine allemande, 1939-1945. [Paris]: Perrin, 1999.
Find full textMcQuarrie, John. 'Til we meet again: Recapturing moments of the RCAF in World War II. Whitby, Ont: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1991.
Find full textStewart, Conrad. From high school to high skies in wartime: The true stories of some brave Canadian airmen in World War II. Everett, Ont: Stewart Pub., 2010.
Find full textChalmers, John West. Navigator brothers: The story of two brothers in the RCAF : one flew, one fell. Edmonton: J.J.N. Chalmers, 2008.
Find full textHempsall, Leslie. My years as a wartime flyer. Surrey, B.C: Coomber-Hempsall Pub., 2009.
Find full textHempsall, Leslie. My years as a wartime flyer. Surrey, B.C: Coomber-Hempsall Pub., 2009.
Find full textMartin, Lager, and Naiman Sandy 1948-, eds. Flashbacks: Stories from a WWII hero. Toronto: Mosquito Press, 2011.
Find full textOlson, Lynne. A question of honor: The Kos̐ciuszko Squadron : forgotten heroes of World War II. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.
Find full textWakelam, Randall T. The science of bombing: Operational research in RAF Bomber Command. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009.
Find full textHechler, Ken. The Bridge at Remagen: The Amazing Story of March 7, 1945-The Day the Rhine River was Crossed. Pictorial Histories Pub, 1993.
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