Image for Axis Occupation of Europe: Then and Now

Axis Occupation of Europe: Then and Now

See all formats and editions

Dr Raphael Lemkin was a Polish émigré and the person who coined the term 'genocide' during his study of international law concerning crimes against humanity which he began in 1933 - the year that the Nazis assumed power in Germany.

His much-acclaimed work Axis Rule in Occupied Europe was published in 1944 and extracts from it now form the framework on which we have built this 'then and now' coverage of the occupation of Czechoslovakia, Memel, Albania, Danzig, Poland, Denmark, Norway, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Monaco, the Channel Islands, Greece, Yugoslavia, the Baltic states, the Soviet Union, Romania, Italy and Hungary.

Individual chapters also cover the most serious crimes committed by the occupier: the destruction of whole villages in Czechoslovakia, France, the Netherlands and Greece, and the genocidal acts carried out in Italy, Greece, Belgium, although nothing can equal the wholesale slaughter enacted in the Balkans and the USSR.

It has been estimated that the Axis occupation of Europe cost between 20 and 25 million civilian lives, apart from the deaths of at least 16 million servicemen and women who paid the ultimate price in trying to put Europe back together again.

It is a debt that can never be repaid.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£26.65
Product Details
Pen & Sword
1399076116 / 9781399076111
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
30/06/2018
United States
English
368 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%