Hitler’s armies were nearly at the gates of Moscow in December of
1941, 78 years ago this month. Victory seemed assured. The German high
command decided to celebrate and document the six months it had taken
its armies to reach the outskirts of the Soviet capital. Echoing the
grand scale of their invasion, they created a huge commemorative atlas: 2
feet wide and 2 feet tall, with a “Balkenkreuz,” a black and white bar cross, dominating the cover.
In the narrow picture, the atlas contains 123 battlefield situation
maps that document Germany’s wildly successful first six months of
operations on the Russian front. In the larger frame, it tells, like
some massive bible of war and brutal conquest, a story of a German
victory that almost was.
The oversized book chronicling Operation Barbarossa (the invasion’s code name) resides in the Library’s Geography and Map Division.
It is without peer and may be the only one ever made. How this
historical gem came to reside here is lost to history. Map librarians
speculate that American troops captured the atlas in 1945, during the
fall of Germany, and brought it stateside along with a large volume of
German military documents.
The atlas is titled Der Feldzug gegen Sowjet-Russland: Band I. Operationen Sommer-Herbst 1941 vom 21. Juni-6. Dezember 1941. This
translates as The Campaign against Soviet Russia: Volume 1, Operation
Summer-Fall 1941, from June 21 to December 6. The atlas was printed by
the German general staff in 1942. The table of contents lists a
foreword, but it is missing and does not appear to have been included,
suggesting the atlas may be a proof.
It wasn’t unusual for the German military to make such huge maps,
which they called campaign atlases. Dating at least back to the time of
Frederick the Great, German officers created them to document and
celebrate military actions. They also used the information for planning,
post-combat study and critical analysis by officers and cadets. Whether
Hitler and others in the German high command saw this atlas in its
finished form is not known.
This is how it came to be.
In August of 1939, the Nazis and Soviets signed a non-aggression pact
and secretly agreed to divide Poland between them. A few days later,
World War II began with the Nazi invasion of Poland on Sept. 1. The
Soviets invaded from the east on Sept. 17. Poland was swallowed.
But on June 22, 1941, Hitler launched Barbarossa, a massive surprise
attack on the Soviets. It employed more than 3.8 million men, mostly
German but also Croatian, Italian, Belgian, Spanish, Romanian and
Hungarian. They fielded a front that was some 1,900 miles long,
stretching from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Black Sea in the
south. Opposite the Germans stood some 150 Soviet divisions. To deal
with a territory and an enemy so large, the Germans divided
responsibilities among what they called Army Groups North, Centre and
South. These formations relied on speed and firepower to execute
blitzkrieg, the German word for lightning war.
The formula was seemingly unstoppable: Shock troops, armored vehicles
and ground attack planes hit hard and fast, bypassing heavy pockets of
resistance, which they left to a second wave of forces to surround and
destroy. The plan worked brilliantly in the early days. The Germans
raced eastward at breakneck speed, as the maps attest.
Just a month into the invasion, Hitler’s forces had overrun a swath
of Soviet territory twice the size of France. They were capturing Soviet
troops by the hundreds of thousands. In the battles of Minsk and
Smolensk, some 600,000 Red Army soldiers surrendered; in Kiev, more than
650,000 Soviet troops raised the white flag. German confidence in
Hitler soared.
The Fuehrer was interested in every aspect of the invasion. A
frontline veteran of World War I, he remembered Germany’s victory over
Russia and was resolute that, with his modernized tank army, victory
could be achieved once more. To direct the fighting, he relocated from
Berlin to a headquarters called Wolf’s Lair located in Rastenburg, East
Prussia (now Poland). He occupied Wolf’s Lair on June 23, 1941, and
largely remained there until November 1944, only departing as the Soviet
forces approached. It first appears on the atlas on June 25, 1941,
represented by a flag with an Iron Cross.
Hitler’s assault on Russia was aimed at eliminating communism, as
well as extending racial war against the Jews, Slavs and other
“non-Aryans.” The atlas indirectly notes the killing fields in the
Soviet Union, where Nazis and their sympathizers gunned down “enemies of
the Reich” and left the bodies in hastily covered ditches. To catch
these details, however, takes an informed historical eye. The giveaways
are the presence of SS units and paramilitary forces — noted with the
abbreviation “Sich,” a shortened form of the German word for security,
“Sicherheit.”
Just two days into the assault, for example, the atlas shows a heavy
concentration of SS troops around Lublin, Poland. Nazis executed large
numbers of prisoners in nearby forests that summer. By October, they had
established the Majdanek concentration camp, one of the largest of the
Holocaust, just southeast of the city. It eventually had seven gas
chambers and a crematorium with five ovens. Some 360,000 people were
killed there during the course of the war.
The atlas closes with the Nazi high watermark in the Soviet Union,
with troops positioned within sight of Moscow. But winter fell. The
Soviets regrouped and counterattacked. The Germans would never threaten
Moscow again. Hitler tried alternate strategies — the siege of
Leningrad, the battle at Stalingrad, the world’s largest tank battle at
Kursk — but the Soviets held and then began to force the Nazis to
retreat.
The tide of war changed with the Allies landing in France and
advancing in Italy. By April of 1945, the Russian siege of Berlin had
commenced. Desperate – if not fanatical — German resistance could not
stop the Soviet onslaught. Hitler realized the end was at hand and
committed suicide. The unconditional surrender of Germany to the Allies
followed on May 8.
This unique atlas of Germany’s first victorious months lay somewhere
in the ruins of Hitler’s Third Reich and eventually made its way to the
Library of Congress.
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/12/the-nazi-war-atlas-of-operation-barbarossa/
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