Display: 1-25 of 37 Results

Reinhard Heydrich’s Mercedes after Suffering Heavy Damage in the Ambush (May 27, 1942)

“He is to Blame for the War!” (1943/44)

Captured French-African Soldiers (1940)

Polish Youths Forced to do Heavy Labor in Luckenwalde (Summer 1940)

Women from the Soviet Union are Transported to Germany to Perform Forced Labor (1942)

“The East Needs You!” Recruitment Brochure for Women Settlement Advisors (n.d.)

Emergency Graves under Destroyed Train Tracks in Berlin (1945)

Symphony Concert in Hanover (1940/41)

Invasion of the Soviet Union: A Group of German Tanks before their Deployment (June 22, 1941)

Reich Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop Delivers the Foreign Ministry’s Declaration to the Soviet Union (June 22, 1941)

Junkers Warplanes being Assembled (June 1941)

The Army High Command’s Plan for Operation Barbarossa: Cartographic Illustration of the Planned Strategy and the Actual Strategy Implemented (1941)

Soldiers in Front of a Section of the “Atlantic Wall” in Northern France (1943)

Members of the People’s Army [Volkssturm] with Weapons and a Battering Ram during an Exercise in Sanssouci in Potsdam (Fall 1944)

German Soldier after the Capitulation in Stalingrad (January/February 1943)

After the Battle – Surviving Members of the 6th Army (February 1943)

A Russian Village in Flames (January 10, 1944)

Drugs for the Wehrmacht (c. 1940)

German Soldiers Dismantle a Polish Border Barrier (September 1, 1939)

Germans in Front of a Radio Store in Berlin Listen to News of the Invasion of Poland (September 1, 1939)

Adolf Hitler among General Field Officers and Adjutants with Advancing Troops (September 1, 1939)

Alleged War Guilt: Former German Ambassador to Poland, Hans-Adolf von Moltke, Shows Foreign Journalists Archival Materials from Warsaw as “Proof” of Poland’s Responsibility for the War (Fall 1939)

Resettlement Action: Budapest Rations Station for Ethnic Germans from Bukovina (1940)

Crew Members of Submarine U 50 (March 2, 1940)

German-Soviet Boundary and Friendship Treaty – The New Borders after the Division of Poland (September 28, 1939)