Neither Sharks nor Wolves: The Men of Nazi Germanys U-Boat Arm, 1939-1945. As a boy growing up in Germany, Werner Hirschmann dreamed of going to sea. In 1940, he was accepted as an officer cadet in the Kriegsmarine, the German navy, and after rigorous training became an engineer officer in the elite U-Boot-Waffe or submarine service. Using his wartime diaries and remarkable photograph albums, as well as historical documents, Werner Hirschmann recounts the many interesting episodes in his naval career, including serving on a destroyer that escorted Bismarck on her last operation, U-boat operations in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, being besieged by the Americans at the U-boat base at Lorient in France, and his last patrol to North America in 1945, on which his submarine, U-190, sank HMCS Esquimalt, the last Canadian warship lost during the war. Hirschmann provides a unique view of the day-to-day life of a U-boat officer who, like young men on both sides, did his best to enjoy life while trying to do his duty. An epilogue describes his postwar life as a prisoner-of-war in Canada and Britain. After the war, he moved to Canada, where he pursued a successful career and eventually became an honorary member of the veterans association of HMCS Esquimalt. A key feature for many readers is the technical section that provides a detailed pictorial tour of the Type IX/C40 U-boat, including many previously unpublished photographs discovered in Canadian archives. "Another Place, Another Time" was first published in 2004 and is regarded as a classic of U-boat literature. This paperback edition is printed on the same high-quality paper as the original hardcover to ensure the best reproduction of the many superb photographs.
Roth, Peter 1992 Grundlagen des Tourismusmarketing. In: Roth, Peter und Axel Schrand (Hg.). Touristik-Marketing. München. S. 111-192. Rüland, Jürgen 1994 Thailand. In: Nohlen, Dieter und Franz Nuscheier (Hg.). Handbuch der Dritten Welt.
American Genealogical Resources in German Archives
Romanian Volksdeutschen and the Third Reich [microform]
Fredy Neptune
"This story is the sequel to Simon Norval's most recent novel, Decoding the Past; one which describes the current-day discovery of a Second World War German U-boat off Cape Agulhas.
Nicolaus Henckell aka Nicholas Jenkins, son of Johann Hermann Henkel and Anna Elizbaeth Otto, was born 21 March 1755 in Treysa, Germany.
For Fuhrer and Fatherland: The German War, 1939 -1945
... Folter- und Exekutionszentren.4 Romero spricht hierbei von „einem terroristischen Akt“5 des Militärs bzw. einem „Genozid“6, der meist in vier Etappen durchgeführt wird: Entführung des/der Verdächtigen, Folter, Haft und Exekution.
The German-speaking inhabitants of the Bohemian capital developed a group identification and defined themselves as a minority as they dealt with growing Czech political and economic strength in the city and with their own sharp numerical ...
Deutsche Opfer: Alliierte Täter 1945