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Violence in Defeat: The Wehrmacht on German Soil, 1944-1945

Research output: Book/Report/ProceedingsBook

Published
Publication date28/02/2021
Place of PublicationCambridge
PublisherCambridge University Press
Number of pages366
ISBN (electronic)9781108856270
ISBN (print)9781108479721
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Publication series

NameCambridge Military Histories
PublisherCambridge University Press

Abstract

In the final year of the Second World War, as bitter defensive fighting moved to German soil, a wave of intra-ethnic violence engulfed the country. Bastiaan Willems offers the first study into the impact and behaviour of the Wehrmacht on its own territory, focusing on the German units fighting in East Prussia and its capital Königsberg. He shows that the Wehrmacht's retreat into Germany, after three years of brutal fighting on the Eastern Front, contributed significantly to the spike of violence which occurred throughout the country immediately prior to defeat. Soldiers arriving with an ingrained barbarised mindset, developed on the Eastern Front, shaped the immediate environment of the area of operations, and of Nazi Germany as a whole. Willems establishes how the norms of the Wehrmacht as a retreating army impacted behavioural patterns on the home front, arguing that its presence increased the propensity to carry out violence in Germany.