Sainte-Mère-Eglise : the 82nd US Airbone division
Christophe Prime , Eric Belloc
Versailles, Lyon 2ᵉ, Lyon 6ᵉ...
Ce que dit l'éditeurOn the 6th of June 1944, the American people learned that the long-awaited landings on the French coast had begun. Just like the codenamed beaches, they also heard of a small village in Cotentin where the paras from the 82nd U.S. Airborne Division engaged in bitter combat, losing many of its men : Sainte-Mère-Église. The site's renown has continuously grown over the years, to offer the village pride of place among the leading memorial sites of the Battle of Normandy. Illustrated with over 200 photographs and enhanced with many witness reports, this book offers you a delve into the very heart of the ordeal faced by the U.S. paras to liberate and keep control of Sainte-Mère-Église and the surrounding area. It is also a fascinating insight into the extraordinary story of the very creation of the American airborne army, and the adventures of the 82nd Airborne's troopers and gliders, from Sicily to central Germany, via Normandy and the Netherlands. The authors prolong their narration over the moving pages of the village's history immediately after the war. The presence - for three years - of two large temporary war cemeteries in the immediate vicinity of the village, and its inhabitants' heartfelt gratitude towards their liberators, have led to abiding links of friendship between locals and the men from the All Americans. |
RésuméUne description détaillée, avec plus de 200 photographies et des témoignages, des combats livrés par les parachutistes américains pour libérer Sainte-Mère-Eglise. Les auteurs évoquent également l'histoire de cette commune normande au lendemain de la guerre ainsi que la création de cimetières militaires provisoires américains. ©Electre 2026 |
Caractéristiques Auteur(s) Éditeur(s) Date de parution
25 mars 2022
Rayon
Histoire de l'Europe
Contributeur(s) Heather Inglis
(Traducteur) EAN
9782815105521
Nombre de pages
127
pages
Reliure
Broché
Dimensions
27.0
cm x
21.0
cm x
1.0
cm
Poids
600
g
|
