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Articles

Battle for Fort Eben-Emael
  • Article by Gerd Van der Auwera
  • Published on April 19th, 2013

Battle for Fort Eben-Emael

In order to understand the construction of the fort we need to look back to the 19th century and more specifically, to the year 1871. The Franco- German war had ended with Germany’s victory and unification. Belgium, a young state only in existence since 1839, feared that Germany and France would go to war again in the future. Due to the construction of French and German lines of fortification on both sides of the new border, Belgium feared that their neighbours would be tempted to fight on its territory. In order to prevent this, large concrete forts were constructed around Antwerp, Liège and Namur. The twelve forts around Liège were directed against Germany, the nine fortresses around Namur were directed against France and Antwerp was made the military headquarters.

Bombardment of air base Hörnum, 19-20 March 1940
  • Article by Pieter Schlebaum
  • Published on May 1st, 2015

Bombardment of air base Hörnum, 19-20 March 1940

At the outbreak of World War Two RAF Bomber Command consisted of five Groups. The Command possessed four types of bombers with which every part of Germany could be reached, with the exception of the very east. Nevertheless, the role of Bomber Command during the first six months of the war was confined to reconnaissance-flights, attacking German shipping and nickelling (dropping propaganda leaflets). Not until March 1940 did Bomber Command launch an assault on a German land target. The Command bombed the air base at Hörnum, on the island of Sylt, during the night of 19/20 March 1940. It was a reprisal raid for the Luftwaffe bombardment on the naval base in Scapa Flow at the Orkney Islands and was ordered by the British government.

Bombardment of Mannheim, 16-17 December 1940
  • Article by Pieter Schlebaum
  • Published on May 16th, 2015

Bombardment of Mannheim, 16-17 December 1940

The German Air Force, the Luftwaffe, carried out a large scale bombardment on Coventry on 14 November 1940. A sizable part of the city was obliterated by more than 500 bombers. It was the biggest raid in a series of attacks on Coventry and other British cities. 568 people were killed and more than 1000 injured. Until then, the Royal Air Force had only carried out precision-bombing on industrial and military targets in an attempt to severely damage the German war machine. However, after the bombing of Coventry, Bomber Command was authorized to abandon its strategy to carry out a reprisal raid. The centre of the German town of Mannheim was bombed during the night of 16/17 December 1940. The raid was a forerunner of the strategy which the allies would later call 'area-bombing', a heavy and indiscriminate bombardment on a city.

Bombardment of Rotterdam, May 14th, 1940
  • Article by Wilco Vermeer
  • Published on September 1st, 2013

Bombardment of Rotterdam, May 14th, 1940

After the German invasion in the Netherlands on the early morning of May 10th, the situation for the Dutch army had deteriorated fast. On the Friesian side of the "Afsluitdijk", (enclosing dyke, that separated the former Zuiderzee from the North sea) they managed to hold their positions. On the Grebbeline too, attack after attack by the Germans was pushed back with much effort. The greater part of the German airborne troops were either destroyed or surrounded. A more serious danger was that German parachutists gained control over the Moerdijk bridges and that the 9e Panzerdivision (9th Armoured Division) proceeded in that direction by way of Noord Brabant. Eventually the struggle in Holland would be settled by a bombardment of Rotterdam.

Bombardment of Waalhaven airfield, 10 May 1940
  • Article by Pieter Schlebaum
  • Published on April 21st, 2014

Bombardment of Waalhaven airfield, 10 May 1940

On Friday the 10th of May, 1940, the Dutch neutrality was ravaged when the German armies attacked the Low Countries. The Dutch army was insufficiently trained and equipped to counter the German invasion. Without help from outside it would be a battle without the slightest chance. This help from abroad did arrive. Not only from the French, who fought in the province of Noord-Brabant, but also from the British. The Royal Air Force supported the Dutch army in May 1940 by carrying out several operations. One of the raids was carried out on Waalhaven airfield by No.600 Squadron.

British attack on Taranto
  • Article by Peter Kimenai
  • Published on March 15th, 2020

British attack on Taranto

The British air raid on Taranto marked a turning point in military maritime history. 21 obsolete torpedo bombers put half of the Italian battleships out of action for months. Churchill felt increasing pressure from the Axis Powers especially in the Mediterranean. The British needed free sea passage in this area to keep the supply lines open from Gibraltar to Egypt, which they controlled. The raid was a big succes for the Royal Navy.

Lost gold on the Nieuwe Waterweg
  • Article by Peter Kimenai
  • Published on July 28th, 2019

Lost gold on the Nieuwe Waterweg

On the eve of the Second World War, the German government had assured the Dutch that they would respect their neutrality. The Dutch government, however, did not trust this assurance, and the near future would prove that the Dutch preparatory measures had not been in vain. One of these measures was to secure the Nederlandsche Bank’s (Dutch national bank) gold deposit. From September 1938, it had over 362 tonnes (399 US tons/ 356 imperial tons) of gold transferred to New York, London, and Pretoria.

Operation Dynamo
  • Article by Wilco Vermeer
  • Published on September 30th, 2022

Operation Dynamo

After the German breakthrough in the direction of the English Channel, the situation in Belgium was so precarious, causing Lord Gort to send an alert to the British War Office as early as May 1940, stating that in his view, an evacuation of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) should be considered.

Operation Razzle
  • Article by Pieter Schlebaum
  • Published on May 20th, 2024

Operation Razzle

Introduction

Royal Dutch Navy in combat in Rotterdam
  • Article by Peter Kimenai
  • Published on January 21st, 2023

Royal Dutch Navy in combat in Rotterdam

In the early morning of May 10, 1940, the Koninklijke Marine in Rotterdam joined the battle for the Maas bridges. Infantry men, Marines and fleet personnel held out on the northern bank of the Nieuwe Maas until the general capitulation on May 14.

Surrender of Fort Pannerden
  • Article by Wilco Vermeer
  • Published on November 14th, 2024

Surrender of Fort Pannerden

Near the village of Doornenburg, in an area previously known as West Pannerden, the former armored fortress Fort Pannerden is situated on a headland that splits the water originating from the Rhine river into the Waal river and the Pannerdensch Canal. Only two battles were waged for the fortress, during its entire history since its completion in 1871. The last time was in 2006, when squatters were expelled from the fort by riot police, assisted by the defense department. The first and only other time was on May 10th and 11th, 1940, when Germany invaded the Netherlands. In both cases, the siege of Fort Pannerden lasted about two days and there were no casualties. On May 10th, 1940, the German invader initially ignored the fortress, only to force it to surrender on May 11th at 19.30 hrs.