Enemy at the Gates

Home > Other > Enemy at the Gates > Page 41
Enemy at the Gates Page 41

by William Craig


  Lenz, Friedrich. Stalingrad-The Lost Victory. Heidelberg: 1956.

  Levin, Nora. The Holocaust. New York: 1968.

  Lochner, Louis, ed. The Goebbels Diaries. New York: 1948.

  Loginov, I. M. The Militia in the Battle for Its Homeland. Volgograd: 1963.

  von Manstein, Erich. Lost Victories. Chicago: 1958.

  von Mellenthin, Friedrich W. Panzer Battles. London: 1955.

  Menshikov, M. P. The Stalingrad Battle. Stalingrad: 1953.

  Morozov, I. K. The Fight for the Volga. 2d ed. Volgograd: 1962.

  ―. The Regiments Fought Like Guards. Volgograd: 1962.

  Morzik, Fritz. The German Transport Command in the Second World War. Frankfurt: 1966.

  Nekrassov, V. P. Front Line Stalingrad. London: 1962.

  Paderin, I. In the Main Direction. Moscow: 1959.

  Pavlov, F. D. In Stalingrad 1942-Front Notes. Stalingrad: 1951.

  Perrault, Gilles. The Red Orchestra. New York: 1969.

  Philippi, Alfred, and Heim, Ferdinand. The Campaign Against Soviet Russia 1941-45. Stuttgart: 1962.

  Plievier, Theodor. Stalingrad. Translated from German by Richard and

  Clara Winston. New York: 1948.

  Pollack, E. Children of Stalingrad. New York: 1944.

  Reginato, Enrico. Twelve Years as a Prisoner in Russia. Milan: 1955.

  Reitlinger, Gerald. The House Built on Sand. New York: 1964.

  Rodimtsev, A. I. On the Banks of the Mandanares and Volga. Petrozavodsk: 1966.

  ―. On the Last Frontier. Volgograd: 1964.

  ―. People of Legendary Heroism. Moscow: 1964.

  von Rohden, H. The Luftwaffe Struggle for Stalingrad. Wiesbaden: 1950.

  Rohricht, Edgar. Problems of the Battle of Encirclement. Karlsruhe: 1958.

  Rokossovsky, K. K. The Soldier’s Duty. Moscow: 1968.

  Rooney, Andrew A. The Fortunes of War. Boston: 1962.

  Salisbury, Harrison. The 900 Days. New York: 1969.

  Salvatores, Umberto. Bersaglieri on the Don. Bologna: 1966.

  Samchuk, I. A. The Thirteenth Guards. Moscow: 1971.

  Samsonov, A. M., ed. Stalingrad Epopeya. Moscow: 1968.

  ―. The Stalingrad Battle. Moscow: 1960, 2d ed.: 1968.

  ―. Under the Walls of Stalingrad. Moscow: 1953.

  Sanzhara, A. The Heroism of the Thirty-Three. Vladivostok: 1964.

  Scheibert, Horst. Relief Operation Stalingrad. Neckargemund: 1968.

  ―. To Stalingrad-48 Kilometers. Neckargemund: 1956.

  Schneider, Franz, and Gullans, Charles, trans. Last Letters from Stalingrad. New York: 1962.

  Schramm, Percy Ernst., ed. War Diary of the Army High Command. Frankfurt: 1961.

  Schroter, Heinz. Stalingrad. Translated by Constantine Fitzgibbon. New York: 1958.

  Selishchev, I. P. The Volga in Flames. Moscow: 1963.

  Selle, Herbert. The Tragedy of Stalingrad. Hannover: 1948.

  Semin, I. A. Stalingrad Tales. Moscow: 1961.

  Seth, Ronald. Stalingrad: Point of Return. New York: 1959.

  Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. New York: 1959.

  Simonov, K. Days and Nights. New York: 1945.

  Stalingrad: An Eyewitness Account by Soviet Correspondents and Red Army Commanders. London: 1943.

  Stupov, A. D., and Kokunov, V. L. The Sixty-Second Army in the Stalingrad Battles. 2d ed. Moscow: 1953.

  von Telpuhovsky, B. S. The Soviet History of the Great Fatherland War 1941-45. Frankfurt: 1961.

  von Tippelskirch, Kurt. History of the Second World War. Bonn: 1951.

  Toepke, Gunter. Stalingrad: How It Really Was. Stade: 1949.

  Tuna, Don Guido. Seven Rubles to the Chaplain. Milan: 1970.

  Umansky, R. G. At the Battle Frontiers. Moscow: 1960.

  Valori, Aldo. The Campaign in Russia. Rome: 1950.

  Vasilyev, A. V. The Great Victory on the Volga. Moscow: 1965.

  ―. In the Days of the Great Fight. Stalingrad: 1958.

  Vinokur, L. The Seventh Guards. Volgograd: 1962.

  Vodolagin, M. A. The Defense of Stalingrad. Stalingrad: 1948.

  ―. Outline of the History of Volgograd. Moscow: 1968.

  Stalingrad in the Great Patriotic War, 1941-43. Stalingrad: 1949.

  ―. Under the Walls of Stalingrad. Moscow: 1960.

  Voronov, N. N. Service in War. Moscow: 1963.

  Warlimont, Walter. Inside Hitler’s Headquarters, 1939-45. New York: 1964.

  Weinert, Erich. Memento Stalingrad. E. Berlin: 1951.

  Werth, Alexander. Russia at War 1941-45. New York: 1969.

  ―. The Year of Stalingrad. London: 1946.

  Werthen, Wolfgang. History of the Sixteenth Panzer Division. Bad Nauheim: 1958.

  Wieder, Joachim. Stalingrad: How It Really Was. Munich: 1962.

  ―. The Tragedy of Stalingrad. Deggendorf: 1955.

  Wilmot, Chester. The Struggle for Europe. New York: 1952.

  Wolfe, Bertram. Three Who Made a Revolution. New York: 1948.

  Yeremenko, A. I. Stalingrad. Moscow: 1961.

  Yevgeniev, P. Yerzovka. Kazan: 1966.

  Yuriev, V. The Great Victory in Stalingrad. Moscow: 1943.

  Zaitsev, V. Notes of a Sniper. Vladivostok: 1956.

  Zamyatin, N. M. et al. The Fight for Stalingrad. Moscow: 1943.

  Zarubina, A. D. Women in the Defense of Stalingrad. Stalingrad: 1958.

  Zelma, G. Stalingrad: July 1942–February 1943. Moscow: 1966.

  Zhematis, F. R. The Stalingrad Battle. Moscow: 1953.

  Zhilin, P. A. The Principle Operations of the Great Fatherland War, 1941–45. Moscow: 1956.

  Zhukov, G. K. Marshal Zhukov’s Greatest Battles. New York: 1969.

  The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov. New York: 1971.

  Ziemke, Earl. Stalingrad to Berlin—The German Campaign in Russia 1942–1945. Washington, D. C.: 1968.

  Documents

  Freiburg Archives and National Archives, Washington, D.C.:

  Ia. Situation Maps, War Diary 12, Russland. Situation maps for the southern sector of the Russian front. May–July 1942.

  Ia, Ic/ AO, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 12, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations of Sixth Army units in the Izyum and Volchansk areas, and Operation “Wilhelm” and “Blau"; intelligence reports on enemy operations, troop identification, movement, and losses; and maps (1:300,000) showing the tactical grouping of enemy units in the Stary Oskol and Belgorod areas. June 20– 24, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 12, Russland. Reports, orders, and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations of Sixth Army units in the Voronezh, Voronovka, Krasnoye, and Pavlovsk areas; intelligence reports on enemy operations, troop identification and movements; and captured booty and prisoners of war. July 7-11, 1942.

  Ia, Ic/ AO, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports, orders, and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations and ammunition and fuel supply situation of Sixth Army units in the Don River Bend area west of Stalingrad; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements; and a map showing the tactical grouping of enemy units in the Serafimovich area. August 8-13, 1942.

  Ia, Ic,/Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports, orders, and teletype messages pertaining to the tactical situation and operations, chain of command, and combat readiness of Sixth Army units in the Don River area; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements; and a map showing the tactical grouping of the Eighth Flieger Korps in the Don River area. August 14-19, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations, subordination, and combat readiness of Sixth Army units in the Don-Volga River area; and intelligence reports on enemy operations, troop movements, and identification. August 20-25, 1942.

  Ia, Ic/ AO, Volume of Appendices,
War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations and order of battle of Sixth Army units in the Don-Volga area; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop movements; and an enemy information bulletin “Stalingrad,” giving an appraisal of the enemy situation, tactics, and combat readiness of Soviet divisions and the defenses for Stalingrad, including a map (1:300,000) showing the tactical disposition of the Soviet armies in the area around Stalingrad. August 25-30, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations of Sixth Army units in the Don River area and intelligence reports on enemy tactical operations and troop movements aid identification. July 24-29, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and armored and antitank weapons situation of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area; intelligence reports on enemy operations, troop identification, movement, and losses, and Soviet fortifications around Stalingrad. September 12-17, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning tactical operations, training, combat readiness, and losses of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area; a report on conditions in Stalingrad; intelligence reports on enemy tactical operations and troop identification and movements; and an overlay showing the tactical grouping of the Ninth Flakdivision in the area between the Don and Volga Rivers. September 17-21, 1942.

  Ia, Ic/ AO, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical operations and subordination of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements; enemy information bulletin “Stalingrad,” pertaining to the tactical situation in and the defenses of Stalingrad and the combat readiness and order of battle of Soviet forces participating at Stalingrad; and a map (1:300,000) showing the disposition of Soviet units in and north of Stalingrad. September 20-26, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports, orders, and teletype messages pertaining to tactical operations, subordination, combat readiness, and strength of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area; survey of the supply needs of the Rumanian Fifth Army Corps; and intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements. September 27—October 3, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland. Reports and teletype messages concerning tactical operations, combat readiness, and activation of winter mobile units of Sixth Army, intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and losses. October 3-5, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 14, Appendices 1-174, Russland. Reports and messages pertaining to own and enemy tactical situation, activity, losses, and order of battle in the Orlovka, Beketovka, and Chalchuta areas. Also included are a situation map (1:300,000) indicating disposition of Soviet forces in the Stalingrad area and an order of battle chart of Soviet units on the Stalingrad front. October 6-13, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 14, Appendices 175-334, Russland. Reports and messages pertaining to own and enemy tactical situation, activity, losses, and order of battle in Stalingrad, Rossoshka, Kamyshin, and Leninsk areas. Also included are reports pertaining to transportation and training matters, increasing of combat strength on the Stalingrad Front, air reconnaissance, and a chart showing assignment of construction troops of the Sixth Army. October 13-21, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 14, Appendices 335-468, Russland. Reports and messages pertaining to own and enemy tactical situation, activity, and losses in the Stalingrad, Leninsk, and Beketovka areas. Also included are a list of alert units subordinate to the Sixth Army, enemy information bulletin No. 11 “Stalingrad,” order of battle charts of own and enemy units in the Stalingrad area, and a situation map (1:300,000) indicating disposition of Soviet units in the Stalingrad front. October 21-28, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 14, Appendices 468a-588, Russland. Reports and messages pertaining to own and enemy tactical situation, activity, losses, and order of battle in the Stalingrad, Gratshi, and Repin areas. Also included are orders governing combat during the winter of 1942-43, relating to mission, assignment, combat from winter positions, training, and security and Fiihrer directives concerning defensive combat. October 29—November 3, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 14, Appendices 589-751, Russland. Reports and messages pertaining to own and enemy tactical situation, activities, losses, and order of battle in the Stalingrad area. Also included are a survey concerning status and utilization possibilities of Turkish battalions and march reports of engineering battalions concerning units designations, strength, weapons, date of arrival, and mission. November 4— 12, 1942.

  Ia, Zweitschrift des War Diary 13, Part 1. Copy of war journal relating to daily activities and tactical situation along the Sixth Army front in the area of Stalingrad, Frolovo, Sarepta, and Kletskaya. Also included are three situation maps (1:1,000,000) indicating disposition of Soviet and German forces in the area west of Stalingrad. July 20—August 26, 1942.

  Ia, Zweitschrift des War Diary 13, Part 2. Copy of war journal regarding daily activities and tactical situation along the Sixth Army front in the area of Stalingrad, Sarepta, Belshoi, and Olchovka. Also included is a situation map (1:1,000,000) indicating disposition of Soviet and German forces in the Stalingrad area. August 26—October 5, 1942.

  Ia, Zweitschrift des War Diary 14, Part 1. Copy of war journal containing chronological entries pertaining to daily activities and tactical situation along the Sixth Army front in the area of Stalingrad-Golubinka. October 6—November 11, 1942.

  Ia, Angrin “Nordwind,” Russland. Reports, orders, and maps (1:100,000 and 1:300,000) concerning Operation “Nordwind” (plans to destroy the Soviet forces between the Don and Volga rivers northwest of Stalingrad). September 3-15, 1942.

  Ia, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Lichtbilder. Photographs depicting the march of Sixth Army units to the Don River and the thrust to the Volga River and Stalingrad, and a study of Sixth Army combat operations from Kharkov to Stalingrad. May 21—October 26, 1942.

  Ia, War Diary 14, Russland. War diary pertaining to tactical operations of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area. October 6—November 19, 1942.

  Ia, Appendix, War Diary 14, Russland, Situation Maps. Maps ( 1 : 20,000 and 1:100,000) concerning enemy situations, attack on Stalingrad North; city plans of Stalingrad; and Sixth Army check points. October—November 1942.

  Ia, Volume of Appendices, Report, Russland. Reports concerning the granting of leave, awarding of decorations, casualties of Sixth Army personnel, and billeting and weather conditions in the Sixth Army sector; and a letter from General Paulus to corps and divisions adjutants concerning an army retraining course. June 13—October 28, 1942. Ic, Report. Intelligence Branch activity reports. January 1—March 31, 1943.

  Ia, War Diaries 15 and 16, “Festung Stalingrad.” War journals 15 and 16 containing chronological entries pertaining to the situation and activities of the Sixth Army around Stalingrad. December 23, 1942—January 9, 1943.

  Ia, Documents, War Diary 16, “Festung Stalingrad.” Reports, orders, and directives concerning the German attack on Stalingrad; German casualties between November 21 and December 26, 1942; supplying of the army by air; and the German and Russian tactical situation. December 1942.

  Ia, Documents, War Diary 16, “Festung Stalingrad.” Data concerning German activity in the Stalingrad area, ration situation, German casualties and artillery losses, ammunition supply situation, and Russian tanks destroyed or disabled. November 1942.

  Ia, Documents, War Diary 16, “Festung Stalingrad.” Reports pertaining to the tactical situation and activities of Sixth Army units in the area around Stalingrad. November 1942—January 1943.

  Ia, Documents, War Diary 16, “Festung Stalingra
d.” Reports pertaining to the tactical situation and activities of Sixth Army and operations, order of battle, and combat readiness of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area, and intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements. August 30—September 3, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russ/and. Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations, combat readiness, and subordination of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area, and intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop movements and identification. September 3--8, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russ/and. Reports, orders, and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation, operations, and losses of Sixth Army units in the Stalingrad area; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification and movements; enemy information bulletin pertaining to an appraisal of the enemy situation, defenses of Stalingrad, and order of battle and combat readiness of enemy units facing the Sixth Army; and maps (1:100,000 and 1:300,000) showing operational plans for the destruction of Soviet forces between the Don and Volga Rivers north of Stalingrad and the tactical grouping of Soviet forces around and north of Stalingrad. September 9-11, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russ/and. Reports and teletype messages concerning tactical operations, training, combat readiness, and losses, and ammunition and operations, combat readiness, and ammunition and fuel supply situation of Sixth Army units in the Don River Bend area west of Stalingrad; intelligence reports on enemy operations and troop identification, movements, and losses; and enemy information bulletin “Stalingrad” giving an appraisal of the enemy situation, defenses, and organization of Soviet forces around Stalingrad. July 29—August 3, 1942.

  Ia, Ic, Volume of Appendices, War Diary 13, Russland, Reports and teletype messages concerning the tactical situation and operations and subordination of Sixth Army units in the Don River Bend area west of Stalingrad; intelligence reports on enemy tactical operations and troop movements and identification; and a captured order of the People’s Commissariat of Defense of the USSR, July 28, 1942. August 3-8, 1942.

 

‹ Prev