Illustrated guide to the advanced weapons developed by Nazi scientists in WWII
The Third Reich pioneered rocket and jet-propelled aircraft, the pilotless plane, long-range rocket technology and ‘robot bombs’, and the world’s first super-heavy tanks. Broken down by weapon types, Hitler’s Secret Weapons, 1939–45 includes reference tables, diagrams, maps and charts, presenting all the core data in easy-to-follow formats.
Illustrated guide to the advanced weapons developed by Nazi scientists in WWII
The Third Reich pioneered rocket and jet-propelled aircraft, the pilotless plane, long-range rocket technology and ‘robot bombs’, and the world’s first super-heavy tanks. Broken down by weapon types, Hitler’s Secret Weapons, 1939–45 includes reference tables, diagrams, maps and charts, presenting all the core data in easy-to-follow formats.
The Third Reich had the most technologically advanced and innovative weapons industries in World War II, with aircraft, tanks and bombs that could match and beat anything else in the World. What is less known is the extent of Germany's secret weapons development. Germany pioneered rocket and jet-propelled aircraft, the pilotless plane, long-range rocket technology and 'robot bombs', and the world's first super-heavy tanks. Many of these weapons had a real impact on the course of the war.Following the invasion of the Soviet Union and the realisation that the war could continue for years, Hitler put great resources into the development of new and technologically advanced weaponry, in the belief that the production of 'wonder weapons' were the key to winning the war. Hitler's Secret Weapons, 1939-45 gets behind this little-know aspect of the Nazi war machine to reveal the real extent of German secret weapons' development. Broken down by weapon types, the book includes exhaustive reference tables, diagrams, maps and charts, presenting all the core data in easy-to-follow formats.Hitler's Secret Weapons, 1939-45 is an essential reference guide for anyone interested in the history and make-up of Germany's secret weapons industry.
Since leaving the British Ministry of Defence in 2006 after 29 years’ service, David Porter has worked on a number of research projects, contributing articles and book reviews to the BBC History Magazine, the British Army Review and the Royal Engineers Journal.
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