Ian Kershaw
THE END
1. Martin Bormann,
2. Heinrich Himmler,
3. Joseph Goebbels, 1942 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
4. Albert Speer, 1942 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
5. Captured German prisoners near Falaise, September 1944 (photograph: Topfoto)
6. German civilians evacuate Aachen, October 1944 (photograph: Bettmann/Corbis)
7. Wilhelm Keitel (undated) (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
8. Alfred Jodl, 1944 (photograph: Ullsteinbild/Topfoto)
9. Heinz Guderian, 1944 (photograph: Ullsteinbild/Topfoto)
10. Karl Donitz,
11. Digging a trench near Tilsit, September 1944 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
12. Erich Koch on inspection in East Prussia, August 1944 (photograph: Ullsteinbild/Topfoto)
13. German soldiers viewing corpses, Nemmersdorf, October 1944 (photograph: akg-images)
14. The Ardennes offensive, December 1944 (photograph: Heinz Rutkowski (Scherl)/Bundesarchiv, Koblenz)
15. Walter Model, 1941 (photograph: akg-images/Ullsteinbild)
16. Georg-Hans Reinhardt, 1939 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
17. Ferdinand Schorner, 1942 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
18. Gotthard Heinrici, 1943 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
19.
20.
21. Arthur Greiser, 1939 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
22. Josef Grohe, 1944 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
23. Karl Hanke,
24. Karl Holz (undated) (photograph: Bundesarchiv, Koblenz)
25. Refugees crossing the Frisches Haff, February 1945 (photograph: Vinzenz Engel/ Scala, Florence/BPK)
26. Abandoned wagon in East Prussia, January 1945 (photograph: Mary Evans/ Suddeutscher Verlag)
27. Flying court-martial, location unknown, probably 1944/5 (photograph: Ullsteinbild/Topfoto)
28. Hanged German officer, Vienna, April 1945 (photograph: akg-images/Interfoto/AWKZ)
29. Overcrowded boat from Pillau crossing the Baltic Sea, March 1945 (photograph: akg-images)
30. Dresden, February 1945 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK/Walter Hahn)
31. Nuremberg, March 1945 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
32. Young Germans cycling to the front, February 1945 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
33. Berlin, April 1944 (photograph: Deutsches Historisches Museum, Berlin (Inv.-Nr.: F 66/911))
34. Photograph from a series taken by the US Army immediately after the liberation of Buchenwald concentration camp, Weimar, April 1945 (photograph: ITS Archives, Bad Arolsen (Exhibit B-1, Numbers 1-28, Set No 5, Picture No. 2))
35. Prisoners on a death march from Dachau, April 1945 (photograph: private collection, courtesy KZ Gedenkstatte Dachau)
36. Germans surrender to the Red Army, Konigsberg, April 1945 (photograph: Deutsches Historisches Museum, Berlin (Inv.-Nr.: F 61/1661))
37. Houses display white flags in Worms, March 1945 (photograph: Scala, Florence/BPK)
38. Heinrich von Vietinghoff, 1944 (photograph Scala, Florence/BPK)
39. Karl Wolff, 1942 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
40. Keitel signs the complete German capitulation, 8 May 1945 (photograph: Bundesarchiv, Koblenz)
41. An angel on the spire of Freiburg minster, 1946 (photograph: Scala, Florence/Walter Frentz Collection)
1. The European fronts, July 1944
2. The Allied breakthrough in the West, June to September 1944
3. The Red Army’s advance, June to August 1944
4. East Prussia
5. The Ardennes offensive
6. The Red Army’s January 1945 offensive
7. The Collapse of the Third Reich, March 1945
8. Donitz’s Reich, 1 May 1945
9. Europe at the final surrender
One of the most pleasant parts of finishing a book is to thank those who, in different ways, have contributed to the making of it.
My thanks first of all to the British Academy for a grant which helped me to undertake the initial, exploratory research. I am also grateful to the archivists and staff of the various record repositories where I have worked: the Bundesarchiv in Berlin/Lichterfelde, the Bundesarchiv/Militararchiv in Freiburg, the Bibliothek fur Zeitgeschichte in Stuttgart, the Bayerisches Hauptstaatsarchiv and Staatsarchiv Munchen, the Staatsarchiv Augsburg, the International Tracing Service, Bad Arolsen, the National Archives in London, the Imperial War Museum at Duxford, and the Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives in King’s College, London. At the Bibliothek fur Zeitgeschichte in Stuttgart, part of the Wurttembergische Landesbibliothek, I had every reason to be most grateful for the help and advice of the library’s director and good friend of mine, Professor Gerhard Hirschfeld, and the head of its archival collections, Dr Irina Renz. Dr Susanne Urban was most helpful in guiding me through the extensive sources related to the death marches—only recently opened to researchers—at the International Tracing Service in Bad Arolsen, where I would also like to express my thanks to the director, M. Jean-Luc Blondel. At Duxford, I benefited greatly from Dr Stephen Walton’s expert assistance in consulting the valuable holdings of German documents. I started, and finished, the research for the book in the incomparable Institut fur Zeitgeschichte in Munich, where I have had the good fortune to be a welcome guest for many years, and I would like to express my warmest thanks to the director, Professor Horst Moller, and his colleagues, especially the library and archives staff, who as always dealt with my many requests with unfailing courtesy and friendliness.
Professor Otto Dov Kulka (Jerusalem), a highly esteemed colleague and friend with whom I have shared a