(Download) "German Capital Ships of the Second World War" by Siegfried Breyer & Miroslaw Skwiot * eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: German Capital Ships of the Second World War
- Author : Siegfried Breyer & Miroslaw Skwiot
- Release Date : January 02, 2012
- Genre: Military,Books,History,Lifestyle & Home,Crafts & Hobbies,Nonfiction,Transportation,Europe,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 94531 KB
Description
âOutstanding . . . covers the major units starting with the Deutschland Class, through the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, to the Bismarck and Tirpitz.â âWW2 Cruisers
The Kriegsmarineâs capital shipsâDeutschland, Admiral Scheer, Graf Spee, Scharnhorst, Gneisenau, Bismarck, and Tirpitzâcontinue to generate intense interest among warship enthusiasts, despite the fact that no new source of information has been unearthed in decades. What has come to light, however, is a growing number of photographs, many from private albums and some that lay forgotten in obscure archives. These include many close-ups and onboard shots of great value to modelmakers, as well as rare action photos taken during wartime operations.
This book is a careful selection of the best of these, but on a grand scale, with around one hundred images devoted to each ship, allowing in-depth coverage of its whole career, from launching and fitting out to whatever fate the war had waiting for it. For sake of completeness, there are even sections reproducing the various design studies that led to each class, while an appendix covers the uncompleted Graf Zeppelin, Germanyâs only attempt to build an aircraft carrier, the vessel which clearly displaced the battleship as the capital ship of the worldâs navies during the war.
Essays on technical backgrounds and design origins by the well-known expert Siegfried Breyer and explanatory captions by Miroslaw Skwiot draw out the full significance of this magnificent collection of photos.
âHighly recommended for those who wish to admire seven of the most magnificent warships built anywhere in the twentieth century. We will certainly never see their like again.â âJournal of the Australian Naval Institute