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A Bloody Summer

The Irish at the Battle of Britain

Dan Harvey

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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

The Battle of Britain, regarded by historians as one of the greatest air battles in the history of warfare, was an early turning point in the Second World War. In the summer of 1940, the German army had, with astonishing speed, mercilessly swept aside all before them and were perched on the northern coastline of France. Outright victory over all of Europe was impeded only by the expanse of the English Channel. The supremely confident, yet-to-be defeated Luftwaffe (German Air Force) were eager for continued action, to claim air superiority and victory over an outnumbered RAF and clear the skies for the amphibious invasions of Britain and Ireland. It was vital that the RAF deny them, and so a ferocious and highly strategic aerial battle began that was to rage for more than three months.

Among those in the RAF’s Spitfire and Hurricane fighter squadrons were Irishmen, who were in the thick of the aerial exchanges, daring ‘dog-fights’, and intrepid interceptions of German bombers. A Bloody Summer: The Irish at the Battle of Britain for the first time tells the true and full story of their heretofore underestimated involvement in this epic aerial encounter.

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Hitler, An Cosantóir, Cambes, Saving Private Ryan, Allies, German POWs, Irish agents, supply line logistics, Luckenwalde POW Camp, Victoria Cross, military, Gold Beach, French Resistance, paratroop, Pathé, Luftwaffe, Churchill, Pegasus Bridge, Utah Beach, bocage, Legion d'Honneur, POWs, Far From the Short Grass, First World War, OB West, International Red Cross, bomber plane, Bayeux, WWI, Ardennes Offensive, Enigma code, Legion of Merit,, Saint-Charles-de-Percy, Cold War, Saint-Lô, United States Army, battle of attrition for Normandy, Military strategy, Sonnenburg, War casualties, Carl Spaatz, Hermanville War Cemetery, Military history, Royal Navy, The Longest Day, liberation of Paris, Museum of Man, US Army, U-boats, codebreaking, Ranville War Cemetery, Rhine Crossing, Battle of Britain, Bridge Too Far, RAF, D-Day landings, BIGOT, Atlantic Wall, Bouncing Betty, Caen, air power superiority, Bernard Law Montgomery, D-Day invasion, Spielberg, military planning, No Better Place to Die, Michael Morris, War, Landing Craft Tank, Eisenhower,, Irish codebreaker, The Quiet Man, Belsen, Hitler Youth, Military Cross, To Hell and Back, Operation Overlord, airforce, Juno Beach, Peacekeeping, D-Day, Chaplains, Erwin Rommel, WWII, Robert Capa, Second World War, British Army, Rundstedt, Mulberry harbours, St Leger Aldworth, Sainte-Mère-Église, aircraft, Carentan, Battle of the Bulge, friendly fire, Épron, Liverpool 8th Irish Battalion at War, Five Came Back, Unforgiven, Dieppe, Liberation, Band of Brothers, Canadian Army, Gestapo, Irish Defence Forces, El Alamein, Goebbels, strategy, Casablanca Conference, Sword Beach, counter-intelligence, modified tanks, Emergency Powers Order, German Army, Special Operations Executive, Stalingrad, The Dirty Dozen, Lord Killanin