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The Mules of Monte Cassino

The Mules of Monte Cassino
Author: Jim DeFilippi
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2013-08-23
Genre: Cassino, Battle of, Cassino, Italy, 1944
ISBN: 9781492235088

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Sacrifice, slaughter, and stupidity. The Battle for Monte Cassino, in southern Italy during the bitter winter of 1943-1944, was the most gruesome, spine-wilting, pointlessly devastating battle of America's Twentieth Century, perhaps in all of America's history. The enormity of the mistakes of Monte Cassino was misunderstood and overlooked then and remains under-reported and ignored to this day. Three hundred and fifty thousand dead soldiers, along with no accurate count of the civilian dead, for no reason other than the hubris and egos of men with golden stars pinned on their shoulders, hobnobbing with Popes, Presidents and Prime Ministers. Priceless and irreplaceable art treasures were destroyed for no better reason than incompetence and impatience. Military advantage gained from all of this: nothing. This is the story of that battle told from the fox holes and from the blood-stained rivers, with the hands of wounded and drowning comrades clutching at your legs as you try to swim back to shore. One survivor of the devastation said, "We were all of us mules."


Monte Cassino

Monte Cassino
Author: Matthew Parker
Publisher: Hachette UK
Total Pages: 581
Release: 2014-03-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 1472219031

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The six-month battle for Monte Cassino was Britain's bitterest and bloodiest encounter with the German army on any front in World War Two. At the beginning of 1944 Italy was the western Allies' only active front against Nazi-controlled Europe, and their only route to the capital was through the Liri valley. Towering over the entrance to the valley was the medieval monastery of Monte Cassino, a seemingly impenetrable fortress high up in the 'bleak and sinister' mountains. This was where the German commander, Kesselring, made his stand. MONTE CASSINO tells the extraordinary story of ordinary soldiers tested to the limits under conditions reminiscent of the bloodbaths of World War One. In a battle that became increasingly political, symbolic and personal as it progressed, more and more men were asked to throw themselves at the virtually impregnable German defences. It is a story of incompetence, hubris and politics redeemed at dreadful cost by the heroism of the soldiers.


Monte Cassino

Monte Cassino
Author: Peter Caddick-Adams
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 413
Release: 2013-03-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199974659

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Selected as a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2013 The most horrific battles of World War II ring in the popular memory: Stalingrad, the Bulge, Iwo Jima, to name a few. Monte Cassino should stand among them. Waged deep in the Italian mountains beneath a medieval monastery, it was an astonishingly brutal encounter, grinding up ten armies in conditions as bad as the Eastern Front at its worst. Now the battle has the chronicle it deserves. In Monte Cassino, military historian Peter Caddick-Adams provides a vivid account of how an array of men from across the globe fought the most lengthy and devastating engagement of the Italian campaign in an ancient monastery town. Not simply Americans, British, and Germans, but Russians, Indians, Georgians, Nepalese, Ukrainians, French, Slovaks, Armenians, New Zealanders, and Poles, among others, fought and died there. Caddick-Adams offers a panoramic view, surveying the strategic heights and peering over the shoulders of troops fruitlessly digging for cover in the stony soil. Here are incisive sketches of the theater commanders--Field Marshal "Smiling Albert" Kesselring, who outmaneuvered Rommel to command German troops in Italy, and the English aristocrat General Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander, tall, upbeat, "and--crucially for Churchill--looked every inch a general." Caddick-Adams puts Cassino into the context of the Italian campaign and larger Allied war plans, and takes readers into the savage, often hand-to-hand combat in the bombed-out medieval town. He captures the brutal weather and unforgiving terrain--the rubble and rocky slopes that splintered dangerously under artillery barrages and caused shellfire to echo with such volume that men had trouble keeping their sanity due to acoustics alone. Over four months, the struggle would inflict some 200,000 casualties, and Allied planes would level the historic monastery-and eventually the entire town as well. With scholarly care, insightful analysis, and narrative verve, Caddick-Adams has crafted a monumental account of one of World War II's lesser-known but no less devastating battles.


Monte Cassino

Monte Cassino
Author: Mary Ildephonse Nuxoll
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1947
Genre: Education, Medieval
ISBN:

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Cassino to the Alps

Cassino to the Alps
Author: Ernest F. Fisher
Publisher:
Total Pages: 584
Release: 1993
Genre:
ISBN:

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Monte Cassino 529-1944

Monte Cassino 529-1944
Author: Romanus Rios
Publisher:
Total Pages: 20
Release: 1945
Genre:
ISBN:

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Monte Cassino

Monte Cassino
Author: Peter Caddick-Adams
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 413
Release: 2013
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199974640

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Offers an authoritative account of the lesser-known yet devastatingly brutal battle waged by the Italian campaign during World War II.


Battle for Monte Cassino

Battle for Monte Cassino
Author: George Forty
Publisher: Ian Allan Publishing
Total Pages: 168
Release: 2004
Genre: History
ISBN:

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The Battle for the Benedictine monastry on the hilltop of Monte Cassino between January and May 1944 was one of the most dramatic in the Battle for Italy. The author examines in detail this struggle to open up the road to Rome. Drawing upon archive photographs and first hand reminiscences, the author sets the scene for the conflict, examines the forces ranged against each other and describes each of the four major battles.


The Monastery

The Monastery
Author: Fred Majdalany
Publisher:
Total Pages: 168
Release: 1946
Genre: Cassino (Italy), Battle of, 1944
ISBN:

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