Battle for Caen
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Battle for Caen |
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A total of 14 divisions and 4 heavy tank battalions[2] |
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The Battle for Caen from June to August 1944 was a battle between the Allied and German forces during World War II's Battle of Normandy.
Originally the Allies aimed to take the French city of Caen, one of the largest cities in Normandy on D-Day. Caen was a vital objective for several reasons. First, it lay astride the Orne River and Caen Canal; these two water obstacles could strengthen a German defensive position if not crossed. Second, Caen was a road hub; in German hands it would enable the enemy to shift forces rapidly. Third, the area around Caen was relatively open, especially compared to the bocage country in the west of Normandy. This area was valued for airfield construction.
On D-Day, Caen was an objective for the British 3rd Infantry Division. Because Caen was not taken during the D-Day assault, it became the focal point for a series of battles through June, July and into August.
The old city of Caen, with many buildings dating back to the Middle Ages, was largely destroyed by Allied bombing and the fighting. The reconstruction of Caen lasted until 1962. Today, little of the pre-war city remains.
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[edit] Background
On 6 June 1944, Allied forces invaded France by launching Operation Neptune, the beach landing operation of Operation Overlord. A force of several thousand ships assaulted the beaches in Normandy, supported by approximately 3,000 aircraft. The D-Day landings were generally successful, but the Allied forces were unable to take Caen as planned.
In addition to seaborne landings, the Allies also employed Airborne forces. The U.S. 101st and 82nd Airborne Divisions, as well as the British 6th Airborne Division (with an attached Canadian airborne battalion), were inserted behind the enemy lines. The British and Canadian paratroopers behind Sword Beach were tasked with reaching and occupying the strategically important bridges such as Horsa and Pegasus, as well as to take the artillery battery at Merville in order to hinder the forward progress of the German forces. They managed to establish a bridgehead north of Caen, on the east bank of the Orne, that the Allied troops could use to their advantage in the battle for Caen.
[edit] Attempts to take Caen
[edit] Operation Neptune
The first attempt to capture Caen was by direct assault from Sword Beach from the assaulting 3rd Infantry Division landing on June 6. Despite being able to penetrate the Atlantic Wall and push south the division was unable to reach the city that day, falling short by 6 kilometres. The 21st Panzer Division once organised launched several counterattacks during the afternoon against the assaulting troops, although these attacks were beaten off they effectively blocked the road to Caen.
[edit] Operation Perch
Operation Perch was the second attempt to capture Caen after the direct attack from Sword Beach on June 6 failed. 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division,XXX Corps, was ordered to strike south capture Bayeux, then Tilly-sur-Seulles following which the 7th Armoured Division would capture Villers-Bocage and Evrecy.[3][4]
51st (Highland) Infantry Division, I Corps, would support the offensive by capturing Cagny to the east of [aen[3][4]
Once these two thrusts were complete Operation Wild Oats would be given the green light and the 1st Airborne Division would be landed between the two divisions to close the gap and thus encircle the city.[3][4][5]
However the 50th (Northumbrian) Infantry Division attack bogged down in front of Tilly-sur-Seulles which resulted in heavy fighting with the Panzer Lehr Division raging around the village from 8 June to 19 June 1944, when it finally fell and the German commander, Major General Fritz Bayerlein, ordered a retreat. This is known as the Battle of Tilly-sur-Seulles.
During the fighting 76 civilians[citation needed] from the village were killed, a tenth of the population of Tilly-sur-Seulles. The Panzer Lehr Division had 190 tanks at the start of the battle, of which 66 remained after the battle[citation needed]. In addition to the lost tanks, the Germans lost 5,500 men[citation needed]. Today there is a British military cemetery in Tilly-sur-Seulles, as well as a museum that gives information about the battle. Nearby is the "Jerusalem War Cemetery," the smallest military cemetery in Normandy.
While the fighting at Tilly-sur-Seulles was raging, the American U.S. 1st Infantry Division opened up a 12km gap on the flank on the Panzer Lehr Division's flank.[6] This vulnerability in the German lines opened up an opportunity for the Allies to thrust forward with armoured units and turn the flank of the German defensive position. Lieutenant-General Dempsey[7] ordered the 7th Armoured Division to capture Villers-Bocage and the high ground outside of the town with the intention that the appearance of British armour in the rear of the Panzer Lehr Division along with the high ground occupied would compel them to withdraw.[8]
This resulted in the Battle of Villers-Bocage, which took place on June 13. In fierce, close-range fighting the Germans succeeded in holding onto the town and securing their front.
[edit] Operation Martlet
A preliminary attack to support Operation Epsom was launched on June 25 by the 49th (West Riding) Infantry Division of XXX Corps. There objective was to secure ground on the flank of the intended advance. The attack gained some ground however the weather and muddy ground ground hampered the attack thus some of the dominating terrain on the right flank of the intended attack by VIII Corps was still in German hands.
[edit] Operation Epsom
The Allies, after they had consolidated their forces and after a delay because of bad weather between 19 June and 22 June, began Operation Epsom on 26 June. Three attacks were carried out by British and Canadian units of VIII Corps. The mission was to bring Caen and the surrounding countryside under Allied control. Dempsey had 60,000 soldiers, over 700 pieces of artillery and about 600 tanks under his command, although most of the troops had seen very little combat to that point[citation needed].
The Allied attack was hampered by bad weather and bad preparation. The Allied artillery supported the advance with a creeping barrage. On 26 June the Allied bomber fleet in England was prevented from supporting the attack because of bad weather. The Allied attacks were stopped by Waffen-SS and Wehrmacht units. Most of the gains made by the Allies could not be held. After heavy fighting the Allies had secured and held on to only one location, Hill 112.
[edit] Operation Windsor
The airfield at Carpiquet was to have been taken on D-Day, but this plan had failed. In order to correct the failure, the Allies undertook Operation Windsor to break through the strongly held German positions near the airfield. The 8th Canadian Brigade, reinforced with a regiment of the 7th Canadian Brigade, of the 3rd Canadian Infantry Division received the mission.
The airfield was reinforced with concrete shelters, machine gun towers, underground tunnels and 75 mm anti-tank guns and 20 mm air defence cannons. The surrounding area was also protected by mine fields and barbed wire entanglements. The Resistance had informed the Canadian troops about the defences surrounding the airfield.
After hard fighting the Canadians were able to take the village of Carpiquet on 5 July. Three days later, after repulsing several German counterattacks, they also controlled the airfield.
[edit] Operation Charnwood
The Allies planned to use heavy bombers in order to scare the German defenders[citation needed] as well as destroy their defensive positions. It was also hoped that the bombardments would raise the morale of the British troops.
Meanwhile the following instruction was issued on 7 July from the German armed forces operations staff[9]
- 1. Stop the current front, [...] free up the 12th SS-Panzerdivision and replace the besieged Infantry divisions with fresh troops; [...]
- 9. Deployment of the entire Organisation Todt [...] .[10]
SS-Oberführer Kurt Meyer, commander of SS Panzergrenadier Regiment 25, 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend, said that these instructions meant that their orders were to die in Caen.[11].
After taking some time to reorganize, re-supply and refit, the 21st Army Group launched Operation Charnwood on 7 July.
The British Second Army and First Canadian Army, with approximately 115,000 men[citation needed], struck out at villages held by German forces north of Caen. The Allies had planned to conduct a bombing run on the villages but cancelled them because of the proximity of their own troops. The bombardment area continued to shift towards Caen. On the evening of 7 July, 467 airplanes flew in clear weather and dropped 2,276 bombs[citation needed]. The bombings did little to harm the German forces, but the northern suburbs were mostly destroyed in the attacks. French civilians also bore the brunt with about 3,000 being killed[citation needed]. The German air defence was able to shoot down one airplane, and three others fell over Allied air space. The air bombardment was supported by naval gunfire from offshore ships.
Alexander McKee said about the bombardment on 7 July: "The 2,500 tons of bombs made no distinction between friend and foe. If the British commanders believed that they would intimidate the Germans by killing the French, then they were sorely mistaken."[12].
The shock effect was non-existent, since the attack did not take place immediately after the bombardment, when the defenders were still diverted and scared. Instead the main attack began the next morning, 8 July, around 04:30. The employment of tanks was made more difficult because of the bombings. Later, when the city was finally taken, it was determined that no German cannon, tanks or soldiers were killed in the targeted areas.
At the end of 8 July the Allied had only advanced one kilometre towards the city of Caen. After the German troops withdrew on 9 July from the city centre to the north and west of the city, the Allied troops engaged in the north but were kept from further advances by German snipers. At 18:00 on 9 July, the first units reached the Orne River in Caen. On the evening of 9 July and on 10 July, the Allied reached the city centre. Engineers were tasked with repairing bridges over the Orne and moving the rubble out of the city. Arthur Wilkes described the situation after the action: "Mountains of rubble, [approximately] 20 or 30 feet [≈ 6 or 9 meter] high [...] the dead lay everywhere."[11]. In the daily war journal of the 1st Battalion King's Own Scottish Borderers there is an entry on 9 July: "In the house that were still standing there slowly came life, as the French civilians realized that we had taken the city. They came running out of their houses with glasses and bottles of wine."[11].
Operation Charnwood was a minor tactical success for the Allies, because the city was still not entirely in Allied hands. The northwest portion of Caen had been taken but the eastern suburbs, where the steel factory at Colombelles (with its high observation posts) was located, was still under German control. Strategically the operation contributed towards the German belief that the Allied breakout would be in the British sector,[citation needed] where it in fact was not.
[edit] Operation Jupiter
Lieutenant-General O’Connor tried again to develop the bridgehead with Caen. The 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division was to retake Hill 112 on 10 July during Operation Jupiter. In the first phase the Allied forces were to take Hill 112, Fontaine and Eterville and in the second phase use Hill 112 as a defensive position and move towards Maltot. A bombardment of mortars and over 100 field artillery pieces preceded the Allied attack.
The Germans had five infantry battalions, two Tiger heavy tank battalions, as well as two Sturmgeschütz companies and Nebelwerfer drawn mostly from the 10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg, with elements of the 9th SS and 12th SS Panzer Divisions in reserve.
The operation failed because of strong resistance from the Germans which had dug themselves in and were well prepared for the attack. The 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division lost over 2,000 men during the operation.
[edit] Operation Goodwood
[edit] Preparation
At a meeting with General Montgmery on 10 July, the commander of the Second Army, Lieutenant-General Dempsey suggested the plan for Operation Goodwood on the same day Montgomery had approved Operation Cobra. The Canadian part of Operation Goodwood was given the codename Operation Atlantic.
Since the middle of July, 2,250 medium and 400 light tanks in three armoured divisions and several independent armoured brigades had been brought to Normandy under the control of the Second Army, which was now in a position were they could afford to lose tanks, but not men, in order to break through the German positions on the eastern side of the Orne and in the north of Caen. Operation Goodwood was to begin on 18 July, two days before the beginning of the U.S. Operation Cobra. Cobra however, did not begin until 25 July.
Although heavy losses were expected in the operation, Dempsey believed his men had a good chance to break through. The armoured divisions of VIII Corps under the command of Lieutenant-General O’Connor were to make the main effort. Approximately 700 guns shooting about 250,000 rounds were to support the attack. Furthermore, the RAF was to bombard three targets: Colombelles-Mondeville, Toufreville Emiéville and Cagny.
The goal was to capture all of Bras, Hubert-Folie, Verrieres, Fontenay, Garcelles-Secqueville, Cagny and Vimont.[citation needed] A further goal was to push the Germans back from the Bourguebus Ridge. The Canadian forces had the task of securing the western flank, and the British infantry were to secure the eastern.
[edit] Execution
On 18 July, 942 Allied bombers and fighters attacked five villages on the eastern end of Caen in order to facilitate Operation Goodwood. The attacks took place at dawn and were helped by good weather. Four of the targets were marked by pathfinders; for the fifth target the bombardiers had to find another way to find their mark. Supported by American bombers and fighters, the British dropped approximately 6,800 tons of bombs on the villages and surrounding area. Two German units, the 16th Luftwaffe Field Division and the 21st Panzer Division were hit hard by the bombing. German air defences and ground troops were able to shoot down six aircraft.
The three Allied armoured divisions had to overcome water obstacles and a minefield in order to reach their line of departure. The Orne River and the Caen Canal was an obstacle for the British troops during their advance. Six small bridges were available for the 8,000 vehicles including the tanks, the artillery, the motorised infantry, the engineers and the supply vehicles to cross the river. It was obvious that there would be a large traffic problem. Dempsey's solution was nearly fatal; he directed his Corps commander O'Connor to leave the infantry, engineers, and artillery on the other side until all of the tanks got across. This broke up the British combined-arms team before the Germans were even engaged.
After the tanks got over the bridges, the British had to cross a minefield of anti-tank and anti-personnel mines laid only a few days before by the 51st Highland Division. This obstacle would have taken a massive effort from the engineers to be cleared before the battle. There was a concern that, since the Germans had their own minefield at the steel plant in the German occupied suburb of Colombelles and could observe the mine clearing effort, they would have been forewarned of the attack. However, tactical surprise had already been lost. The engineers of the 51st Highland Division had taken the two nights before the battle to clear 17 corridors through the minefield[citation needed].
VIII Corps gave up the element of surprise as the tanks were slowed by the bridges and minefields. Through Allied broadcasts, the Germans had known about the attack since 15 July and had plenty of time to prepare their defences. Thus the effort to clear additional lanes through the minefields should have been undertaken.
Additionally, fire support was not effective; the artillery regiments stayed west of the Orne as per Dempsey's orders, so that the main German defence at Bourguebus Ridge was not in range. Additionally, coordination between the field artillery and the tanks was lacking[citation needed].
It became clear that the area that had been selected was strategically poor[citation needed]. There were many small villages, and in each one there was a small German garrison, each connected by tunnels as well as many observation posts that could be used to watch the progress of the Allies.
The German artillery on the Bourguebus Ridge at Cagny and Emieville was not weakened by either prior air or artillery attacks[citation needed]. From these positions the German guns as well as the 16th Luftwaffe Field Division dug in on the ridge had free fields of fire. Behind the ridge, were the remnants of the 21st Panzer Division with 78 88 mm guns[citation needed] and 40 tanks[citation needed].
The Seconds Army over-tasked the 11th Armoured Division. Although it was the unit that led the attack, it also was tasked with cleaning out the small villages along the front lines, namely Cuverville and Demouville. These were to be secured by units following the initial effort, but instead the armoured brigades attacked Bourguebus Ridge while the Motorised Infantry brigades took care of the villages. This slowed the attacks down and prevented meaningful cooperation.
For the most part, VIII Corps pressed forward very slowly. The 29th Armoured brigade of the 11th Armoured Division made the biggest gains, capturing almost 7 miles (11 km) of ground[citation needed] lateral to the British front.
When the railroad at “Caen Vimont” was reached at 09:30, the German troops had recovered from the bombardment. Twelve British tanks were destroyed by one 88 mm gun that fired on them several times[citation needed]. The British advanced slowly and crossed the rail line in order to approach the Bourguebus Ridge held by the 21st Panzer Division, the 1st SS Panzer Division and numerous artillery pieces.
For most of the day, the 29th Armoured Brigade, 11th Armoured Division, was without artillery support. The 159th Infantry Brigade was busy clearing out two villages behind the 29th Armoured Brigade. The remaining two armoured divisions were also busy crossing the bridges or passing through the minefields. At dawn on the 18th, only one tank battalion of the 7th Armoured division was involved in combat while most of the remaining armour units had to wait from 10:00 to midday on 18 July to cross the Orne[citation needed].
Individual tank battalions fought without support and behind one another instead of fighting together which was what was planned at the outset of the operation. Most of the ground gained came on the morning of 18 July[citation needed]. By 20 July most of the city of Caen was under Allied control.
The Germans began a counterattack after midday on 18 July that lasted until 20 July. General Montgomery brought the operation to a close on 20 July after having lost 4,000 soldiers and approximately 400 tanks[citation needed].
[edit] Results
The operation did not go as planned for the Allies. They lost roughly 400 tanks and about 5,500 British and Canadian soldiers[citation needed]. The Germans held their most important positions while losing 109 tanks[citation needed], a figure that was high for them as opposed to the Allies, in that they could not replace their tanks as quickly. While tactically the operation went poorly for the Second Army, strategically it was partly successful in that the Germans remained convinced that the main attack would still come in the Second Army sector.
[edit] Operation Spring
At a conference on 22 July it was decided that Operation Spring would begin on 25 July under the command of Lieutenant-General Simonds. The goal of the operation was for the Canadian II Corps to capture, among others, the high ground near Cramesni and La Bruyers, approximately three miles (5 km) south of Bourguebus.
Two Canadian infantry divisions were to attack, after which follow-up armoured divisions would break through the holes opened up by the infantry and carry on the advance.
The operation was to go forward in three parts. First to the May-sur-Orne—Verriéres—Tilly-la-Campagne line. Then to the Fontanay-le-Marmion—Roquancourt line, and then onto the plateau.
The Germans tried to bring more troops into the Caen-Falaise area. On 20 June the Supreme Command of the Wehrmacht announced that the advance of their forces was finished. The Germans had five armoured divisions and various other infantry units in the area. Since these units had been available on the first day of the operation the chance of an Allied break through was small.
After the air and artillery bombardment that had preceded the attack, the Canadians could have reached their goal on 25 July, but because of the strong German resistance, they were forced to withdraw entirely or at least pull back to their previous defensive positions. On 26 July and 27 July, a German counterattack in the area around Verriéres where the Canadians had taken the day before was pushed back by an Allied artillery strike.
The operation did not reach its intended goals; instead it ensured that Verriéres remained in Allied hands which amounted to a good tactical position, as the town lay on the high ground and allowed observation of several lower lying areas. The advantages afforded by the view to the Allies had, was lost to the Germans, as Tilly-la-Campagne was also taken. The operation was the Canadians' most costly in the war, as they lost approximately 1,500 men[citation needed], many of whom are buried in the Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery.
[edit] Treatment of prisoners of war and war crimes
[edit] Treatment of prisoners
Kurt Meyer reported that he was allegedy given a notebook which contained orders on how to handle German prisoners of war by the Canadian troops:
- "On the 7th of June I was given a notebook taken from the body of a dead Canadian captain. In addition to handwritten orders, the notes stated that 'no prisoners were to be taken'. Some Canadian prisoners were asked to verify these instructions...they confirmed orders that if prisoners impeded the advance, they were not to be taken"[13]
Canadian company commander Major Jacques D. Dextraze recalled "I used to tell my men, "Your job is to kill the enemy, that's your principal job. But the minute an enemy comes out with his hands up in the air, you must respect him, and you must protect him, and you must ensure that this man is as protected as your own men."
Yet, he also explains that sometimes it was clear that not all POW's were treated so well:
"We crossed the river - the bridge had been blown up...Eighty five prisoners we take. I select an officer, "take them back to the P.W. cage". He goes back, making them run, to the bridge that we had... These guys had been running for a couple of miles. They came to the bridge (bad cut) No no, you don't take the bridge, you swim. Now these guys fell...went into that water you know. Most of them drowned. Imagine having run you know, they had been fighting before, running you know for a couple of miles, and then the water you know. Now, they were picked up by the engineers rebuilding the bridge. I could have been accused of not having protected them. I'm responsible for these prisoners you see. I felt very bad when I saw them all piled up beside the bridge..."[13]
[edit] War crimes by the German troops
More than 156 Canadian prisoners, according to reports, were murdered near Caen by the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend in the days and weeks following D-Day.
Twenty Canadians were executed near Villons-les-Buissons, northeast of Caen in the Ardenne Abbey. The abbey was made up of buildings from the middle-ages and a gothic church. The commander of the 25th Panzer Regiment of the 12th SS Panzer Division, Kurt Meyer, had his headquarters in the area and probably was involved in the execution.
On 7 June Canadian troops fighting at Authie were taken prisoner. The abbey was fast filling up with prisoners. Ten were selected and executed outside the abbey. The rest of the prisoners were brought to Bretteville sur Odon. In the evening on the same day eleven prisoners were shot in the garden of one of the Chateaus.
On the evening of 8 June another seven prisoners that had fought at Authie and Buron were brought to the abbey. There they were questioned and then afterwards executed. The seven were brought into the garden and ten minutes later all seven were dead, shot in the back of the head. Jan Jesionek, a Polish soldier serving with the 12th SS Panzer Division, later reported the events and that the German units commander Meyer supposedly had said: "'What should we do with these prisoners? They only eat up our rations. In future no more prisoners are to be taken."[14] The last corpses of the Canadians that were killed were found in the fall of 1945.
The Abbaye d'Ardenne was captured at midnight on 8 July by the Regina Rifles. The executed soldiers were exhumed and buried in the Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery.
Meyer was sentenced to death in December 1945, although he had denied knowledge of the incident. His sentence was later commuted to life in prison. On 7 September 1954, he was released from prison.
A small chapel at the abbey was set up in memory of the Canadian soldiers. The chapel consists of a wooden cross, over which is a niche with a statue of Mary. On the cross is a Canadian steel helmet. Every year the children of Authie place flowers at the chapel. In 1984 a bronze plaque was erected at the abbey, it reads:
"On the night of June 7/8, 1944, 18 Canadian soldiers were murdered in this garden while being held here as prisoners of war. Two more prisoners died here or nearby on June 17. They are dead but not forgotten."
[edit] Aftermath
Operation Overlord and the battles in Normandy successfully gave the Allies a foothold in France, which led to the liberation of the rest of Western Europe. On 25 August the Allies were able to retake the French capital Paris.
Caen and many of the surrounding towns and villages were mostly destroyed; the cathedral in Caen and the University of Caen (founded in 1432) were both razed to the ground. The buildings were eventually rebuilt after the war and even expanded. For this reason the symbol of the University of Caen is the Phoenix. Approximately 35,000 citizens of Caen were rendered homeless after the fighting[citation needed].
After the war ended, the West German government had to pay reparations as compensation to any civilians in Caen killed, starved, or left homeless by the war[citation needed].
The rebuilding of Caen officially lasted from 1948 until 1962. On 6 June 2004, Gerhard Schröder became the first German Chancellor to be invited to the anniversary celebration of the invasion.
There are many monuments to the Battle for Caen and Operation Overlord. For example on the road to Odon-bridge at Tourmauville, there is a memorial for the 15th (Scottish) Infantry Division; or the monument on hill 112 for the 53rd (Welsh) Infantry Division, as well as one for the 43rd (Wessex) Infantry Division. Near hill 112, a forest was planted in memory of those that fought there.
The landings at Normandy, the Battle for Caen and the Second World War are remembered today with many memorials, in Caen there is the Mémorial with a "peace museum" (Musée de la paix). The museum was built by the city of Caen on top of where the bunker of General Wilhelm Richter, the commander of the 716th Infantry Division was located. On 6 June 1988 the museum was opened by the French president at the time, François Mitterrand as well as twelve ambassadors from countries that took part in the fighting in Normandy. The museum is dedicated to pacifism and borders the Parc international pour la Libération de l'Europe, a garden in remembrance of the Allied participants in the invasion.
The fallen are buried in the Brouay War Cemetery, the Banneville-la-Campagne War Cemetery (2,170 graves), the Bény-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery (2,049 graves), the Bretteville-sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery (2,957 graves), La Cambe German war cemetery (21,222 graves) as well as many more.
[edit] References
- Badsey, Stephen. Normandy, 1944, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 0-85045-921-4
- Daglish, Ian. Operation Bluecoat (Battleground Europe S.), Pen and Sword Books Ltd., 2003, ISBN 0-85052-912-3
- Daglish, Ian. Operation Goodwood: Battleground, Leo Cooper Ltd., 2004, ISBN 1-84415-030-5
- Ellis, Major L.F. . Victory in the West: The Battle of Normandy, Official Campaign History Volume. I (History of the Second World War: United Kingdom Military), Naval & Military Press Ltd; New Ed edition (Sep 2004)., 1-84574-058-0
- Ford, Ken. Caen 1944, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-625-9
- Ford, Ken. D-Day 1944: Sword Beach & British Airborne Landings, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-366-7
- Ford, Ken. Falaise 1944: Death of an Army, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-626-7
- Forty, George. Battle Zone Normandy: Villers Bocage. Sutton Publishing, London, 2004. ISBN 0-7509-3012-8
- Going, Chris. Jones, Alun. D-Day: The Lost Evidence (Above the Battle), Crecy Publishing, 2004, ISBN 0-85979-097-5
- Hall, Anthony. Operation Overlord---D-Day---: Operation Overlord, Zenith Imprint, ISBN 0-7603-1607-4
- Hart, Russell and Stephen. The Second World War (6): Northwest Europe 1944-1945, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-384-5
- Hart, Stephen Ashley. Colossal Cracks: Montgomery's 21st Army Group in Northwest Europe, 1944-45, Stackpole Books,U.S. (1 Feb 2007)., ISBN 0-81173-383-1
- Hastings, Max. Overlord: D-Day and the Battle for Normandy, 1944, Pan Books; New Ed edition (13 Aug 1999),. ISBN 0-33039-012-0
- Hunt, Eric. Mont Pinçon, Pen and Sword Books Ltd., ISBN 0-85052-944-1
- Maule, Henry. Caen: The brutal battle and break-out from Normandy, David & Charles, 1976, ISBN 0-7153-7283-1
- Meyer, Hubet. 12th SS: The History of the Hitler Youth Panzer Division Volume 1 ISBN 0-81173-198-7
- Meyer, Kurt Grenadiers: The Story of Waffen SS General Kurt "Panzer" Meyer , Stackpole Books,U.S., New Ed edition (15 May 2005)., ISBN 0-81173-197-9
- Holmes, Richard. The D-Day Experience: From the Invasion to the Liberation of Paris with Other and Map and CD, Andrews McMeel Publishing (April 2004)., ISBN 0-74074-509-3
- Montgomery of Alamein, Bernard Law. The Memoirs of Field Marshal the Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, K.G., Collins (1958).
- Penrose, Jane. The D-Day Companion: Leading Historians Explore History's Greatest Amphibious Assault, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 1-84176-779-4
- Rommel, Erwin (author) & Liddell-Hart, B.H. (Editor) The Rommel Papers, Da Capo Press (1 Mar 1982)., ISBN 0-30680-157-4
- Saunders, Time. Hill 112, Pen and Sword Books Ltd., ISBN 0-85052-737-6
- Saunders, Tim. Operation Epsom (Battleground Europe S.), Pen and Sword Books Ltd., 2003, ISBN 0-85052-954-9
- Shulman, Milton. Defeat in the West, Cassell military; New Ed edition (13 Nov 2003)., ISBN 030436603X
- Trew, Simon. Battle Zone Normandy: Battle for Caen, Sutton, 2005, ISBN 0-7509-3010-1
- von Luck, Hans. Panzer Commander: The Memoirs of Colonel Hans von Luck, Cassell military; New Ed edition (9 Mar 2006)., ISBN 0-30436-401-0
- Wilmot, Chester. The Struggle For Europe, Wordsworth Editions Ltd; New Ed edition (25 Sep 1997), ISBN 1-85326-677-9
[edit] Media
[edit] Films
- The documentary D-Day 6.6.44 - Entscheidung in der Normandie from British television BBC documents the results of the advances on Caen. Producer: Tim Bradley; Director: Richard Dale, Kim Bour, Pamela Gordon, Sally Weale.
- The U.S. black and white documentary Crusade in Europe from 1949, based on Eisenhower's book, documenting Operation Overlord as well as the Battle for Caen
- The Norman Summer: 1962 Canadian documentary about the fight for Caen as well as Normandy.
- In Desperate Battle: Normandy 1944 1992 Canadian television film about the Battle for Caen.
- Road to Ortona, Turn of the Tide and V Was for Victory as well as Crisis on the Hill (all 1962): Canadian documentary about the Battle.
[edit] Games
- Call of Duty 2: Computer game from the U.S. game developer Infinity Ward. Released on 3 November 2005, the player is British Sergeant John Davis in the attack on Caen.
- D-Day: In this real-time tactical computer game the player can play one of the operations involved in the Battle for Caen. Also the player can simulate the action on D-Day and other actions in the breakout in Normandy.
- Hidden & Dangerous 2: The player is a British SAS soldier that must liberate a town near Caen from the Germans.
- Battlefield 1942: This extremely popular multi-player game features a map of Caen only available with the latest patch which can be found on the Battlefield 1942 website. The two opposing teams, the Germans and the Canadians, must fight over the city of Caen. This was the only WWII game which featured the Canadian Army until the release of Call of Duty 3.
- Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts: The entire British campaign, spanning 9 missions, is about the British 2nd Army's advance towards Caen and the battle of Caen.
[edit] External links
- The Battle of Caen, 1944
- Overview of the Battle for Caen
- Information about Operation Charnwood
- Additional information about the battle
- Info on the battle for hill 112
- Information about the battle from valourandhorror.com
- diverse information
- Maps
- ibiblio.org
- Caen Memorial
- Info
- Operation Bluecoat from the BBC
- Info
- Journal of the RAF:
- Information
- ornebridgehead.org
- junobeach.org
- Abbaye d'Ardenne
- Info about the massacre
- Info about the battle
- [PDF] Britishes Ministry Of Defence on the Battle - Part 1
- [PDF] British Ministry Of Defence on the Battle - Part 2
- [PDF] Operation Charnwood
- [PDF] Report from the Canadian military
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Caen 1944: Montgomery´s break-out attempt by Ken Ford. ISBN 1-84176-635-9
Pag. 9 " Caen was a Pyrrhic Victory, however, with the city left a shattered wastland of smoking rubble and the enemys panzer forces still gathered in streght to the south, barring Montgomery`s way onto the Falaise plain. - ^ a b Wilmot, Pg363
- ^ a b c Major Ellis, Official History, Pg 247
- ^ a b c Forty Pg 36
- ^ WO 171/392
- ^ Weigley Pg 109-110
- ^ Ashley Hart, Pg 134
- ^ Major Ellis, Official History, Pg 254
- ^ The 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend was under direct control of Adolph Hitler
- ^ Percy E. Schramm: War Diary of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces 1944-1945 , ISBN 3-7637-5933-6, volume 1, page 325
- ^ a b c British Ministry of Defence: http://www.veteransagency.mod.uk/pdfolder/60th_anniversary/drive_on_caen.pdf, PDF
- ^ Yves Lecouturier: Entdeckungspfade - Die Strände der alliierten Landung (Discovery Paths - The Beaches of the Allied Landings), ISBN 3-88571-287-3, Page 102
- ^ a b valourandhorror.com: http://www.valourandhorror.com/DB/ISSUE/POWs.php
- ^ waramps.ca: http://www.waramps.ca/military/wwii/tnop.html#abbaye2, Report from a Polish Private from the 12th SS Panzerdivision

