Jump to content

Maps of Belorussia 1944


Recommended Posts

Well, last time I asked about maps, I got brilliant replies. It just encourages me to ask again! :D

I'm reading Paul Adair's Hitler's Greatest Defeat: The collapse of Army Group Centre at the moment. The maps are figurative rather than enjoyable. I've done a little poking about on the net for Belorus maps, but can anyone on this forum suggest any good net (or other) sources for topographical quality(-ish) maps for the areas around Vitebsk... Minsk... Bobruisk... Mogilev?

I know there's some ace Ukraine maps, but anyone aware of any for the central area of the front?

Thanks in anticipation....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks muchly, Von Paulus.

I've just finished Adair. Frustrating book. Very interesting event glossed over by others...Alan Clark in Barbarossa gives it barely a page and subsumes it in a discussion of the 20 July assassination plot on Hitler. *sigh* And given that it's a greater defeat than Stalingrad, this seems trite. A symptom, i suppose of anglophone's reliance on German records produced for the US army postwar.

Ultimately, I didn't think Adair managed the narrative at all well. The event became fractured and barely coherent. Perhaps that's what a rout is supposed to read like?! Still, it was a good introduction to a crucial moment on the Eastern Front.

There are heaps of interesting fights/scenarios here: partisans seizing bridges and holding out until relief arrives; the 5th Panzer vs. 5th Tank army; the 12th panzers Divisions desperate series of holding actions that allowed over 12,000 German troops to flee to safety; Russian 'reconnaisance in force' battles, and plenty of MEs as deep penetration columns chase retreating germans through the Byelorussian forests and swamps...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Try "East Front Drama-1944"by Rolf Hinze it's available from JJ.fedorowicz Press.They specialize in translation's of german book's.I have not completly read the above book but it is very detailed but unfortunatly like most wwII book's suffer's from a lack of map's.It is very frustrating to see a name of a village that seem's to be important in the narrative but not be able to locate it in relation to the overall situation.The "History of The Leibstandarte"published by the same publisher as above is a five volume set that is a difficult read because of the immense amount of detail,almost daily activities are recorded.These book's are the exception to the above complaint because they have seperate map book's in color no less.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are heaps of interesting fights/scenarios here: partisans seizing bridges and holding out until relief arrives; the 5th Panzer vs. 5th Tank army; the 12th panzers Divisions desperate series of holding actions that allowed over 12,000 German troops to flee to safety; Russian 'reconnaisance in force' battles, and plenty of MEs as deep penetration columns chase retreating germans through the Byelorussian forests and swamps...

However you can still look at a good atlas and create a map who represent less or more the battle you're telling about.

I worked on a map with today's satellite photos of NASA site. I forgot the link but I'll try to find it.

Paulus

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For reading Erickson's map-free books I relied on printouts from that excellent online military atlas (at www.dean.usma.edu) and some laser-copies of 1:2.5M soviet maps from the library's Times Comprehensive atlas. Together they folded up into a useful bookmark, and all for free :D

I also got from the library the Osprey Campaign Series #42 BAGRATION, which looks a bit like a kids book (ie. you'll want to hide it under some big sophisticated novels when approaching the pretty librarian) but it's packed full of photos, maps (incl 3D ones) and a decent text by S. Zaloga.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Originally posted by HarryInk:

Well, last time I asked about maps, I got brilliant replies. It just encourages me to ask again! :D

I'm reading Paul Adair's Hitler's Greatest Defeat: The collapse of Army Group Centre at the moment. The maps are figurative rather than enjoyable. I've done a little poking about on the net for Belorus maps, but can anyone on this forum suggest any good net (or other) sources for topographical quality(-ish) maps for the areas around Vitebsk... Minsk... Bobruisk... Mogilev?

I know there's some ace Ukraine maps, but anyone aware of any for the central area of the front?

Thanks in anticipation....

Sounds like grids: N-36-25; N-35-67,68,78,79; N-35-106,107; N-36-61,73.

Hmm...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Originally posted by HarryInk:

Tecumseh...have you got a tighter ref for that military atlas?

The military atlas link has been posted a lot:

http://www.dean.usma.edu/history/dhistorymaps/Atlas%20Page.htm

Not much detail for EF, but still helpful while reading.

Also there are additional grids from the EART/x-ussr maps, beyond the ukraine/caucasus ones that are more commonly known. Below are some links, plus Herr Oberst hints he knows more...

http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/EART/x-ussr/100k/

http://mapy.mk.cvut.cz/data/Rusko-Russia/Topo%201_100%20000/East%20Russia/

http://mapy.mk.cvut.cz/data/Rusko-Russia/

The lower the letter of the alphabet, the further north the grid is. The higher the number, the further east.

Finally, Herr Oberst has personally scanned some great maps. They are generously available for FTP - check out his recent thread on maps for scenario designers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, that's great thanks for the links.

There is any place where I can find a reference map to know where belongs each of those grid references?

It's a bit diffcult to go just by "The lower the letter of the alphabet, the further north the grid is. The higher the number, the further east.

"

Many thanks!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Originally posted by KNac:

Wow, that's great thanks for the links.

There is any place where I can find a reference map to know where belongs each of those grid references?

It's a bit diffcult to go just by "The lower the letter of the alphabet, the further north the grid is. The higher the number, the further east.

"

Many thanks!

There's a key for the ukraine/caucasus set here

http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/EART/x-ussr/ukraine.html

For others, use these:

http://mapy.mk.cvut.cz/data/Rusko-Russia/Blank-ost.jpg

http://mapy.mk.cvut.cz/data/Rusko-Russia/Blank-west.jpg

[ July 09, 2003, 12:04 AM: Message edited by: tecumseh ]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...