volume 1, issue 1

série: 2nd World War history
éditeur: Purnell London
auteur: Collectif
classement: carton81
année: 1966
format: broché
état: TBE
valeur: 3 €
critère:
remarques: the second world war,
a new illustrated history in English
21 years after VJ Day, this is the most comprehensive
history of World War II designed for the general reader

issue 1/1 the third reich
+ free fold-out map
a) the Axis forces expansion 1939-1942
b) the allied counter-attack 1942-1945
with list of the many distinguished writers
of this history
editor-in-chief being Sir Basil Liddell Hart

for compiled reading see also
the 6 binders of the 2nd WW history


Information
Purnell's History of the Second World War
was a hugely successful weekly anthology
or '"partwork" publication covering all aspects of World War II
that was distributed throughout the English-speaking world,
produced shortly after the similarly
accomplished 8-volume series on WW1,
it was first published in 1966,
being reprinted several times during the 1970s

the magazine was notable for its use of multiple writers
– many of them well-known military figures –
from all relevant nationalities in order to
present a rounded view of the subject material,
this was combined with high-quality original
artwork of the military hardware used, maps
and numerous previously unseen photographs,
some of them quite gruesome

despite the name, Purnell's History of the Second World War
was published by Phoebus Publishing Ltd
in co-operation with the Imperial War Museum
which provided its research facilities,
expert advice, official statistics and photographs,
the now defunct Purnell & Sons,
later British Printing Corporation, based in Paulton, Avon
(now Bath & North East Somerset),
were the printers of the magazine,
at the time, Purnell's were one of the
largest and most advanced printing plants in Europe
and had developed a reputation
for high quality printing, producing well-known titles
such as the Observer Magazine and the TV Times

the editor, Barrie Pitt,
who had been involved in the production
of the BBC Television series The Great War,
together with the editor in chief,
the renowned military theorist and historian Sir Basil Liddel Hart,
wanted to create a definitive record of the conflict
which would both hold up to academic scrutiny
and be accessible to the general public

each issue of the magazine contained several articles
on differing topics but typically,
important or contentious events were viewed from both sides
(e.g. Stalingrad: the German view,
followed by another article, Stalingrad: the Russian view)
in order to allow the writers to counter long held myths
and set the record straight rather than
to merely recycle familiar themes,
numerous famous military figures
and former senior staff officers contributed articles;
because it was originally published just
over twenty years after the end of the conflict,
many of the surviving protagonists were still alive

General Walter Warlimont (survivor of the 20 July plot
who received a long prison sentence at Nuremberg,
but was later released) was commissioned
to produce a piece on life in Hitler's inner circle,
while Marshal G.K. Zhukov contributed an article
on how he planned the Moscow counterattack

other senior figures who contributed to the publication include:
- Major General Eric Dorman O'Gowan,
former Chief of Staff of General Auckinleck;
- Freiherr von der Heydte commander of Rommel's rearguard
during the 2nd Battle of El Alamein;
- General Major Alfred Philippi who commanded
an infantry division on the western front after D-Day;
- Lord Chalfont, former Minister for Disarmament
writing on the morality of the atom bomb attacks on Japan;
- General Leutnant Walther Chales De Beaulieu,
commander of a Panzer army at Leningrad;
- Major General JL Moulton;
- Brigadier Rt Hon Sir John Smith VC, MC,
former MP and minister under
the Churchill and Eden governments;
- Lieutenant-General Nikolay Kirillovick-Popel,
who participated in the Stalingrad offensive

prominent historians such as John Keegan,
Jerrard Tickell, W.H. Koch, Alvin D. Coox,
Phyllis Auty, Martin Blumenson, Antony Brett-James,
John Vader, Rudolf Bohmer, Raleigh Trevelyan
produced articles, as well as AJP Taylor,
who acted as editor in chief for later editions
after the death of Sir Basil Liddel Hart

other well-known contributors to the publication
included Alan Clark MP and
the best-selling author Dudley Pope,
eyewitness accounts from otherwise anonymous individuals,
such as a Japanese housewife telling
of the horrors of life after the surrender
and the testimony of a former Zero pilot, were also included

despite the efforts to tell the story from alternative viewpoints,
many of the events being discussed remained
controversial and sensitive subjects
and there was still scope for Cold War propaganda
and government censorship to find its way into print

in issue 45, which covered the Katyn Massacre,
the discovery of the bodies
of several thousand captured Polish officers in 1943,
which was widely believed to have been
carried out by the Soviets,
and which remained an unmentionable subject
between the Allies after the war,
the historian Jerrard Tickell attempted to
reconstruct the events around the atrocity
which took place at the Hill of Goats site,
while pointing to the evidence,
he left his conclusion open ended,
finishing with the comment that it was up
to the reader to form their own opinion,
his article was followed by a piece by a Soviet scientist
purporting to be a forensic re-examination
of all the available evidence
such as the conditions of the bodies,
their levels of decomposition
and the remaining artefacts in order to 'prove'
that the Polish officers could have only been murdered
during the period of the German occupation of the region,
using eye witness accounts, selective testimonies
and the findings of the official Russian investigation
into the affair, Doctor of Juridical Sciences,
Arkady Poltorak, finished with the paragraph;

thus was unmasked the provocative act of the Nazis,
thus was established with complete clarity
the fact of the monstrous killing
by the Nazi authorities
of Polish prisoners of war at Katyn Wood

during the Perestroika period in the early 1990s,
the Russian authorities finally admitted
that the killings had been carried out by the NKVD,
the secret police organization used to enforce Stalin's rule

the series was so successful
that although it was initially scheduled to run
to six volumes of 16 issues each,
a further two volumes were added,
covering later themes such as the Chinese Civil War,
the Arab–Israeli conflict, Suez, Korean War,
Vietnam War, and the rise of nationalism
which led to the breakup of the European empires
in the years after World War II,
there were also discussions on the spread of communism,
tactics and battle strategy, the post war reconstruction,
the use of propaganda,
the work of war correspondents and artists,
profiles of the leading politicians,
generals
and ambassadors as well as features on uniforms and medals

while the editorial comment justified this move
as important for the reader to gain a rounded view
of all the inter-connected events,
it could also be considered a sound business move
to extract as much financial reward for the publishers as possible

as well as the magazine itself,
a series of higher quality 'specials' were also later produced
which were themselves hugely successful,
selling over 8 million copies world wide,
they centred on specific elements
not only of World War II but also World War I,
e.g. battleships of the First World War, the Desert War,
German Secret Weapons, D Day, invasion of Hitler's Europe
and German Tanks 1939–45,
while popular, they included a great deal of material
previously published in the main magazine,

though the magazine is long out of print,
it is remembered as largely achieving
what it set out to do and back issues remain
sought after on internet auctions

couvertures:
Copyright 2008 - 2024 G. Rudolf