
The Destruction of Berlin in 1945
Top 10 Astonishing Facts
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Narrateur(s):
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Lieutenant Colonel Tom Briggs US Army (ret)
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Auteur(s):
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Cyril Marlen
À propos de cet audio
In the spring of 1945, the world witnessed the fall of Nazi Germany and the near-total annihilation of its capital. Berlin, once a metropolis of culture, politics, and ambition, became the stage for one of the most devastating urban battles in modern history. When the guns finally fell silent, the city that had symbolized both Prussian grandeur and Hitler’s vision of a “world capital” lay in ruins—a smoldering monument to the destructive power of total war.
This book explores the destruction of Berlin through ten astonishing facts that capture the sheer scale of the devastation. The statistics are staggering, but the lived reality behind them is even more haunting. By May 1945, Berlin contained over 55 million cubic meters of rubble, more than half of its buildings damaged or destroyed. Entire districts disappeared, while iconic landmarks like the Reichstag, Brandenburg Gate, and Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church were reduced to battered shells. Years of Allied bombing had already scarred the city, but it was the Soviet assault—unleashing 1.8 million artillery shells—that delivered the final blow, pulverizing neighborhoods and leaving vast swathes of the capital unrecognizable.
Infrastructure collapsed. Roads and bridges became impassable, the tram network and railway stations lay in ruins, and the underground U-Bahn tunnels—used as shelters—were flooded, drowning thousands. Civilians were trapped in pockets of the city, cut off from supplies, huddling underground for weeks in overcrowded, suffocating bunkers. To observers arriving in May 1945, Berlin no longer resembled a city at all; they described it as a “moonscape,” cratered and lifeless, with only skeletal walls and chimneys piercing the horizon.
Amid this devastation, survival depended on resilience. With men dead, missing, or prisoners of war, the burden of recovery fell disproportionately on women.
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