The Siege of Leningrad: History in an Hour. Rupert Colley

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      The Siege of Leningrad

      History in an Hour

      Rupert Colley

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       About History in an Hour

      History in an Hour is a series of ebooks to help the reader learn the basic facts of a given subject area. Everything you need to know is presented in a straightforward narrative and in chronological order. No embedded links to divert your attention, nor a daunting book of 600 pages with a 35-page introduction. Just straight in, to the point, sixty minutes, done. Then, having absorbed the basics, you may feel inspired to explore further. Give yourself sixty minutes and see what you can learn . . .

      To find out more visit http://historyinanhour.com or follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/historyinanhour

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

      About History in an Hour

      Introduction

      The History of Leningrad

      The Great Patriotic War

       Under Attack

       Hunger

       Death in a Cold City

       The Road of Life

       Spring 1942

       The Symphony

       Leningrad Liberated

       The Aftermath

      Appendix 1: Key Players

      Appendix 2: Timeline of Siege of Leningrad

      Copyright

      Got Another Hour?

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

       The Führer has decided to wipe the city of Petersburg from the face of the earth. After the defeat of Soviet Russia there is no interest in the further existence of this large inhabited area.

      Adolf Hitler

      With these words, issued on 22 September 1941, Adolf Hitler effectively sealed Leningrad’s fate. Preferring to call the city by its pre-revolutionary name, St Petersburg, he declared, ‘We have no interest in saving the lives of the civilian population’. Over the next twenty-nine months, German forces encircled the city and subjected it to a devastating siege. The number of deaths in Leningrad exceeded those who died from the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined, and constitutes the largest death toll ever recorded in a single city.

      For almost nine hundred days, the city resisted the Germans pounding at its gates. Its survival contributed to the defeat of Nazism. But the price was heavy – over one million died in Leningrad from German bombs and artillery, or from disease, the cold or starvation. In its suffering Leningrad became a source of symbolic national pride, of good conquering evil. The story of the siege is one of heroic resistance and stoical survival but it also one of unimaginable suffering and extreme deprivation.

      This, in an hour, is the Siege of Leningrad.

       The History of Leningrad

      Named after its founder, Peter the Great, the city of St Petersburg was formed in 1703. Sitting on the mouth of the River Neva, the city, declared the capital of the Russian empire in 1712, developed into a huge flourishing port, the ‘Venice of the North’. Influenced by European fashions and tastes, it became Russia’s ‘window on the West’. It was the city of Tolstoy, of French-speaking Russian aristocrats and high culture, theatres, ballet, and art museums. But it also became the city of revolution. In 1905, the city workers downed tools and staged a huge demonstration demanding political and constitutional reform. A petition to be presented to the tsar, Nicholas II, ended in bloodshed on the steps of the Winter Palace, fomenting in the workers a deep hatred of the privileged regime. That hatred would erupt with catastrophic consequences twelve years later.

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       Vladimir Lenin

      In February 1917, at the height of the First World War, the Tsarist government was overthrown and Nicholas II forced to abdicate. A provisional government ruled, but that too was overthrown in October by the Bolsheviks, revolutionary socialists, led by the charismatic Vladimir Lenin. Having come to terms with Germany, thus ending Russia’s involvement in the Great War, Russia became the Soviet Union and Moscow – not St Petersburg – its capital. In 1924, following Lenin’s death, the city was renamed in his honour.

      During the mid-1920s, Joseph Stalin emerged from Lenin’s shadow to take power. Moving slowly but lethally, Stalin gradually removed all opposition and potential dissent, strengthening his control until the peoples of the huge Soviet empire bowed before him. Stalin ruled by fear, ‘purging’ the Soviet Union of its internal enemies, whether real or imagined. No one was safe, no one was beyond the reach of the NKVD, Stalin’s secret police, and everyone went to bed fearing a knock on the door in the early hours. Stalin was no fan of Leningrad – he resented its reputation as the cradle of the Russian Revolution, in which he played only a minor part. 30,000 Leningraders would fall during the Great Purge of the 1930s, arrested, exiled, or executed, labelled as enemies of the people.

      Stalin next turned his vindictive attention to his military, purging his ablest field marshals and generals and decimating the officer corp. 40,000 Red Army personnel, deemed politically out of step, were purged. Amongst the victims were men who called for reform of the Soviet Union’s military methods, calls that were, on the whole, ignored. When war came, Stalin found himself bereft of his finest military thinkers. Nikita Khrushchev, Stalin’s successor, wrote in his memoirs, ‘There is no question that we would have repelled the Fascist invasion much more easily if the upper echelons of the Red Army command hadn’t been wiped out. They had been men of considerable expertise and experience.’

       The Great Patriotic War

      On 22 June 1941, Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa, Germany’s invasion

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