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AUTHOR: Clark, L
FORMAT: 192pp 65 col 65 Bw 234x156 Hb
This key title in the acclaimed Battle Zone Normandy series provides a
gripping account of how lightly armed but highly motivated Brtish troops sought
to overcome an enemy desperate to unhinge the Allied invasion. British 6th
Airborne Division’s attacks on ’Pegasus’ Bridge and the Merville Battery are
remembered as two of the most remarkable actions which took place in Normandy on
6th June 1944.The division fought for far longer than just one day, however,
achieving a great deal of success by securing the Allied left flank and creating
a firm base from which a breakout into the French interior could be launched.
The strengths, weaknesses and sheer drama of airborne warfare are all
encapsulated in the opening week of the division’s operations in Normandy as its
lightly armed but highly trained and motivated troops sought to overcome a more
heavily armed enemy desperate to unhinge the invasion. Starting with an
examination of 6th Airborne Division, its plan and the German opposition, Lloyd
Clark provides an overview of British operations east of the River Orne from the
initial landings in the early hours of 6 June to the capture of Breville seven
days later. The battlefield tours which follow include the famous and dramatic
assaults on ’Pegasus’ Bridge and the Merville Battery, but also the lesser known
struggle to secure the British southern flank around Le Bas de Ranville,
Longueval and St.Honorine on 6th-7th June and the Battle of Breville on 12th
June.
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