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The Combat History of German Tiger Tank Battalion 503 in World War II
K**R
Lots of information
This book has got everything you need or want to know about the tank battalion, everything 👍
T**K
Life in a German Tiger Tank Batallion
This book gives an unique insight in life in a Tiger Tank Batallion. Full of details, battle reports and evaluation of friendly and enemy battle tactics by the men who fought the battles.The book has sketches and maps describing battle plans, positions and movements and interesting photos showing the tanks and their crews, full of details.Print quality of photos could have been betterr, but that does not reduce the quality of this book.Having served as a Leopard 1 Tank Commander, I find lots of familiar stuff, from life as a tanker, from tactics and combat drill.A book for tankers, historians and model builders!
S**N
5 Stjerner
En rigtig god kvalitetsbog som ikke kun er store billeder. Tilmed til en pris som er meget rimelig. Se også efter de andre bøger i samme serie.
D**K
A heartfelt tribute to the members of the 503
This volume is a highly personal reenactment of the 503 Battalion history written by the members of the panzer battalion. The battalion war diary was lost in battle and Mr Lochmann admits there are "holes" in the story which was reconstructed from personal recollections and diaries as well as other primary documents that survived the war. It still seems fairly comprehensive and definitely worth reading.There are six sections to this 439 page book. The first section familiarizes the reader to the Battalion as well as a little info on the Tiger. Some of the information includes the formation and activation of the unit. It lists the individual commanders of the Battalion and its companies. It goes on and lists the recipents of medals in its combat history. It also presents a general purpose employment record, its chronology of engagements. The section finishes with comments from the individual company personnel as well as its engineering and logistic attachments. It also displays combat strength periodically throughout its history.The remaining five sections are broken down into the different theaters of employment. The first was in the DonBasin not far from Rostov under Army Group Don in late 1942, early 1943. In mid 1943 the battalion was on the southern front of Operation Citadel and had to fight in the Kharkov sector during the Soviet counter offensive. In late 1943, they saw action on the Dniepr and in early 1944 was part of the relief attempt of the Korsun Pocket. For mid 1944, the 503 was transferred to the western front to fight Montgomery near Caen. For late 1944 and 1945, the 503rd Battalion went back to the east and tried to stop the Soviets in Hungary, Austria and Czechoslovakia. The final section is the demise and surrender of the Battalion. It also includes a discussion of the ones who didn't escape and became prisoners of the Soviets. In the first Appendix is a listing of battle deaths for the Battalion. It includes name, rank, date and location of his death. The second Appendix contains a short but interesting biography of eight of the key contributors.This operational coverage is driven entirely on the personal experiences of the individuals within the battalion on an almost daily basis. With most of the survivors contributing their recollections and personal diaries to writing this book that even without the official Battalion War Diary, it still seems fairly complete. The Tiger was an awesome machine and the men were proud to be part of the fighting unit. They had confidence that the Tiger would keep them safe; there was much talk about the panzer and its upkeep in the field as well as its victum count on the battlefield.The operational coverage was more personal than say a David Glantz book but it also didn't have as much information on the enemy but the coverage is probably sufficient for all except a demanding researcher. In addition to the operational coverage of the 503, coverage would also include the units that it was either attached to or supported during a campaign.There were also 350 photos showing the battalion's men and Tigers in the field. There were also 14 black on white, nearly full page maps of key deployments of the war. It includes the defense of the Chir-Don line in early 1943. Kursk, the breakthrough of the Dniepr, Korsun, Caen, Budapest.Anybody interested in the panzer action of WWII should seriously consider buying this low cost alternate that was written by its Battalion members. It has decent operational coverage along with many first hand battle accounts. It gives startup and background information for the Battalion and its individual Companies thats engaging and worthy for the oldest Tiger Battalion in the Wehrmacht.
E**E
Good history from those that were there.
I enjoyed this book. I read Richard Von Rose's book and I saw this and thought that I would like it and did.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
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