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On August 1, 1944, the Polish Home Army launched the largest urban resistance operation of the Second World War. For sixty-three days, civilian fighters armed with improvised weapons held significant portions of Warsaw against the full force of German military reprisal — while Soviet forces, positioned across the Vistula River, halted their advance and waited. When the uprising collapsed in October, over 200,000 Polish civilians were dead and Hitler ordered the systematic demolition of what remained of the city, block by block. This book reconstructs the Warsaw Uprising through Home Army operational records, survivor testimony, German military archives, diplomatic correspondence between Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin, and the postwar testimonies of Soviet commanders. It examines the military planning and political calculations that launched the uprising, the experience of fighters and civilians navigating a city progressively reduced to rubble, and the still-contested question of Soviet strategic intent during the sixty-three days of fighting. The narrative centers the human dimension without sacrificing analytical rigor: the underground courier networks, the field hospitals operating in cellars, the daily negotiations between military command and a civilian population bearing catastrophic cost. It also examines how Cold War politics shaped the uprising's historiography — suppressed in communist Poland, incompletely understood in the West — and how post-1989 scholarship has worked to restore its full complexity. A carefully documented account of courage, political abandonment, and the deliberate erasure of a city that refused to surrender without a fight.
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Liczba stron: 248
Rok wydania: 2026
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