Introduction Context Resources (6) Items per page 25 25 50 100 Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email The post-war European idea and the first European movements (1945–1949) — Introduction Text Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email The post-war European idea and the first European movements (1945–1949) — Full text Text Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Buchenwald concentration camp (Germany, 16 April 1945) Image Three prisoners of Russian, Polish and Dutch origin, ‘survivors’ of the Buchenwald Nazi concentration camp in April 1945. Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Destruction in the Netherlands (Rotterdam, 14 May 1940) Image In May 1940, air raids and bombing sorties carried out by the Luftwaffe destroy a large part of Rotterdam’s Old Town. Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Cartoon by Szewczuk on the shortage of supplies in Germany (1946) Image ‘The calorie mirage.’ In 1946, the cartoonist, Mirko Szewczuk, illustrates the difficult situation with regard to food in post-war Germany. Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Germany at the end of the Second World War: the destruction in Dresden (1946) Image View of the destruction caused in the City of Dresden following the Allied bombings at the end of the Second World War.
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email The post-war European idea and the first European movements (1945–1949) — Introduction Text
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email The post-war European idea and the first European movements (1945–1949) — Full text Text
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Buchenwald concentration camp (Germany, 16 April 1945) Image Three prisoners of Russian, Polish and Dutch origin, ‘survivors’ of the Buchenwald Nazi concentration camp in April 1945.
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Destruction in the Netherlands (Rotterdam, 14 May 1940) Image In May 1940, air raids and bombing sorties carried out by the Luftwaffe destroy a large part of Rotterdam’s Old Town.
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Cartoon by Szewczuk on the shortage of supplies in Germany (1946) Image ‘The calorie mirage.’ In 1946, the cartoonist, Mirko Szewczuk, illustrates the difficult situation with regard to food in post-war Germany.
Consult Share Twitter Facebook Email Germany at the end of the Second World War: the destruction in Dresden (1946) Image View of the destruction caused in the City of Dresden following the Allied bombings at the end of the Second World War.