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Browse All : Pictorial map and Military of France
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Author
Los Angeles Times
Note
Color map. Shows lines of attack, army bases, major cities, rivers, railroads, etc. Relief shown pictorially. Includes historical notes and text: "Six allied armies are driving ahead on a 400-mile line in what may develop into the last great offensive on the western front." .
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map, with views of horizon at upper panel and air attack in Germany. Shows major cities, buildings, roads, railroads, etc. Relief shown pictorially. Includes compass rose at lower left, historical notes and text :"Allied forces, as illustrated in Charles Owens's map, are driving at major German cities ..."
Author
[Los Angeles Times, Owens, Charles H.]
Note
Color map with detailed view of the shortest path to Berlin across the English Channel. Shows boundaries, major cities, battle fields, fortifications, canals, rivers, Hedgehog stronholds, battleships, war planes, etc. Includes views of battle fields on upper panel, notes and text.
Author
Los Angeles Times
Note
Color map, packed with information on invasion of France and allies activities. Published in Los Angeles Times. Date estimated. Shows boundaries, major cities, railroads, battle fields and distances. Relief shown pictorially. Includes notes and text:" With the Brittany Peninsula sealed of and left behind for mopping up, the fast-breading American take forces yesterday were swinging deep into the heart of France, turning the entire left flank of the German army ..."
Author
Callot, Jacques (1592-1635)
Note
These are a set of six prints illustrating the Siege of the Citadel of Saint Martin on the Isle de Re. Callot also engraved the Seige of La Rochelle at the same time, also in six prints with decorative borders (Lieure 655). Both are remarkable, but the Seige of Saint Martin view is extraordinary in its use of engraving line darkness to indicate depth of space, a technique that Callot pioneered. These famous battle scenes were drawn and etched by Callot as bird's-eye views and maps. Callot received commissions to commemorate these two spectacular battle scenes from Louis XIII in 1628. The Siege of La Rochelle and St. Martin on the L'Ile de Re took place between the French Royal forces of Louis XIII and the Huguenots of La Rochelle and the English forces of Charles I at St. Martin in the years 1625-1628. The Siege of Saint-Martin-de-Ré, occurred in the French isle of Ile de Ré around the fortress of the city of Saint-Martin-de-Ré, when Duke of Buckingham tried to occupy the island in 1627. After three months of combat and sieges however, Governor Toiras and a relief force of French ships and troops managed to repel the Duke of Buckingham, who was forced to withdraw in defeat. This encounter followed another defeat for Buckingham, the 1625 Cádiz Expedition, and is considered as the opening conflict of the Anglo-French War of 1627-1629, itself a part of the Thirty Years' War.
Author
[White, Harry D., United States. Army. Infantry Division, 79th.]
Note
Color pictorial map. Author names from signatures reproduced in cursive script inside lower right corner. Shows towns, river, and forests. Borders with large letters: Pont-A-Mousson, Luxembourg, Liege, Tongeren, Maastricht, Erkelenz, Hoensbroek, Lintfort, Rhine, Dinslaken, Walsum, Hamborn, Gelsenkrocken, Essen, Mulheim, Bochum, Herne, Recklinghausen, Dorstend. Includes notes and 3 colored vignettes, showing the troops, and civilians carrying colored flags of European countries.
Author
[White, Harry D., United States. Army. Infantry Division, 79th.]
Note
Color pictorial map. Author names from signatures reproduced in cursive script inside lower right corner. Shows towns, river, forests, along the route of the U.S. Army 79th Infantry Division as it moved from a rest area southwest of Luneville, France, participating in the Allied "Race to the Rhine". Borders with large letters: Montigny, Harbouey, Hattigny, Nitting, Phalsbourg, Savern, Brumath, Batzedorf, Weyersheim, Hagenau, Bischwilied, Drusenheim, Soufflenheim, Nederoedern, Sessenheim, Schebenhardt, Berg, Hatten, Rittedshoffen, Pont-A-Mousson. Includes notes, and color vignettes showing wrecked armored vehicles, troops fighting house, road sign reading 'Welcome to Germany..." and a small colored illustration of a female singer, a clown juggler, and piano player.
Author
[White, Harry D., United States. Army. Infantry Division, 79th.]
Note
Color pictorial map. Author names from signatures reproduced in cursive script inside lower right corner. Shows towns, river, forests, along the route of the U.S. Army 79th Infantry Division as it moved from a 14 June 1944 landing on the Normandy shore near St. Mere Eglise. Inotes: "On 2130 on the darkest, rainiest Aug 19 on record." Borders with large letters: Camp Pickett, Camp Blanding Tennessee, Camp Forrest, California, Arizona Desert, Camp Phillips, Poe, England, Sainte Mere Eglise, Valognes, Cherbourg, La Haye Du Putts, Lessay, Avranches, Fougeres, Laal, Le Mans, La Mesle sur Sarthe, Nogent Le Roi, Mantes Gassicourt, Seine. Includes color vignettes showing troops and landing craft.
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