When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Port of Hamburg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Hamburg

    The Speicherstadt, one of Hamburg's architectural icons today, is a large wharf area of 350,000 m 2 floor area on the northern shore of the river, built in the 1880s as part of the free port and to cope with the growing quantity of goods stored in the port. Hamburg shipyards lost fleets twice after World War I and World War II.

  3. Outline of the Post-War New World Map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_the_Post-War...

    The Outline of the Post-War New World Map was a map completed before the attack on Pearl Harbor [1] and self-published on February 25, 1942 [2] by Maurice Gomberg of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It shows a proposed political division of the world after World War II in the event of an Allied victory in which the United States of America, the ...

  4. List of German naval ports during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_German_naval_ports...

    For major ports within Germany, a position of "Naval Superintendent" (Marineintendantur) served as the port commander and answered directly to the commanders of the Navy regions. Naval superintendent positions established during World War II included Bremen, Wilhelmshaven, Kiel, and Hamburg. The superintendent at Kiel also possessed a deputy ...

  5. Bombing of Hamburg in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Hamburg_in...

    As part of a sustained campaign of strategic bombing during World War II, the attack during the last week of July 1943, code named Operation Gomorrah, created one of the largest firestorms raised by the Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces in World War II, [2] killing an estimated 37,000 people in Hamburg, [3] wounding 180,000 more ...

  6. Naval regions and districts of the Kriegsmarine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_regions_and...

    Naval regions and districts were the official shore establishment of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II.The Kriegsmarine shore establishment was divided into four senior regional commands, who were in turn subordinated to the operational Navy Group commanders who commanded all sea and shore naval forces within a particular geographical region. [1]

  7. History of Hamburg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Hamburg

    Hamburg was the port for most Germans and Eastern Europeans to leave for the New World and became home to trading communities from all over the world (like a small Chinatown in Altona, Hamburg). In 1903, the world's first organised club for social and family nudism, Freilichtpark (Open-air Park) was opened in Hamburg. [33] It was located on a ...

  8. Kohlenschiffhafen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kohlenschiffhafen

    Map of Hamburg port in 1910, already showing the completed Kohlenschiffhafen near Köhlbrand (to the left). Another source reports its completion only around 1920. Kohlenschiffhafen (Coal ship harbour) is a harbour basin of the port of Hamburg, Germany, connected with the Norderelbe anabranch of River Elbe. It is located between the ...

  9. Hamburg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg

    Hamburg Eilbek after the 1943 bombing; today around 25% of Hamburg's buildings are from before the Second World War [27] Hamburg was a Gau within the administrative division of Nazi Germany from 1934 until 1945. During the Second World War, the Allied bombing of Hamburg devastated much of the city and the harbour.