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Revision as of 19:59, 30 August 2018 editHolly Cheng (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators116,583 edits GA icon← Previous edit Revision as of 07:36, 31 August 2018 edit undoThe Rambling Man (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, IP block exemptions, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers, Template editors286,429 edits Major landmarks, damaged or destroyed: dashNext edit →
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==Major landmarks, damaged or destroyed== ==Major landmarks, damaged or destroyed==
Targets destroyed by German bombing included: Targets destroyed by German bombing included:
*Farna Church, built in the 13th-14th centuries<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/> *Farna Church, built in the 13th–14th centuries<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/>
*A mid-19th-century synagogue<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/> *A mid-19th-century synagogue<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/>
*The Augustinian cloister<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/> *The Augustinian cloister<ref name=":3" /><ref name="Ol18"/>

Revision as of 07:36, 31 August 2018

Bombing of Wieluń
Part of the Invasion of Poland

Wieluń town center after German Luftwaffe bombing on 1 September 1939
Date1 September 1939
LocationWieluń, Poland
Result German victory
Belligerents
Second Polish Republic Poland Nazi Germany Germany
Commanders and leaders
none Walter Sigel
Friedrich-Karl Freiherr von Dalwigk zu Lichtenfels
Oskar Dinort
Units involved
none Luftwaffe
Strength
none several dozens of bombers, mostly Junkers Ju 87B
Casualties and losses
at least 127 civilian casualties none
Bombing of Wieluń is located in PolandWieluńWieluńWarsawWarsawKrakówKrakówPoznańPoznańclass=notpageimage|
Location of Wieluń
(map before 1939 invasion of Poland)

The bombing of Wieluń comprised air raids on the Polish town of Wieluń by Germany's Luftwaffe (air force) on 1 September 1939. The Luftwaffe began bombing Wieluń in the early morning on the first day of World War II. The bombing has been described by several historians as the first act of World War II, but this claim, and the precise time the town was bombed, have been disputed by other historians. Regardless of the precise time, the air raids on the town were among the first aerial bombings of the war.

The city had neither air defenses nor any apparent military targets. Historians still debate the rationale behind the bombing, which took place over several hours and involved at least three bomber waves. The Luftwaffe bombed such nearby towns as Działoszyn, Radomsko, and Sulejów, which also had no military targets.

The Wieluń bombing destroyed at least 70 percent of the town's buildings (as much as 90 percent, in the city center). There were at least 127 civilian casualties – possibly "several hundred" – but the exact number remains unknown. The attack on Wieluń has been described as the first war crime committed by Germany in World War II.

Timing

The exact time the first bombs fell on Wieluń on the morning of 1 September 1939 has been a subject of debate, particularly in reference to claims that the town's bombing was the first overt act of World War II, preceding by five minutes the shelling of Westerplatte at 04:45, which has traditionally been considered the opening of the war.

The time given by most Polish sources is 04:40, but this is an average of eyewitness reports on various phases of the initial bombing run, which likely lasted more than a minute. Polish historian Tadeusz Olejnik reports a number of accounts of the first bombs falling as early as 04:30. Another Polish historian, Jan Książek, described 04:40 as a "certainly confirmed" time.

German sources report the time as 05:40, based on German flight documents (Startzeit: 5.02, Angriffzeit: 5.40, Landzeit: 06.05: take-off 05:02, attack 05:40, landing 06:05). The time difference, 04:40 versus 05:40, has been attributed by several writers, such as journalist Joachim Trenkner [pl], to a summer time-difference between Poland and Germany. Other historians, such as Grzegorz Bębnik, disagree that there was a time difference and give the attack time as 05:40; he also cites an eyewitness account giving the attack time as "shortly before 6 a.m." and notes that the eyewitness testimonies are likely unreliable as they were collected in 1961, two years after a commemorative plaque was put up in the town, giving the time as 04:40. He concludes the eyewitnesses were likely influenced by the plaque, which "corrected" their memories. In 2004 the Polish Institute of National Remembrance stated that there was no time difference between Poland and Germany and gave the time of initial bombing as 05:40.

Even if the time 04:40 was to be correct, several historians identify the first (aerial) action of the war as the bombing of the key Tczew bridge in the Pomeranian Corridor by bombers from Sturzkampfgeschwader 1 around 04:30.

Events

Aerial view of part of the city on 1st September

On 1 September 1939, 29 Junkers Ju 87B Stukas of I Division Sturzkampfgeschwader 76 of Sturzkampfgeschwader 3 (I/StG 77), under command of Captain (Hauptmann) Walter Sigel, took off from Nieder-Ellguth airfield. Half an hour later they reached Wieluń unopposed and dropped 29 500-kilogram bombs and 112 50-kilogram bombs. One of the first places hit was the hospital, which likely had Red Cross markings; 32 persons in the hospital were killed. After the hospital began burning, German pilots strafed patients trying to escape the building. Within the hour all 29 aircraft landed back at Nieder-Ellguth, where Sigel reported "no noteworthy observation of the enemy." German pilots reported "blue skies" during the attack and gave detailed descriptions of buildings bombed. After the initial attack, German pilots reported no enemy presence in Wieluń. Two Dornier Do 17 reconnaissance planes that had surveyed the area between 04:50 and 05:02 for Polish military units, reported locating several, the nearest to the town being in a forest 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) southwest of Wieluń.

Several more waves bombed the town; sources vary as to the number. One of the latter waves, described by Piątkowski as the second, of Stuka bombers of Sturzkampfgeschwader 77, was commanded by Captain Friedrich-Karl Freiherr von Dalwigk zu Lichtenfels. Książek describes the second wave, which bombed the town at 05:08 (or 06:08, according to the IPN, which does not name its commander, only the unit: I/StG 77), as being commanded by Captain von Schönborn, likewise of Sturzkampfgeschwader 77.

At 13:00 hours (or 14:00) a third wave of 29 Stukas of Sturzkampfgeschwader 2, commanded by Major Oskar Dinort from Nieder-Ellguth, struck Wieluń. However, Bębnik writes that the third wave, commanded by Major Dinort, bombed the town around 08:00 and 09:00 a.m. This was followed by a fourth wave about 14:00 hours, commanded by Günter Schwartzkopff, of 60 Ju 87 Stukas of I./Sturzkampfgeschwader 77. Based on German documents, Bębnik concludes that three morning waves and one lighter, afternoon wave of bombing can be confirmed.

The city was bombed with extreme precision, from low altitude due to the absence of air defenses. After the bombing, German fighters strafed fleeing civilians. The town was captured by the German Army on the first day of the invasion.

In all, 380 bombs totaling 46,000 kilograms were dropped on the town, hitting the hospital and destroying 70% of the town's buildings, including as much as 90% in the city center. Other estimates have suggested 75% of buildings destroyed. Casualty estimates vary substantially, as an accurate casualty count does not exist since no comprehensive analysis of damage was carried out until after the war. Norman Davies, who cited the number of "1,290 townspeople killed", called the casualty rate "more than twice as high as Guernica's or Coventry's". Jan Piątkowski gives the number of confirmed casualties as 127 and writes that the estimate of some 1,200, common in older research, is incorrect as it represents the number of fatalities in all of Wieluń County. A similar conclusion was reached in a 2004 Institute of National Remembrance report, which stated that, while the number of casualties was likely in the range of "several hundred", there are insufficient sources to arrive at a conclusive number, and only 127 have been identified beyond all doubt.

Purpose

Piątkowski writes that some historians, such as Grzegorz Bębnik and Marius Emmerling [pl], describe the bombings as having resulted from faulty reconnaissance or intelligence. German historian Rolf-Dieter Müller writes that, while the town might not have contained military targets, German pilots bombed it due to poor visibility, assuming there were military targets present. Several accounts state that the German command had received reports of the possible presence of Polish cavalry of the Wołyń Cavalry Brigade in the town's vicinity, and at least one German pilot described the bombing of cavalry targets in the town itself. However, other German pilots had reported no military targets present. German historian Jochen Böhler writes that the first operational report by Sturzkampfgeschwader 76 stated there had been "no enemy sightings", a finding corroborated by Poland's Institute of National Remembrance, which concluded there were no Polish military targets or units in the city or vicinity on 1 September or the preceding day—as had already earlier been stated as well by a number of historians.

Most historians agree that the town contained no targets of military value. Historian Timothy Snyder suggests that the civilian population itself may have been the primary target: "The Germans had chosen a locality bereft of military significance as the site of a lethal experiment. Could a modern air force terrorize a civilian population by deliberate bombing?" This view has also been supported by Polish historians Tadeusz Olejnik and Bogumił Rudawski. Another view of a number of historians is that the destruction of the town infrastructure may have been the raids' aim, in order to test the tactics and firepower of the Luftwaffe, in particular of the new Ju 87B bomber. Two weeks before the war began, Germany's Chief of the General Staff Franz Halder mentioned in his war diary a plan called "Offensive Operation Red in the Wieluń area". In the first days of the war, the Luftwaffe launched several further attacks in the area, including on the small towns of Działoszyn and Kamieńsk, and produced aerial photographs of the effectiveness of attacks on other towns.

Halder distinguished in his war diary between "terror attacks" and attacks on military targets. German historian Hans-Erich Volkmann notes that, for the German 10th Army, which was the critical military factor in this section of the front, Wieluń would have had no operational, let alone strategic, importance to justify its bombing. The commander responsible for the Luftwaffe, Wolfram von Richthofen, would have personally ordered the attack. Volkmann, like Böhler, observes that while Richthofen might not have intended it as a "terror attack", he had selected Wieluń as a target close to the border in order to test the capabilities and operational effectiveness of his dive bombers, if possible without losses to his own force. Volkmann characterizes the destruction of Wieluń as an attack on a non-military target and therefore as a war crime. Similar reasons for bombing a defenseless small town are given by historian Norman Davies for the bombing of Frampol two weeks later: "Frampol was chosen partly because it was completely defenceless, and partly because its baroque street plan presented a perfect geometric grid for calculations and measurements."

Piątkowski, analyzing the bombing from the perspective of aerial bombardment and international law, concludes that the bombing constituted a violation of a number of war norms, in particular relating to humanitarianism and proportional force. He also discusses the applicability of the term "terror bombing" in the light of a never-adopted 1923 draft convention (The Hague Rules of Air Warfare) that introduced the term. He concludes that, in order to describe the Wieluń raids as terror bombing, documents would have to prove that the real reason for the bombing was the terrorizing of the civilian populace and not a misidentification of military targets.

Major landmarks, damaged or destroyed

Targets destroyed by German bombing included:

  • Farna Church, built in the 13th–14th centuries
  • A mid-19th-century synagogue
  • The Augustinian cloister
  • One wing of the 19th-century Royal Castle
  • The All Saints Hospital, with a clear Red Cross roof sign, whose bombing killed 32 persons, including 26 patients
  • The 15th-century city walls, severely damaged
  • Over a dozen historic 18th- and early-19th-century houses

The city hall, with its 14th-century Kraków Gate, survived when a bomb got stuck in the city hall's roof and failed to explode.

German crimes

A number of civilians, mostly Jews, were shot by the Germans. Claus von Stauffenberg accused an officer who had ordered two mentally ill women shot. The officer was convicted but was pardoned.

Remembrance

The first scholarly study of the bombing was performed in 1961 by Barbara Bojarska, based on her interviews with 14 Polish witnesses.

The attack on Wieluń has been commemorated by several Polish Presidents. In 2004 President Aleksander Kwasniewski unveiled a monument to the city's fallen residents, saying that "here total war was waged, not distinguishing between civilians and military, with the aim of mass extermination." In 2009 President Lech Kaczynski visited, emphasizing that "Wieluń is a symbol of total war." In 2017 President Andrzej Duda visited and "remind the world that the war started in Poland, on Westerplatte, but that in the first days the highest losses were sustained by civilians, and that Nazi Germany committed atrocities in bombing innocent populations."

The bombing of Wieluń is part of an exhibit at the German Bundeswehr Military History Museum in Dresden.

Prosecution attempts

Two attempts, in 1978 and 1983, to prosecute individuals for the bombing of the Wieluń hospital were dismissed by West German judges when prosecutors stated that, in the morning fog, the pilots had been unable to make out the nature of the structure.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bębnik, Grzegorz (2009). "WIELUŃ, 1 WRZEŚNIA 1939 - fragment tekstu dr. Grzegorza Bębnika" [WIELUŃ, 1 WRZEŚNIA 1939 - fragment of the work of dr. Grzegorz Bębnik]. Pamięć.pl - portal edukacyjny IPN (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-05-16. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |dead-url= (help)
  2. ^ Davies, Norman (29 August 2009). "We must not forget the real causes of the war". The Independent. Retrieved 2010-02-25.
  3. ^ Rybczyński, Zbyszek (2017-09-01). "Czy wystawiać rachunek za Wieluń?" [Should We Issue an Invoice for Wieluń?]. Dziennik Łódzki (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-05-16.
  4. ^ "Oddziałowa Komisja w Łodzi. Śledztwa zakończone wydaniem postanowienia o umorzeniu. Śledztwo w sprawie zabójstwa przez lotników niemieckich w dniu 1 września 1939 roku, podczas bombardowania miasta, 32 pacjentów Szpitala w Wieluniu oraz kilkuset Polaków i Żydów, którzy zginęli w innych miejscach podczas bombardowania miasta, to jest o zbrodnię nazistowską stanowiącą zbrodnię wojenną (S 10.2004.Zn)" (in Polish). 2004.
  5. Kulesza, Witold (2004). ""Wieluń polska Guernica", Tadeusz Olejnik, Wieluń 2004 : [recenzja]" ["Wieluń Polish Guernica", Tadeusz Olejnik, Wieluń 2004 : ] (PDF). Rocznik Wieluński (in Polish). 4: 253–254.
  6. ^ Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. pp. 31–34. ISBN 9788391378861.
  7. ^ Książek, Jan (2005). "Cel zniszczony, z dzienników wojennych Waltera Siegla i Kurta Hartmana" [Target destroyed, from the war diaries of Walter Siegel and Kurt Hartmann] (PDF). Siódma Prowincja (in Polish). 3–4: 44–47.
  8. ^ Piątkowski, Mateusz Jan (2013). "Wieluń – 1 IX 1939 r. Bombardowanie miasta a międzynarodowe prawo konfliktów zbrojnych". WOJSKOWY PRZEGLĄD PRAWNICZY (2): 21–52. ISSN 0137-7272. PDF
  9. Steve Zaloga; W. Victor Madej (31 December 1990). The Polish Campaign, 1939. Hippocrene Books. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-87052-013-6.
  10. John Weal (20 October 2012). Bf 109D/E Aces 1939–41. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 4–7. ISBN 978-1-78200-526-1.
  11. Lexikon der Wehrmacht, Sturzkampfgeschwader 76
  12. ^ Trenkner, Joachim (1 September 2009). "Ziel vernichtet" [Target destroyed]. Die Zeit (in German). 2003 (7). Hamburg. Retrieved 4 June 2010.
  13. Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. pp. 20–21. ISBN 9788391378861.
  14. Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. p. 19. ISBN 9788391378861.
  15. ^ Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. pp. 16–17. ISBN 9788391378861.
  16. Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. p. 33. ISBN 9788391378861.
  17. ^ Sylwia Słomińska, Z dziejów dawnego Wielunia: Wieluń, 1 września 1939 r., Uniwersytet Lodzki
  18. ^ Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. p. 30. ISBN 9788391378861.
  19. ^ Pete that r C. Smith (2007). Ju 87 Stuka Volume One: Luftwaffe Ju 87 Dive-bomber Units 1939-1941. Classic Publications. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-903223-69-7.
  20. Chris McNab (20 November 2012). Hitler’s Eagles: The Luftwaffe 1933–45. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 262–. ISBN 978-1-78200-311-3.
  21. Rolf-Dieter Müller: Der Bombenkrieg 1939–1945 , Ch. Links Verlag , Berlin 2004, ISBN 978-3-86153-317-7 , S. 54; Horst Boog: Bombenkriegslegenden , in: Militärgeschichtliche Beiträge 9/1995, S. 22.
  22. Mike Guardia (20 July 2014). Junkers Ju 87 Stuka. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 50–. ISBN 978-1-4728-0121-0.
  23. Richard Hargreaves (2008). Blitzkrieg Unleashed: The German Invasion of Poland, 1939. Stackpole Books. pp. 116–. ISBN 978-0-8117-0724-4.
  24. ^ Jochen Böhler: Die Zerstörung der Nachbarschaft – Die Anfänge des Vernichtungskrieges in Polen 1939. In: Mike Schmeitzner, Katarzyna Stokłosa: Partner oder Kontrahenten? Deutsch-polnische Nachbarschaft im Jahrhundert der Diktaturen. Mittel- und Ostmitteleuropastudien Vol. 8, Lit Verlag, Berlin, 2008, ISBN 3-8258-1254-5, pp. 82 ff.
  25. Timothy Snyder (2 October 2012). Bloodlands: Europe between Hitler and Stalin. Basic Books. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-465-03297-6.
  26. ^ Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. pp. 27–28. ISBN 9788391378861.
  27. ^ Rudawski, Bogumił (2016). "Nalot bombowy na Wieluń 1 września 1939 r." [Bombing of Wieluń 1 September 1939]. Z Archiwum Instytutu Zachodniego (in Polish). 7: 1–10.
  28. Hans-Erich Volkmann, "Wolfram von Richthofen, die Zerstörung Wieluńs und das Kriegsvölkerrecht", Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift 70 (2011), pp. 287–328.
  29. Norman Davies (26 August 2008). No Simple Victory: World War II in Europe, 1939-1945. Penguin Publishing Group. p. 262. ISBN 978-1-4406-5112-0.
  30. ^ Tadeusz Olejnik (2004). Wieluń polska Guernica (in Polish). Biblioteka Wieluńskiego Towarzystwa Naukowego. p. 18. ISBN 9788391378861.
  31. Stukas über Wielun
  32. Łódź, Instytut Pamięci Narodowej -. "Ogólnopolskie obchody 78. rocznicy wybuchu II wojny światowej i Dnia Weterana – Wieluń, 1 września 2017". Instytut Pamięci Narodowej - Łódź (in Polish). Retrieved 2018-05-18.
  33. Kraenzle, Christina; Mayr, Maria (2016-12-10). The Changing Place of Europe in Global Memory Cultures: Usable Pasts and Futures. Springer. pp. 36–37. ISBN 9783319391526.
  34. Jolly, Philip (2010). Jewish Wielun - a Polish Shtetl. Philip Jolly. p. 501. ISBN 9781445287737.

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