You can listen to this audiobook in formats: FLAC, MPEG4, WAV, OGG, MP3, WMA Lossless, WMA (compression TAR.Z, ZIP, CHM, EML, RAR, ISO, CBC)
Total pages original book: 304
Includes a PDF summary of 25 pages
Duration of the summary (audio): 18M6S (5 MB)
Description or summary of the audiobook: Never previously published in this format, documents once stamped ‘secret’ have been sourced from Britannia Royal Naval College’s Library. These include reports, maps and plans drawn up by serving Royal Navy Officers during and immediately after World War II. In late 1944, the German battleship Tirpitz was sunk by RAF Bomber Command. While it was the RAF that delivered the final coup de grâce, it was the Royal Navy, from 1942 to 1944, that had contained, crippled and neutralised the German battleship in a series of actions marked by innovation, boldness and bravery. From daring commando raids on the coast of France, to the use of midget submarines in the fjords of Norway and devastating aerial attacks by the Fleet Air Arm, the Royal Navy pursued Tirpitz to her eventual destruction. The foreword is by Admiral Sir Mark Stanhope, First Sea Lord and Chief of Naval Staff. The introduction, by Dr G H Bennett, expertly guides the reader through a level of detail that does not appear in post-war accounts, putting these actions in context.
Other categories, genre or collection: Military & Naval Ships, Military Engineering, World War 2 Books, Ships & Shipping, Maritime History, Military History