Read Breakthrough (The Red Gambit Series) Online
Authors: Colin Gee
201 Korps
202 Korps
1
Fallschirmjager Division.
[201 Kps]
5 Gebirgsjager Division
. [201 Kps]
1 [Austrian] Bundes Division [201 Kps]
90 Grenadiere Division
[202 Kps]
162
Infanterie Division
[202 Kps]
334 Infanterie Division
[202 Kps]
504 Panzer Abtl
eilung.
129 Panzer Abtl
eilung.
15 [Mot
orised
] Infanterie Reg
imen
t
67 P
a
nz
er-
Gren
adiere
Reg
imen
t.
289 Grenadiere Reg
imen
t
.
17 Nebelwerfer
Regiment.
56 Nebelwerfer
Regiment.
Artillerie Gruppe Italia.
Bundes [Austrian] Alpenjager Brigaden
Rosignoli, Guido
The Allied Forces in
Italy
1943-45
ISBN 0-7153-92123
Kleinfeld & Tambs, Gerald R & Lewis A
Hitler’s Spanish Legion - The Blue Division in
Russia
ISBN 0-9767380-8-2
Delaforce, Patrick
The Black Bull - From
Normandy
to the Baltic with the 11th Armoured Division
ISBN 0-75370-350-5
Taprell-Dorling, H
Ribbons and Medals
SBN 0-540-07120-X
Pettibone, Charles D
The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II
Volume V - Book B,
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
ISBN 978-1-4269-
0281-9
Pettibone, Charles D
The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II
Volume V - Book A
,
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
ISBN 978-1-4269-2551-0
Pettibone, Charles D
The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II
Volume VI -
Italy
and
France
, Including the Neutral Conutries of
San Marino
,
Vatican City
[Holy See],
Andorra
and
Monaco
ISBN 978-1-4269-4633-2
Pettibone, Charles D
The Organisation and Order of Battle of Militaries in World War II
Volume II - The
British Commonwealth
ISBN
978-
1-4120-8567-5
Chamberlain & Doyle, Peter & Hilary L
Encyclopedia of German Tanks in World War Two
ISBN 0-85368-202-X
Chamberlain & Ellis, Peter & Chris
British and American T
anks of World War Two
ISBN
0-85368-033-7
Dollinger, Hans
The Decline and fall of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan
ISBN 0-517-013134
Zaloga & Grandsen, Steven J & James
Soviet Tanks and Combat Vehicles of World War Two
ISBN 0-85368-606-8
Hogg, Ian V
The Encyclopedia of Infantry Weapons of World War II
ISBN 0-85368-281-X
Hogg, Ian V
British & American Artillery of World War 2
ISBN 0-85368-242-9
Hogg, Ian V
German Artillery of World War Two
ISBN 0-88254-311-3
.30cal machine-gun | Standard |
.45 M1911 automatic | US |
.50 cal | Standard US heavy machine-gun. |
105mm Flak Gun | Next model up from the dreaded 88mm, these were sometimes pressed into a ground role in the final days. |
105mm LeFH | German light howitzer, highly efficient design that was exported all over |
128mm Pak 44 | German late war heavy anti-tank gun, also mounted on the JagdTiger and Maus. Long-range performance would have made this a superb tank killer but it only appeared in limited numbers. |
2" Mortar | British light mortar. |
39th Kingdom | See Kingdom39 |
50mm Pak 38 | German 50mm anti-tank gun introduced in 1941. Rapidly outclassed, it remained in service until the end of the war, life extended by upgrades in ammunition. |
6-pounder AT gun | British 57mm anti-tank gun, outclassed at the end of WW2, except when issued with HV ammunition. |
6x6 truck | Three axle, 6 wheel truck. |
Achilles | British version of the M-10 that carried the high velocity 17-pdr gun. |
Addendum F | Transfer of German captured equipment to Japanese to increase their firepower and reduce logistical strain on Soviets |
Alkonost | Creature from Russian folklore with the body of a bird and the head of a beautiful woman. |
Anschluss | The 1938 occupation and Annexation of Austria by |
Anthrax Bombs | Factual Japanese weapons, believed used against the Chinese by Unit 731. Both the |
Aquitania | Cunard liner that saw service in both WW1 and WW2. She was scrapped in 1950. |
BA64 | Soviet 4x4 light armoured car with two crew and a machine-gun. |
BAR | US |
Battle | Germany |
Bazooka | Generic name applied to a number of different anti-tank rocket launchers introduced into the US Army from 1942 onwards. |
Beaufighter, | British twin-engined long-range heavy fighter, saw extensive service in roles from ground attack, night fighter, to anti-shipping strikes. Also served in the USAAF in its night fighter role. |
BergePanther | German Panther tank converted or produced as a engineering recovery vehicle to service Panther Battalions in combat. |
Bletchley | Location of the centre for Allied code breaking during World War two. Sometimes known as Station X. |
Blighty | British slang term for |
Boyes | .55-inch anti-tank rifle employed by the British Army but phased out in favour of the PIAT. |
Brandenburghers | Rough German equivalent of commando, who were trained more in the arts of stealth and silent killing. |
Bren Gun | British standard issue light machine-gun. |
Browning Hi-Power | 9mm handgun with a 13 round magazine, used by armies on both sides during WW2. |
Buffalo | British term for the LVT or Amtrak, the amphibious tracked vehicle which became a mainstay of the Pacific War, and featured in all major Allied amphibious operations from |
Bund Deutsche Madel | The League of German Girls, young females’ organisation of the Nazi Party. |
C47 | US |
Camel | US |
Caudillo | Political-military leader, in this case, referring to Franco. |
Cavalry | The German army had cavalry until the end, all be it in small numbers. The SS had two such divisions, the 8th and 22nd. |
Chekist | Soviet term used to describe a member of the State Security apparatus, often not intended to be complimentary. |
Chesterfield | American cigarette brand. |
Chickamauga | A battle in the American Civil War, fought on 19th to 20th September, 1863. It was a Union defeat of some note, and second only to |
Colibri | High-class men's accessories producer, initially specialising in cigarette lighters. |
Colloque Biarritz | The fourth symposium based at the Château du Haut-Kœnigsbourg. |
Combat Command [CC] | Formation similar to an RCT, which was formed from all-arms elements within a US Armored Division, the normal dispositions being CC’A’, CC’B’ and CC’R’, the ‘R’ standing for reserve. |
Corvette | Small patrol and escort vessel used by Allied navies throughout WW2. |
Court of Bernadotte | The Court of the Swedish Royal Family. |
Deuxieme Bureau | France |
Douglas | Twin-engine |
DP-28 | Standard Soviet Degtyaryov light machine-gun with large top mounted disc magazine containing 47 rounds. |
Duke of | British battleship of the King George V class. Survived WW2 and was scrapped in 1957. |
Edelzwicker | Alsatian wine that is a blend of noble and standard grapes, and as a result is sometimes hit and miss, sometimes superb. |
Elektroboote | A Type XXI U-Boat |
Fallschirmjager | German Paratroops. They were the elite of the Luftwaffe, but few Paratroopers at the end of the war had ever seen a parachute. None the less, the ground divisions fought with a great deal of elan and gained an excellent combat reputation. |
Fat Man | Implosion-type Plutonium Bomb similar in operation to 'The Gadget'. |
FBI | Federal Bureau of Intelligence, which was also responsible for external security prior to the formation of the CIA. |
FFI | Forces Francaises de L’Interieur, or the French Forces of the Interior was the name applied to resistance fighters during the latter stages of WW2. Once |
FG42 | Fallschirmgewehr 42, a hybrid 7.62mm weapon which was intended to be both assault rifle and LMG. |
Firefly, Fairey | British single-engined carrier aircraft, used as both fighter and anti-submarine roles. |
Firefly, | British variant of the American M4 armed with a 17-pdr main gun, which offered the |
Fizzle | Failure of a nuclear device to properly explode, but which can result in radioactive product being distributed over a sizeable local area. |
Flak | Flieger Abwehr Kanone, anti-aircraft guns. |
Fuhrer-Begleit-Brigaden | German army armoured formation, formed from the Wehrmacht's Fuhrer Escort. Considered an elite formation, it was part of the Grossdeutschland detachments. |
Gamayun | Creature from Russian folklore with the body of a large bird and the head of a beautiful woman. |
GAVCA | Grupo de Aviação de Caça [Portuguese] Translated literally means ‘fighter group’, the 1st GAVCA serving within the Brazilian Expediationary Force. |
GAZ | Gorkovsky Avtomobilny Zavod, Soviet producers of vehicles from light car through to heavy trucks. |
Gebirgsjager | German & Austrian |
Gestapo | GeheimeStaatsPolizei, the Secret Police of Nazi |
Gitanes Mais | French cigarette brand |
GKO | Gosudarstvennyj Komitet Oborony or State Security Committee, the group that held complete power of all matters within the |
Grease gun | US issue submachine-gun, designated the M3. Cheaper and more accurate than the Thompson. |
Green Devils | Nickname for the German Airborne troops, the Fallschirmjager. |
Groβdeutschland | Literally, 'Greater Germany', the elite Grossdeutschland Division was not an SS formation although it wore a cuff title on its right arm. |
GRU | Glavnoye Razvedyvatel'noye Upravleniye of Soviet Military Intelligence, fiercely independent of t |
Halifax | British four-engined heavy bomber |
Hapsburg | European monarchy that ruled Austro-Hungary amongst other European states. |
Harai Ritual | Harai or Harae are rituals for purifying and removing factors such as sin, uncleanliness and bad luck from objects, places, and people. |
Hauptmann | Equivalent of captain in the German army. |
Hellcat Tank-Destroyer, M18. | US |
Hero of the | The Gold Star award was highly thought of and awarded to Soviet soldiers for bravery, although the medal was often devalued by being given for political or nepotistic reasons. |
Hitler Youth [Hitler Jugend] | Young males’ organisation of the Nazi Party. |