ABSTRACT

In The Routledge Atlas of the Second World War, Martin Gilbert graphically charts the war’s political, military, economic and social history through 257 illuminating maps. The atlas covers all the major events from the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 to the defeat of Japan in August 1945.

Focusing on the human – and inhuman – aspects of the war, The Routledge Atlas of the Second World War includes examination of:

  • military, naval and air campaigns on all the war fronts
  • the war on land, at sea and in the air
  • the economic and social aspects of the war
  • the global nature of the war, in armed combat and in suffering
  • the impact of the war on civilians, both under occupation, and as deportees and refugees
  • the aftermath of the war: post-war political and national boundaries; war graves; and the human cost of the war on every continent.

This paperback edition includes several updates to existing maps, as well as ten new maps, specially drawn for this edition. The new maps include examinations of Japanese- American and African- American soldiers serving with the United States Army, British women special agents, Belgium at War, and the German occupation of the Channel Islands.

chapter Section 2|24 pages

Britain Alone and its Allies

chapter Section 3|12 pages

The Soviet Union Becomes an Allied Power

chapter Section 4|17 pages

Japan and The United States Enter the War

chapter Section 5|18 pages

The Unrelenting Struggle, 1942 and Beyond

chapter Section 6|23 pages

The Unarmed and the Civilians

chapter Section 7|24 pages

Total War

chapter Section 8|36 pages

Year of Decision: 1944

chapter Section 9|14 pages

The Defeat of Germany

chapter Section 10|18 pages

The Defeat of Japan

chapter Section 11|32 pages

Global War

chapter |23 pages

Aftermath

chapter

Epilogue