000 01151nam a22002298c 4500
001 1373389451
003 DE-101
005 20260407142326.0
007 tu
008 250808s2025 xxk||||| |||| 00||||eng
020 _a180399987X
020 _a9781803999876
035 _a(DE-599)DNB1373389451
040 _a1130
_bger
_cDE-101
_d9999
041 _aeng
050 1 4 _aD804.G47
_b.J46 2021
100 1 _81\p
_aJENNINGS, CHRISTIAN.
_eVerfasser
_4aut
245 1 0 _aANATOMY OF A MASSACRE
_bhow the ss got away with war crimes in italy
300 _a1 volume :
_billustrations (black and white)
_c20 cm
520 _aAt dawn on 12 August 1944, German SS troops arrived in the Tuscan mountain village of Sant'Anna di Stazzema. On arrival, they proceeded to murder up to 560 Italian civilians in the olive groves and chestnut woods of the small hamlet. The victims were women, the elderly, and more than eighty children. One was a baby barely three weeks old. It was the most high-profile massacre committed by the Germans in Italy - and yet, despite three separate war crimes investigations, the Sant'Anna killers escaped justice.
942 _cBK
_2nseq
999 _c26686
_d26686