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  1. The destruction of Warsaw was Nazi Germany's razing of the city in late 1944, after the 1944 Warsaw Uprising of the Polish resistance. The uprising infuriated German leaders, who decided to destroy the city in retaliation. The razing of the city had long been planned.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pabst_PlanPabst Plan - Wikipedia

    Named after its creator Friedrich Pabst, the Nazis' "Chief Architect for Warsaw", the plan assumed that Warsaw, the historical capital of Poland and a city of 1.5 million inhabitants, would be completely destroyed and rebuilt as a small German town of not more than 130,000 inhabitants.

  3. Destrucción de Varsovia. La destrucción de Varsovia fue la destrucción planificada y sistemática de la ciudad por parte de la Alemania Nazi ocurrido tras el Alzamiento de Varsovia de 1944. El fallido alzamiento contra las autoridades nazis de la ciudad enfureció enormemente a las altas cúpulas alemanas, las cuales decidieron hacer de la ...

  4. During the course of the war, approximately 85% of the city was destroyed due to German mass bombings, heavy artillery fire, and a planned demolition campaign. [1] Warsaw after German bombardment in September 1939.

  5. The planned destruction of Warsaw had been on the cards before German tanks and troops rolled over the border into Poland at the start of September 1939. Three months before the invasion, a plan to replace the Polish capital with a small German town had caught the eye of Adolf Hitler.

  6. On 9 August, Stalin informed Premier Mikołajczyk that the Soviets had originally planned to be in Warsaw by 6 August, but a counter-attack by four Panzer divisions had thwarted their attempts to reach the city. By 10 August, the Germans had enveloped and inflicted heavy casualties on the Soviet 2nd Tank Army at Wołomin.