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Encyclopedia :
W :
WI :
WIN :
Winter Line |
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Winter LineThe Winter Line was a series of German military fortifications in Italy, constructed during World War II by Organisation Todt. It ran across Italy from just north of where the Garigliano River flows into the Tyrrhenian Sea in the west, through the Apennine Mountains to the mouth of the Sangro River on the Adriatic Sea in the east. The centre of the line, where it crossed the main route north (Highway 6), was based on the mountain Monte Cassino and the old abbey that sat atop it. The line was fortified withgun pits, concrete bunkers, turreted machine-gun emplacements, barbed-wire and minefields. It was the strongest of the German defensive lines south of Rome. The western part of the line, centred around Monte Cassino, was called the Gustav Line, and was protected by the Bernhardt Line a few miles to the south. Following the Allied invasion of Italy in September 1943, the The Allies' immediate objective was the liberation of Rome. The most The German forces were commanded by Field Marshal Albert Kesselring. The defence of the line itself was commanded by General Heinrich von Vietinghoff of the 10th Armee. The plan The plan called for the US Fifth Army to smash through the line at Monte Cassino and into the Liri Valley. It also called for amphibious landings (Operation Shingle) at Anzio, behind the Gustav Line, so as to bypass it and either draw troops away from the line or make a quick assault on Rome. The assaultIn January 1944 the Allied forces began to close on the Gustav Line. The new Supreme Commander, Mediterranean Theatre of Operations was the British General Sir Henry Maitland Wilson, replacing American General Dwight Eisenhower. The armies involved were the US Fifth Army, commanded by General Mark W. Clark, consisting of both US and British units, and the British Eighth Army now commanded by General Oliver Leese as General Bernard Montgomery had also been recalled to Britain to prepare for Normandy. The Fifth Army occupied the left (western) flank and the Eighth Army the right. Throughout January the U.S. 34th Division of the Fifth Army attempted to The Allied forces around Anzio came under constant and heavy counterattack by Kesselring, who realised that if he drove the Allies off the beach there he could reinforce the Gustav line. The Allies held their ground, but were unable to advance out of the beachheads. On May 11 the Allies renewed the frontal assault on the
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