DK - World War II Map by Map

(Greg DeLong) #1

GERMANY PUSHES SOUTH 81


Ionian


Sea


Aegean


Sea


A d r i a t i c S e a


RO


MA N


IA


Y U G O S L A V I A G R E E C E


TU RK E Y


T
y
r
r
h
e
n
i a
n
S e
a

Gulf of

Taranto

Lake
Balaton

Drava

Sava

D

rin

a

Maritsa

Ti

sz

a

O
ltu
l

Is

ke

r

Jiu
l

Da

nu

be

Muresul

Crete

Paros

Khios

Lemnos

Thasos

Samothrace

Tinos

Euboea

Peloponnesus

Cerigo

Sicily

Malta

S


a

r

d

in

ia

Mount
Olympus

BULGARIA


HUNGARY


ALBANIA


ITALY


C
R
O
A
T
IA

G


R


EA


TE


R


G


ER


MA


NY
German
2nd Army

German
12th Army

British
W Force

Hungarian
3rd Army

German XLI
Panzer Corps

German XIV
Panzer Corps

German XL
Motorized Corps

Italian
2nd Army

Italian
9th Army

Italian
11th Army

German
Fliegerkorps

Greek
1st Army

Greek
2nd Army

Turnu-Severin

Alexandroupoli

Vibo Valentia

Stara Zagora

Salonika

Tirgu Mures
Bekescsaba

Kragujevac Alexandria

Banja
Luka

Dubrovnik

Ermoupoli

Klagenfurt

Krainitzi

Urba

Veszprem

Podgorica

Niksic

Timisoara

Polygyros

Kalamata

Monemvasia

Novi Sad

Peshkopi

Adrianople

Belgrade

Ljubljana

Chalcis

Karlovac

Subotica

Sarajevo

Palermo

Scutari

Razgrad

Maribor

Syracuse

Messina

Potenza Taranto Katerina

Ancona

Marsala

Catania

Salerno

Pescara

Cagliari

Valletta

Agrinio

Pristina

Brindisi

Zagreb

Corfu

Janina

Plovdiv

Mostar

Durazzo

Athens

Thebes

Thermopylae

Sibenik

Ragusa

Naples

Trieste

Larissa

Skopje

Pleven

Nafplio

Kavala

Krumovo
Belitza

Osijek

Foggia Tirana

Pirgos

Zara

Pitesti

Fiume Deta

Koritsa

Maleme Canea

Lecce

Monastir

Veles

Florina

Volos

Valona

Seres

Tuzla

Patras

Corinth

Megara

Arad

Graz

Sofia

Pecs Sibiu

Uzice

Valjevo

Pec

Nis

Piraeus

GREECE OVERRUN
APRIL 10–27, 1941
With the Germans threatening their rear from
Monastir, the British W Force began to withdraw
from the defensive Aliakmon Line on April 10, and
pulled back to Mount Olympus. Over the next
two weeks, the German forces pushed farther
south, driving a wedge between W Force and
the Greek 1st Army in Albania; by this time, the
Italians had also retaken their Albanian territories.
The Greek 1st Army surrendered on April 20.

3


Aliakmon Line

Axis advances
Apr 10–27

W Force position
Apr 16

British evacuation
routes Apr 22–28

Main evacuation ports

German paratrooper
assault May 25

THE BRITISH EVACUATION
APRIL 20–28, 1941
Facing the advancing German forces alone, the
British made plans to evacuate. W Force fell
back to Thermopylae, where its commander,
Lieutenant-General Henry Maitland Wilson,
planned to fight a rearguard action to protect the
withdrawing troops. Evacuations to Crete began
on April 22. Three days later, German paratroopers
landed at the Corinth Canal and crossed to Patras,
driving the last Allied forces from the Peloponnesus.

4


△ Athens falls
German soldiers ride a Stug III assault gun in
Athens, with the ruins of the Acropolis visible
in the background. The first German forces—
motorcycle troops—entered the city on April 27,
1941, and were followed by armor and infantry.

Apr 11–12 The Hungarian
Army overruns part of
northern Yugoslavia,
which is then annexed
by Hungary.

Apr 6 The German XIV
Panzer Corps invades
from Bulgaria; it reaches
Belgrade on April 12.

Apr 17 The Yugoslav
government is
evacuated to
Athens, before
moving to London.

Apr 25
German paratroopers
land in Corinth.

Apr 9 Trapped by the fall
of Salonika, the Greek 2nd
Army surrenders.

Apr 6–7 Piraeus is
virtually destroyed by
Luftwaffe bombing raids
and the explosion of
the British ammunition
ship Clan Fraser.

THE AXIS CAMPAIGN
IN THE BALKANS
Axis forces swiftly overwhelmed
Yugoslavia and Greece in April 1941.
The British were forced to retreat
to Crete, leaving the entire Balkans
in Axis hands.

APR 1, 1941 APR 15 MAY 1

1
2
3
4

TIMELINE

Axis territories, Apr 6, 1941 Axis armies

KEY
Allied armies

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