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D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors

價格:免費

更新日期:2015-05-12

檔案大小:5.7M

目前版本:1.0

版本需求:Android 4.0 以上版本

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D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors(圖1)-速報App

This GPS guided audio tour of 74 locations with nearly 4 hours of audio, which highlights the British and Canadian sectors of Operation Overlord, the D-Day invasion. A second tour covers the American sections of the Normandy invasion, to the west.

D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors(圖2)-速報App

Explore on location on a driving or walking tour, or from the comfort of your home! This limited version features 5 locations.

D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors(圖3)-速報App

Get the full tour by downloading the itourmobile app at https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.itourmobile.app

D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors(圖4)-速報App

You may also subscribe at https://www.itourmobile.com/checkout/ to get access to more than 90 tours across the world!

D-Day: Commonwealth Sectors(圖5)-速報App

To protect its western front, Nazi Germany constructed a massive defensive line, the Atlantic Wall. The battle zone stretched from Norway all the way through to the Spanish border and was fortified with gun emplacements, machine-gun nests and anti-tank pillboxes all aimed at thwarting the soldiers progress up the beaches. There were miles of barbed wire fencing, over six million mines and an array of traps and obstructions designed to prevent craft from reaching the shore. Low lying river estuaries were kept flooded and deep underground command bunkers were constructed to coordinate operations.

The renowned commander of the North Afrika Corps, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, took charge of the Atlantic Wall in early 1944. He felt the defenses were inadequate and set about improving them even further. While addressing his generals about the possibility of invasion, Rommel said, "When they come, and they will come, it will be the longest day". Counter propaganda and deceptions had been spread to reinforce the belief that any invasion would come across the English Channel at Calais. However, the real battle plans were to land on five beaches in Normandy and create a beachhead from where the retaking of Western Europe could begin.