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Q: What are 3 reasons that d day is more important than the battle of Stalingrad?
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Was it the battle of Leningrad or Stalingrad in World War 2?

.Both the siege of Leningrad (8 September 1941 - 27 January 1944) and the battle for Stalingrad (23 August 1942 - 2 February 1943) were events in WW2 . Leningrad is now know as Saint Petersburg and Stalingrad is now Volgograd .


Why was the battle of Stalingard so important?

During the Second World War, the Battle of Stalingrad (August 1942 to February 1943) was important for several reasons. First, it was a decisive defeat for the Germans -- their first decisive defeat on land in the entire war. Second, it demonstrated that, while they had more to learn, the Soviet military had become very nearly a match for their German opponents.


What were the 2 major battles of the allies?

When? If you are referring to World War II, the whole war was a series of major battles. Two of the battles were the Battle of the Bulge and the battle for Stalingrad but there were many, many more of equal importance.


What happened at the battle stalingrand?

The Battle of Stalingrad occured between August 23, 1942 through February 2, 1943 in Stalingrad, Russia. During the battle, the Nazis were defeated by the Solviets after a little more than 5 months.


Famous battle that claimed more than a million dead and wounded?

Modern battles? Kursk and Stalingrad.


What battle of the civil war was more important?

No battle was more important.


How could Germany win the Battle of Stalingrad?

There are 3 ways which the Germans could of won the Battle of Stalingrad. The 3 ways are;To have better battlefield conditions (could of done it earlier or later)Could of tried to get more logistic supplies to the city with air and tank reinforcements.Instead of Hitler splitting the army group into 2 smaller army groups, he should of sent all to Stalingrad or to the oil fields then to the city of Stalingrad.


What was the important battles of world war 2?

Atlantic:D-day invasion, Berlin, Stalingrad, Africa Pacific:Midway,Iwo Jima/Okinawa, Guadalcanal, Guam, Philippines


How many Soviets died in Stalingrad?

The Battle of Stalingrad was considered one of the deadliest engagements in the entire history of war. There were between 1.7 and 2 million people killed between August 23, 1942 and February 2, 1943.


What were the most important Allied Victories?

Some of the major victories for the Allies were: The Battle of Britain, which took place in Great Britain, where Luttwaffe bombed British airports, radar, powerplants, etc. Battle of Stalingrad, which took place in Volgograd, formerly known as Stalingrad. The Soviet Scorched Earch strategy took its toll on the German invaders. The battle alone resulted more Russian deaths than the USA suffered in the entire war. Stalingrad was Nazi Germany's furthest expansion. The Battle of Midway, which took place in the Pacific Ocean, were the Japanese Navy suffered one of its worst defeats. Midway was the turning point of the American-Japanese war in the Pacific Ocean. The fall of Berlin, which took place in Berlin, Germany, were the Red Army entered the Nazi capital city, and caused the end of Hitler and his conquest of Europe. The war in Europe was over!


saviet troops captured 80,000 germans in the battle of?

Battle of Stalingrad in around 1942-1943. They actually captured more Germans than 80,000 I think. I could be wrong so don't quote me on this :|


Who won The Battle of Stalingrad and why?

The Soviets won the Battle of Stalingrad. The Soviets won at Stalingrad. It took months and the Soviets probably lost as heavily or even worse than the Germans, but they could better afford the losses. In the end, the Soviets destroyed an entire Army Group at Stalingrad, over 250,000 Germans. More than 100,000 Germans were finally taken prisoner, and of those only about 6,000 ever got back to Germany, and not until the war had been over for ten years and Stalin was dead. This handful was returned in 1955.