When the Russians took back Stalingrad
Leningrad
During World War II, the most significant turning-points in the European Theater came during the years 1942 and 1943. On land, the Battle of Stalingrad (August 1942 to February 1943) proved that Germany had met its military match in the forces of the Soviet Union. At sea, the Battle of the Atlantic (climaxing in mid-1943) was won by the Western Allies, thereby securing supply-lines and ensuring the successful opening of a Second Front in the near future.
Usually the turning point is said to have been the Battle of Stalingrad (November 1942-February 1943), at least so far as the war against Germany is concerned. The Germans did still have sufficient strength remaining after Stalingrad to mount one last full-blooded offensive (Operation Citadelle) in the summer of 1943, in which they were defeated at the Battle of Kursk. After that the Soviets went over to the counter-offensive and were not stopped until they reached Berlin. In the Pacific the naval Battle of Midway is usually thought of as the turning point, though it took three more years to convince the Japanese they were beaten.
1941-1943 the germans were pushing towards russian in operation barbarossa, and they were also pushing further and further into france and they eventually took paris. in 1943 the russian operation failed the germans because of the T-34 tank the russians used .
There was no single event that can be called the turning point of World War II; the war was simply to large and involved to many people over a very large area to be able to pin down a single key event. Key battles include: Stalingrad El Alamein Battle of the Atlantic Midway Kursk Arnehim Battle of the Bulge Guadalcanal Normandy And many others...
The battle of Stalingrad. Michael Montagne Stalingrad was a turning point, allthough several battles on the eastern front can be regarded as turning points. The first one was the battle of Moscow (october 1941 - January 1942) then there was Stalingrad in 1942 and Kursk in 1943.
nothing absoultely nothing
Leningrad
Stalingrad
Major Soviet victories over Germany (and its allies) include: *Moscow (1941-42) *Stalingrad (1942-43. This battle is widely regarded as the key turning point on the Eastern Front). *Kursk (1943)
The major turning point in the Western Front occurred in two places in the same week. In Italy, Rome surrendered and the Italian Army was taken out of the war, June 4, 1944. In France, the D-Day invasion began on June 6, 1944, completing a cross-channel invasion that Hitler said could not be done. The major turning point in the East could be considered Stalingrad in the winter of 1942-43, or Kursk in the summer of 1943. After the huge German offensive toward Kursk failed, the German Army was never again capable of a major attack against the Soviets. The Eastern Front absorbed hundreds of thousands of German casualties in 1943.
Back from the Front - 1943 was released on: USA: 28 May 1943
The biggest defeat for the Germans came when they surrendered after losing the Battle of Stalingrad, February 2, 1943.
Three Russian Girls was created on 1943-12-30.
I would have to say their were 2 major events: the German surrender of the 6th army at the Battle of Stalingrad in Feb 1943. That was the great turning point of the war on the eastern front. The other would have to be the surrender of all German forces and the end of the war in May 1945.
The cast of At the Front - 1943 includes: John Ford as himself
Back from the Front was created in 1943.