During World War II, the Germans implemented a brutal siege of Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) from September 1941 to January 1944, effectively cutting off the city from essential supplies. They blocked all land and water routes, preventing food and resources from reaching the civilian population. As a result, the residents faced extreme starvation, with rations dwindling to as little as 125 grams of bread per day, leading to widespread famine and suffering. The siege claimed the lives of an estimated one million civilians due to starvation, cold, and bombardment.
The Siege of Leningrad had its regions surrounded on all sides by the Finns and Germans. The Finns were in the northeastern sectors with the German Army Group North sieging the city from the South.
All of the answers are correct. Moscow, Leningrad, & Stalingrad
It is difficult to provide an exact number as there were multiple German armies involved in the battle of Leningrad. However, it is estimated that tens of thousands of Germans were captured during the course of the battle, which lasted for 872 days from September 1941 to January 1944.
The casualties during the Siege of Leningrad is estimatedat 1.5 million , both civilian and military .
The siege of Leningrad lasted from September 1941 to 1944. By the end of the siege, some 632,000 people are thought to have died with nearly 4,000 people from Leningrad starving to death on Christmas Day, 1941. The first German artillery shell fell on Leningrad on September 1st, 1941. The city, one of the primary targets of 'Operation Barbarossa', was expected "to fall like a leaf"
Leningrad is a Russian City. What happened was it was heavily sieged by the Germans in the second World War. It is believed that the siege killed 632,000 people.
The Germans attacked the city relentlessly.
Stalingrad was a Russian city (Leningrad) so the Russians defeatedd the Germans of course.
They were probably put in gas chambers or hung or even put to starve.
Stalingrad, Soviet Union
The Soviet Union started burning their factories, homes and fields because, Stalin ordered it to cities which were going to be occupied by the Nazi Germans. This can be proved at Leningrad, before the 871 day siege of Leningrad, some factories were destroyed because they thought at the time the Germans would of get to Leningrad. Leningrad was one of Germany's 5 main goals because, Leningrad had a main factory of which it produced T-28s and T-34s.
In WW2 the Germans got as far as Stalingrad in the south, and the Caucasus mountains, just north of Grozny. Leningrad was besieged in the north, & Moscow was not reached. Essentially Stalingrad was as far as the Germans got, at the end of 1942.
only stopped the germans from invading Moscow, leningrad, stalingrad and captured berlin in WWII
The Siege of Leningrad had its regions surrounded on all sides by the Finns and Germans. The Finns were in the northeastern sectors with the German Army Group North sieging the city from the South.
The Russian cities of Moscow, Leningrad and Stalingrad .
All of the answers are correct. Moscow, Leningrad, & Stalingrad
It is difficult to provide an exact number as there were multiple German armies involved in the battle of Leningrad. However, it is estimated that tens of thousands of Germans were captured during the course of the battle, which lasted for 872 days from September 1941 to January 1944.