- Source: Festung
Festung is a generic German word for a fortress. Although it is not in common usage in English, it is used in a number of historical contexts involving German speakers:
For historical fortresses in Austria, Germany or Switzerland
As part of the reasoning given by the German Army (Heer) for the slow progress of the Siege of Warsaw
For German WWII strongholds which were to be held at all costs, especially towards the end of the war:
Alpine Fortress or Alpenfestung
Atlantic wall or Festung Europa — a military propaganda term from the Second World War which referred to the areas of Continental Europe occupied by Nazi Germany.
Stalingrad (see Battle of Stalingrad)
Warsaw (Festung Warschau) see also the Warsaw Uprising
Poznań (Battle of Posen)
Kolobrzeg (Battle of Kolberg)
Piła (Festung Schneidemühl)
Wrocław (Festung Breslau)
Budapest (Battle of Budapest)
Kaliningrad (Festung Königsberg)
For entire countries such as Norway which were heavily fortified in World War II. See Festung Norwegen.
For proposed post war German enclaves (festungen, literally "strongholds") in places such as Brest and Trondheim (see Nordstern (city) § Atlantic Wall)
For planned national redoubts such as Switzerland's National Redoubt (Schweizer Alpenfestung).
See also
Die Festung, novel by Lothar-Günther Buchheim
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Benteng Ehrenbreitstein
- Benteng Kufstein
- Benteng Hohensalzburg
- Benteng Kecil (Terezín)
- Benteng Mainz
- Kastel Hohenwerfen
- Salzburg
- Daftar kastel di Austria
- Pengepungan Breslau
- Slavonski Brod
- Festung
- Festung Warschau
- Festung Norwegen
- Die Festung
- Ehrenbreitstein Fortress
- Königstein Fortress
- Battle of Stalingrad
- List of castles in Germany
- Fortress Europe
- Fortress Crete