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Richard Schlemm
Lutwaffe
Europe Winter
Infantry Division
WWII
Did D80028
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Contiene una action figure, drop box in metallo e tanti accessori.
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Schlemm comes dressed in leather jump boots, Luftwaffe trousers and tunic, long sleeve shirt, tie, and Luftwaffe M43 field cap. Accessories include: MP40 SMG w/removable magazine and folding stock, clip on MP40 adjustable sling, field gloves, full length sheepskin lined jacket, sheepskin field cap with fold down flaps, brown leather belt, and actual metal equipment drop cannister.
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During World War II the Luftwaffe raised a variety of Fallschirmjäger units.
These infantrymen were part of the air force rather than the regular army.
Starting from a small collection of Fallschirmjäger battalions at the beginning
of the war, the Luftwaffe built up a division-sized unit of three Fallschirmjäger
regiments plus supporting arms and air assets, known as the 7th Air Division.
Later in the war the 7th Air Division's Fallschirmjäger assets were reorganized
and used as the core of a new series of elite Luftwaffe infantry divisions. These
formations were organized and equipped as motorized infantry divisions, and
often played a fire brigade role on the western front. Their constituents were
often encountered on the battlefield as ad hoc battle groups detached from
a division or organized from miscellaneous available assets.
After mid-1944 Fallschirmjäger troops were no longer trained as parachutists due
to the realities of the strategic situation, but they still retained the Fallschirmjäger
honorific. Near the end of the war the series of new Fallschirmjäger divisions
extended to over a dozen, with a concomitant reduction in quality in the
higher-numbered units of the series.
Fallschirmjäger participated in many famous battles, including the airborne
seizure of Fort Eben-Emael and airdrops in Norway in 1940, and the defense
of Carentan during Division. the Battle of Normandy in 1944. Their most famous
airdrop was in the Battle of Crete in 1941, where the entire 7th Air
Division division was deployed along with other assets such as the German
22nd Air Landing During the Battle of Monte Cassino, the 1st Fallschirmjäger
Division, operating as ordinary infantry, held out for months against repeated
assaults and heavy bombardment and earned the nickname "Green Devils"
by the Allied forces for their tenacious defense, though they were finally forced
out of the position by Polish and French Morrocan forces.
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125,00
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