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    • Southern coast of Norway

      • On April 9, 1940, the German warship Karlsruhe sank off the southern coast of Norway after sustaining damage in a torpedo strike. For the next 80 years, the wreck’s location remained unknown.
      www.smithsonianmag.com › smart-news › german-world-war-two-shipwreck-discovered-norway-180975751
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  2. 2 Sep 1942 Germany. 200 British bombers attacked Karlsruhe, Germany, destroying many buildings and killing 73 civilians; 8 bombers were lost on this mission. ww2dbase [Bombing of Hamburg, Dresden, and Other Cities | Karlsruhe, Baden | CPC]

  3. Two German ships called Karlsruhe sank in the Baltic during World War II—one at the beginning of the war and one at the end. Remarkably, both were identified only this year. In September, the...

  4. Oct 23, 2020 · On April 13, 1945, Soviet planes sank the German steamer Karlsruhe in the Baltic Sea, killing almost 1,000 people. Now, divers say they’ve found the wreck—which could hold remnants of the famed...

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    In April 1945, the Karlsruhe sailed from Königsberg while carrying hundreds of tons of cargo and 1,083 passengers desperate to evacuate ahead of a Soviet military advance into Prussia and Poland. (The German civilian steamship Karlsruhe is not to be confused with the German cruiser Karlsruhe, sunk by a British torpedo in 1940 and discovered in earl...

    “Finding the German steamer and the crates with contents as yet unknown resting on the bottom of the Baltic Sea may be significant for the whole story,” Baltictech diver Tomasz Zwara said in the same statement to the press. (The divers named Tomasz, much like the ships named Karlsruhe, are not interchangeable.) The port from which the ill-fated Kar...

    In August 1944, British Lancaster bombers dropped incendiary bombs on Königsberg in a series of raids. Nearly half the city’s residential areas and most of its historic city center, including a medieval cathedral, were reduced to charred rubble. By the spring of 1945, Soviet artillery had also wrecked large parts of the already-battered port city. ...

    However, that’s really all the evidence there is to suggest the Karlsruhe’s 75-year-old sealed crates contain the priceless panels of the Amber Room: the panels haven’t turned up anywhere else yet, and the steamship would have been their last ride out of Königsberg. It’s not a lot to get excited about. Those crates really could contain anything: vi...

  5. Mar 2, 2021 · On 2 September 1942, the target for the night was Karlsruhe. The city was not at the top of the list of bombing targets, but the fact that it was a transport hub for rail and road and was an important Rhine port made it an attractive and acceptable target.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KarlsruheKarlsruhe - Wikipedia

    Much of the central area, including the palace, was reduced to rubble by Allied bombing during World War II, but was rebuilt after the war. Located in the American zone of the postwar Allied occupation , Karlsruhe was home to an American military base, established in 1945.

  7. Sep 9, 2020 · A British torpedo struck the “Karlsruhe” during the Nazis’ invasion of the Scandinavian country. Alex Fox. Correspondent. September 9, 2020. A sonar scan of the German warship Karlsruhe, which...

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