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      • After World War I it became a centre of right-wing political ferment; it was the site of the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch, Adolf Hitler ’s attempted rising against the Bavarian government, and subsequent Nazi Party activities. It was the site for the signing of the 1938 Munich Agreement. In World War II it suffered heavily from Allied bombing.
      www.britannica.com › summary › Munich-Bavaria-Germany
  1. Munich was bombed by RAF Bomber Command and the United States Army Air Forces. There were seventy-four air raids on Munich, with 6,632 people killed and 15,800 wounded. Around 90% of the Altstadt (old city) was severely damaged due to the policy of carpet bombing (Flächenbombardement).

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  3. Munich Agreement, (September 30, 1938), settlement reached by Germany, Great Britain, France, and Italy that permitted German annexation of the Sudetenland, in western Czechoslovakia. Sudeten Germans marching in Karlsbad, Germany, April 1937.

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  4. The city was very heavily damaged by Allied bombing during World War II—the city was hit by 71 air raids over a period of six years. As the bombings continued, more and more people moved out. By May 1945, 337,000 people (41%) had left.

  5. During World War II, Munich was bombed heavily, and its historic centre almost completely destroyed by the Allies, before finally being occupied by the US in 1945. Modern Munich. The post-war period saw Munich completely and carefully rebuilt, preserving its original street grid and restoring many historic buildings.

  6. Dec 27, 2020 · The bombing of Munich (Luftangriffe auf München) took place mainly in the later stages of World War II. Munich was, and is, a significant German city, as much culturally as well as industrially. Augsburg, twenty miles to the west, was a main centre of diesel engine production (and still is today).

  7. www.smithsonianmag.com › travel › munich-at-850-84396578Munich at 850 | Smithsonian

    Munich suffered extensive damage during World War II—Allied air raids struck the city 71 times. After the war, it was meticulously rebuilt to look as much as possible as it did before...

  8. Munich from 1939 to 1948. It traces Munich’s connections to coal, food, and water. It chronicles and explains how disrupted connections reshaped the everyday lives of the city’s inhabitants. Munich presents a useful example to study warfare’s impacts on a city’s connections to natural resources. All cities depend on connections to

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