מכירה פומבית 83 "No Surrender to Coronavirus" Militaria Autograph Auction
Alexander Historical Auctions LLC
9.6.20
98 Bohemia Ave., St. 2, Chesapeake City, MD 21915, ארצות הברית
A "No Surrender to Coronavirus" auction of some of the most important surrender documents of World War II ever seen, with a major share of the proceeds dedicated to four international Coronavirus charities. Included is a historic document that directly led to the surrender of Nazi Germany, and whose "mate" resides in the National Archives. The sale also offers the British order to surrender Hong Kong, the Japanese surrender of Hong Kong, the British surrender of Java, historic German surrender documents, and much more.
המכירה הסתיימה

פריט 15:

THE BEGINNING OF THE END: MONTGOMERY ISSUES GERMANS A PASS THROUGH THE LINES TO NEGOTIATE THE SURRENDER OF THEIR ...

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  לפריט הקודם
לפריט הבא 
נמכר ב: $1,700
מחיר פתיחה:
$ 1,000
הערכה :
$2,000 - $3,000
עמלת בית המכירות: 30% למידע נוסף
מע"מ: 8.875% על מחיר הפריט, אין מע"מ על העמלה
משתמשים ממדינות אחרות עשויים לקבל פטור ממע"מ בהתאם לחוקי המס המתאימים
תגיות:

THE BEGINNING OF THE END: MONTGOMERY ISSUES GERMANS A PASS THROUGH THE LINES TO NEGOTIATE THE SURRENDER OF THEIR ARMIES IN NORTHERN EUROPE
A truly critical historic document issued by British Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery to two German military officers and peace emissaries, allowing them to safely pass through the British lines in order to bring surrender demands to the new German president, Grossadmiral Karl Donitz. Montgomery's one-page, 6 x 8 inch letter is written on his "Headquarters 21 Army Group" letterhead from Luneberg Heath, Saxony on May 3, 1945. It reads, in part: "The following German Officers are authorised by me to pass through the British lines without molestation : - General-Admiral Von Friedeburg Major IG Friedl�" One fold, soiled a bit at margins as one would expect, otherwise very good. On May 3, 1945 a German delegation consisting of Kriegsmarine C-in-C Hans-Georg von Friedeburg, Gen. Eberhard Kinzel, chief of staff of the northwest German army, his staff officer Major Hans Freidl, and OKW representative Col. Fritz Poleck arrived at Montgomery's headquarters to discuss peace terms on orders of President Admiral Karl Donitz. D�nitz hoped that protracted partial and local surrender negotiations might buy time for troops and refugees in the east to escape capture by the vengeful Red Army. Montgomery initially refused to meet the men, but later spoke to the group and demanded the unconditional surrender of all forces on his northern and western flanks. The Germans stated that they did not have the authority to accept the terms, but the parties agreed they could return to their headquarters to obtain permission for such a surrender from Donitz. The letter offered here was issued at that time to safely expedite their passage through the lines to and from their meeting with Donitz. The negotiations were then continued with Montgomery the next day. A reporter present quoted Montgomery: "If you do not agree to Point 1, the surrender, then I will go on with the war and I will be delighted to do so." Monty added, as an after-thought, "All your soldiers and civilians may be killed." On May 4, 1945 the Germans surrendered: "�all German armed forces in HOLLAND, in northwest GERMANY including the FRISIAN ISLANDS and HELIGOLAND and all other islands. In SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN and in DENMARK, to the C-in-C. 21 Army Group�" A most important historic document. Photo for illustrative purposes only and not included.

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