2018 #5# Sète - Menton - Villefranche sur mer
Sète - Menton - St.Jean Cap Ferrat - Villefranche
France vs Italy: Who would win in a war? (2018)
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France vs Italy talks about a hypothetical modern day war between two said belligerents. It analyzes the positioning and number of their forces, as well as the geographical features that might come into play in such a conflict, before delivering a final verdict.
Music by Matija Malatestinic
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US soldiers walk through the ruins of Fort Manonviller in France during World War...HD Stock Footage
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US soldiers walk through the ruins of Fort Manonviller in France during World War II.
US infantrymen at Fort Manonviller in France during World War II. Soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 314th Infantry Regiment, 79th Division climb up a mountain. The soldiers walk through the ruins of the old fort. The soldiers outside the fort. A soldier with a handie-talkie walks through the ruins. Location: France. Date: October 12, 1944.
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CONFÉRENCE PRÉSENCE US NAVY 1948-1967 US SOUS-TITRÉE
« L’US Navy et la Côte d’Azur au temps de la Guerre Froide. Enjeux, formes et impacts de la marine américaine sur le littoral azuréen, de Théoule-sur-Mer à Menton (1948-1967).»
L'idée est de montrer les logiques des escales et de la base de Villefranche dans la stratégie globale de la VIe flotte en Méditerranée, les formes de la présence américaine qui en sont issues et leurs conséquences sur le territoire et la population.
Conférence de Nathalie Molines, doctorante en Histoire Contemporaine, pour l'association Les Américains et la 6e Flotte à Villefranche-sur-Mer dans le cadre du colloque Les gens de mer à Villefranche-sur-Mer le 25 Juin 2018 à l'occasion de la Journée internationale des gens de mer à l'auditorium de la Citadelle.
The US Navy and the French Riviera during the Cold War. Issues, Organization and Impact of the U.S. Navy on the coastline of the French Riviera, from Theoule-sur-Mer to Menton (1948-1967).
The idea is to show the rationale behind the ports of call and the Villefranche base in the overall strategy of the Sixth fleet in the Mediterranean, the structures of the American presence which stemmed from it and their consequences on the region and population.
Conference of Nathalie Molines for the non-profit association The Americans and the Sixth Fleet on the occasion of the International Seafarers Day - 25th June 2018 - Citadel of Villefranche-sur-Mer.
Aerial France 4of9 Hyeres to Menton DOCUMENTARY
French collaborators haircut Vichy France WW2 photos punishment after victory
The Vichy government, headed by Marshal Philippe Pétain and Pierre Laval, actively collaborated in the extermination of the European Jews. It also participated in Porajmos, the extermination of Roma people, and in the extermination of other undesirables. Vichy opened up a series of concentration camps in France where it interned Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, political opponents, etc. Directed by René Bousquet, the French police helped in the deportation of 76,000 Jews to the extermination camps. In 1995, President Jacques Chirac officially recognized the responsibility of the French state for the deportation of Jews during the war, in particular the more than 13,000 victims the Vel' d'Hiv Roundup of July 1942, during which Laval decided, of his own volition (and without being requested by the occupying German authorities), to deport children along with their parents. Only 2,500 of the deported Jews survived the war. The 1944 Battle of Marseille was another event during which the French police assisted the Gestapo in a massive raid, which included an urban reshaping plan involving the destruction of a whole neighbourhood in the popular Old Port. Some few collaborators were tried in the 1980s for crimes against humanity (Paul Touvier, etc.), while Maurice Papon, who had become after the war prefect of police of Paris (a function in which he illustrated himself during the 1961 Paris massacre) was convicted in 1998 for crimes against humanity. He had been Budget Minister under President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing. Other collaborators, such as Emile Dewoitine, managed to have important functions after the war (Dewoitine was eventually named head of Aérospatiale, the firm which created the Concorde plane). Debates concerning state collaboration remain, in 2008, very strong in France.
French workers at naval bases provided the Kriegsmarine with an essential workforce, thereby supporting Nazi Germany in the Battle of the Atlantic. By 1939, the Kriegsmarine's planning had presumed that they had time to build up resources before war started. When France fell and the ports of Brest, Lorient and St Nazaire became available, there were insufficient Germans to man these repair and maintenance facilities, so huge reliance was made on the French workforce. At the end of 1940, the Kriegsmarine requested 2,700 skilled workers from Wilhemshaven to work in bases on the Atlantic coast, but this was out of a total available workforce of only 3,300. This same request included 870 men skilled in machinery and engine building, but there were only 725 people with these skills in Wilhemshaven. This massive deficit was made up with French naval dockyard workers. In February 1941, the naval dockyard at Brest had only 470 German workers, compared with 6,349 French workers. In April 1941, French workers replaced defective superheater tubes on the Scharnhorst, carrying out the work slowly but, in the opinion of Scharnhorst's captain, to a better standard than could be obtained in the yards in Germany. An assessment commissioned by Vizeadmiral Walter Matthiae in October 1942 of the potential effect of withdrawal of French dockyard workers (considered possible after 32 French fatalities in an air raid at Keroman Submarine Base) stated that all repairs on the surface fleet would cease and U-boat repairs would be cut by 30 per cent. Admiral Darlan stated, on 30 September 1940, that it was useless to decline German requests for collaboration. In September 1942, Rear Admiral Germain Paul Jardel, commander of the French navy in the occupied zone stated We have a special interest in that the workers at our arsenals work, and that they work in the arsenals and not in Germany. From a practical point of view, French workers needed employment and could be conscripted to work in Germany (as happened to nearly a thousand of them). A small number objected to carrying out war work but the majority were found by the Germans to be willing and efficient workers.[26]
Légion des Volontaires fighting with the Axis on the Russian front.
The French volunteers would form the Legion of French Volunteers Against Bolshevism (LVF), Legion Imperiale, SS-Sturmbrigade Frankreich and finally in 1945 the 33rd Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS Charlemagne (1st French), which was among the final defenders of Berlin.
1898 French Naval Paired Sabre (Cutlass) Salute Exercise Drill
Filmed by Lumiere camera operator Alexandre Promio.
Date: February - 19 February 1898
Location: On the deck of the French Naval ship “The Formidable” (In Service From 1888 -1909) -Villefranche-sur-Mer – France
An Officer runs a group of inexperienced sailors through a paired formal sabre (cutlass) Salute exercise. This exercise was used as a warmup, and a exercise of handling a sword against another sword. In some ways, it is like a stylized choregraphed form or kata found in Asian martial arts. This is a description of this type of Salute Exercise from the Manuel d’Escrime (1887).
Salute
The salute precedes the assault and is performed in the following way:
1. Execute a face cut to the right while lunging
2. Return to the 1st position of the guard
3. Come on guard
4. Gather forward, while crossing sabres
5. Execute two changes of guard
6. Slip to the rear
7. Two appels
8. Salute to right and left, and gather forward
9. Come on guard
10. Invite an attack with these words: “To your honour!” and let them touch, then respond
“By obedience!” Lunge while delivering a flank cut (or thrust) and return to guard.
11. Salute to the right, while gathering to the rear
12. Salute in front of you.
Women aid in war effort and give help and support to French soldiers in France du...HD Stock Footage
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Women aid in war effort and give help and support to French soldiers in France during World War I.
French soldiers in France during World War 1. French women in a street. A girl pins up a medal onto a French soldier. Women knit as they sit around a table in a building. Line of French soldiers receive clothes from women working at a counter during a snow storm. A woman in a war manufacturing helmet factory works on a helmet. She weaves straps into the inside of a French Army helmet. She removes a pencil from her hair bun and writes out a note of support to the future recipient of the helmet, and then she tucks it under an inside flap of the completed helmet. Nuns outside a cinema hall hand out treats to soldiers and soldiers enter the movie hall. Women nurses and nuns care for young children and help them at a gathering where they receive flags and toys. Soldiers look on as a girl sings with an amputee. A man and woman couple walk together in a field. The woman helps the man put on and tighten an arm prosthesis, and then the man ably helps saw a log of wood. Women put flowers on French graves in a field. French soldiers sleep in a trench as one soldier stands watch. Location: France. Date: 1917.
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A German spy is executed by US Seventh Army in Kitzingen, Germany during World Wa...HD Stock Footage
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A German spy is executed by US Seventh Army in Kitzingen, Germany during World War II.
US 7th Army soldiers, gathered in the Florian-Geyer athletic ground at Kitzingen, Germany, during World War 2. Several US soldiers led by a field grade officer and an Army Chaplain, escort German spy, Richard Jarczyk, from the Provost Marshal's office. Jarczyk had confessed to sabotage and the killing of US soldiers, behind the lines. He is dressed in civilian clothes. An MP jeep is seen parked in front of a soccer net in background. Several buildings visible around the field. A firing squad of eight US soldiers stands in formation. Closeup of Jarczyk standing in front of a wooden post, with his hands tied behind him. The Chaplain appears to be listening to a statement from him. The field grade officer then ties a blindfold over Jarczyk's eyes. He is seen standing alone, in front of the post. Suddenly smoke arises from the pole and Jarczyk falls to the ground. Blood stain can be seen on the post. Officer confirms death by means of a stethoscope. A corpsman and another soldier place a white shroud around the body. Location: Kitzingen Germany. Date: April 23, 1945.
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Why was Italy so Ineffective in WWII? | Animated History
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Sources:
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, William L. Shirer
Fascist Italy’s Military Struggles from Africa and Western Europe to the Mediterranean and Soviet Union 1935-45, Frank Joseph
Hitler's Italian Allies: Royal Armed Forces, Fascist Regime, and the War of 1940-1943, MacGregor Knox
Music:
Trieste Josh Lippi & The Overtimers
Crisis - Scoring Action by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
Egmont Overture by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
Antonio Salieri, Twenty six variations on La Folia de Spagna
London Mozart Players
Matthias Bamert, as conductor
Liberation of French cities from German Nazi troops in World War II. HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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Liberation of French cities from German Nazi troops in World War II.
Marseilles: View of the French port. British, French and American Naval officers examine German demolition of the port town. Officers survey unfinished U-Boat pens. Toulon: Destroyed German ships in the harbor. Bologne: German coastal guns in ruins. Destroyed artillery. Le Havre: Destroyed buildings and ruins in the town. Unfinished German U-Boat pens. Destroyed artillery. Brest: Destroyed buildings and ruins. Soldiers amid the ruins. A white flag. American soldiers in the main square. Location: France. Date: 1944.
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Sept 1944 France w/ Allied Troops 221546-09 | Footage Farm
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[WWII - France w/ Allied Troops Greeted; POWs & Collaborationists; Italy & Churchill Arrival, 1944]
12:02:03 Title: Victory Is Everywhere - Churchill (also in arabic)
MS clapping smiling cheering boys & girls. Women kissing soldiers; putting US flag next to French flag on building. Others cheering.
12:02:26 German prisoners of war marched past. Woman Nazi collaborators past crowd; others lead off.
12:02:50 Abandoned German clothing salvaged by French civilians; smiling in CU.
12:03:06 Children w/ flowers, crowds line Chartres street; General De Gaulle & others cheered as they walk. Motorcade w/ De Gaulle past. Shot of De Gaulle & Koenig meeting General Eisenhower. Sitting, meeting, talking & smoking under canvas shade.
12:03:59 German prisoners off army truck. standing about in field. Some VERY young. US army trucks loaded w/ prisoners leaving.
12:04:21 Naval ship, heavy black smoke screen; large ships shelling shore. Landing craft heading to shore. White smoke screen. Troops off Landing Craft onto beach. POWs standing on road. Troops move inland. Camouflaged battleship (the Rodney ?) underway; shelling English Channel shore. American LSTs to shore. HMS Rodney rescues downed pilots in lifeboat.
12:06:29 Shelling shore seen from ship underway. Heavily smoking ship (?). Sunset.
12:07:01 MCU tanks passing, tracks seen in CU. In line along road; firing from field. POV crossing firled. Firing on town & destroying buildings. GOOD.
12:07:56 People & soldiers pinned down in street behind vehicle. GI firing machine gun from between jeeps. Woman collaborationist pushed across street. Men firing rifles at snipers. Troops w/ rifles march past burning building. GOOD.
12:08:21 Pan over large number of German prisoners. Prisoners removed from wreckage; one very drunk. Prisoners walked through town.
12:09:00 Flame throwing tanks advance past burning grass, brush; tanks & jeeps w/ Americans crossing Seine on pontoon bridge, civilians waving. Tank in town surrounded by townspeople.
12:09:50 French remove roadblock into Paris. March prisoners thru town past armored personnel carriers. Americans greeted, applauded, cheered. GI drinking from wine bottle. French flag raised to cheering.
12:10:26 Italy - Churchill in rear of open convertible raises arm in V-sign. Large field & British troops cheer Churchill arrival w/ 3 cheers. Churchill in sun glasses & w/ large cigar shakes hands; autographs shell 7 loaded into artillery. Cheered as he leaves. The End.
WWII 1944; Fighting; Battles; Rescues; Happy; Greetings;
2015 Lemon Festival Menton, FRANCE @ HOMG KONG & ITALY MARCHING BAND INTERFLOW(8)
Admiral Grigorovich goes home
In July 2005, a historic event took place in Menton on the Riviera, when ships of the Black Sea Fleet came to collect the ashes of Admiral Grigorovich.
US 1st Army conducts memorial ceremony, at site of first US cemetery, Omaha Beac...HD Stock Footage
CriticalPast is an archive of historic footage. The vintage footage in this video has been uploaded for research purposes, and is presented in unedited form. Some viewers may find some scenes or audio in this archival material to be unsettling or distressing. CriticalPast makes this media available for researchers and documentarians, and does not endorse or condone any behavior or message, implied or explicit, that is seen or heard in this video.
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US 1st Army conducts memorial ceremony, at site of first US cemetery, Omaha Beach, Normandy, France, in World War II
Memorial Ceremony (including Roman Catholic Mass) for fallen US troops,on June 10, 1944 during World War 2. The location is Omaha Beach, St. Laurent sur Mer, Normandy France, where the U.S. 1st Army established the first American military cemetery in France, during World War II. US troops line the area. An altar is set up on the hood of a jeep parked in the sand. An Army Colonel standing in rear of the jeep reads from a notebook. Soldiers all stand with heads bowed. Among them are African American soldiers of the 320th Battalion. A Chaplain's assistant sits at a keyboard instrument next to the jeep. A Roman Catholic Army Chaplain in white clerical robes conducts a mass. Numerous grave markers can be seen in the distant background. Several French civilians stand with the soldiers, who bow heads in prayer. The Chaplain administers holy communion to kneeling soldiers. A French civilian woman places flowers near recent temporary grave markers of US fallen (stakes bearing their dog tags). A color guard stands with American flag, as squad of riflemen fire gun salutes. Three French civilians stand by the flowers. US Army bugler blows taps. All present salute the fallen. Some indivual soldiers walk to the markers of their buddies. Location: Normandy France. Date: June 10, 1944.
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Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.
Golden Hour Menton
Photographer Ian Britton on photography in the Golden Hour
Villefranche-sur-mer, Côte d'Azur, France
Operation Dragoon, Autopsy of a Battle, the Liberation of the French Riviera
The author is always searching for photos, manuscripts and documents about Operation Dragoon: jean-loup@gassend.com
Book website:
On the night of August 14-15, 1944, the First Airborne Task Force, which included the U.S. 509th, 517th and 551st Parachute Infantry Regiments, jumped into enemy held territory spearheading Operation Dragoon, the Allied invasion of southern France. Based on interviews from all combatant units, battlefield archaeology, period photos, letters and reports, this book provides an outstandingly detailed hour-by-hour account of the advance through southern France, as seen through the eyes of those who lived through it, bringing to light the tragic and gruesome realities of what was later to become known as the Champagne Campaign.
Jean-Loup Gassend is a medical doctor specializing in forensics. Over the past ten years he has extensively explored the battlefields of the French Riviera, recovering many lost artifacts as well as the bodies of missing soldiers. Jean-Loup Gassend has French and Canadian citizenships, is fluent in both English and French, and has working knowledge of German, which enabled him to discover many previously unexplored sources for the writing of this book.
Locations covered by this book: Anthéor, Antibes, l'Authion, Bar sur Loup, Biot, le Broc, Callian, Cagnes sur Mer, Cannes, Col de Braus, Courmes, Draguignan, Estérel, Grasse, Hill 1098, Levens, Mandelieu la Napoule, Menton, Montauroux, Moulinet, Nice, Peira Cava, Plan du Var, Pont du Loup, Roquefort les Pins, la Roquette sur Var, Seillans, Sospel, St Cezaire sur Siagne, le Trayas, la Turbie, Vence, Villeneuve-Loubet.
Schiffer, 2014.
The author is always seeking for veterans, manuscripts, photos, information and documents about the First Airborne Task Force - 1st Aiborne Task Force and the following units ( contact: jean-loup@gassend.com ):
-First Special Service Force
-2nd Independent Parachute Brigade
-2nd Chemical Battalion
-3rd Ordinance Medium Maintenance Company
-4th Battalion Parachute Regiment
-5th Battalion (Scottish) Parachute Regiment
-6th Battalion (Welsh) Parachute Regiment
-40th Engineer Regiment
-46th Quartermaster Graves Registration Company
-48th Quartermaster Graves Registration Company
-51st Evacuation Hospital
-65th Infantry Regiment, Puerto Rican (Borinqueneers)
-83rd Chemical Battalion
-141st Infantry Regiment
-334th Quartermaster Airial Resupply
-460th Parachute Field Artillery Battalion
-463rd Parachute Field Artillery Battalion
-509th Parachute Infantry Regiment
-512th Signal Company
-517th Parachute Infantry Regiment
-550th Glider Infantry Battalion
-551st Parachute Infantry Battalion
-596th Parachute Combat Engineer Company
-638th Medical Clearing Company
-636th Tank Destroyer Battalion
-645th Tank Destroyer Battalion
-676th Medical Clearing Company
-887th Airborne Engineer Company
-LST-51
-LST-282
-Reserve Division 148
Book index:
Chapter 1: The Occupation of the Maritime Alps
Chapter 2: The French Resistance
Chapter 3: The Operation Dragoon Parachute Drops
Chapter 4: The Unintentional Parachute Drops in the Fayence and Montauroux Region
Reserve Division 148’s Reaction to the Invasion
La Roche in Fayence
The Recapture of the Fayence-Montauroux Area by the Americans
Office of Strategic Services Actions at la Roche
Chapter 5: Pathfinders and Forcemen in Tanneron
Chapter 6: The Landings in the Estérel Mountains and the Battles for la Napoule and Cannes
The Groupe Naval d’Assault de Corse
The Landing in the Anthéor Cove
The Sinking of Landing Ship Tank 282
The Attack of Hill 84 by the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion
The Capture of Hill 131 and of the Village of la Napoule
The 551st Parachute Infantry Battalion at Hill 105
Chapter 7: Resistance Activities in the Cannes Region
Chapter 8: The Capture of Saint Cézaire sur Siagne
Chapter 9: The Liberation of Grasse and its Region
Chapter 10: Crossing the Loup River at Villeneuve-Loubet and La Colle sur Loup
The Attack on Villeneuve-Loubet During the Night of August 25th to 26th
The German Soldiers of Reserve Grenadier Bataillon 372
Villeneuve-Loubet Battlefield Investigation: the Exhumation of the Mass Grave of German Soldiers
Grenadier Alois Wühr
The Bunker on the Route Nationale 7 at Villeneuve-Loubet Plage
Chapter 11: The Advance to the Var River
Chapter 12: The Battles for Levens and La Roquette sur Var
The 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment Attacks la Roquette sur Var
Chapter 13: The Resistance Rises up in Nice
The Ariane Massacre
The Death of Lieutenant Wilhelm Hansen
The Capture of Oberstleutnant Hans Niedlich
The Execution of Civilians in Menton
Chapter 14: In Resistance Controlled Territory
Chapter 15: Advancing to the Mountains at the Italian Border
Chapter 16: Conclusion and a Few More Stories
Lt Howard Hensleigh returns wedding photos of a German soldier he killed.
Exhumation of German soldiers in Villeneuve-Loubet.
Italy: Migrants pepper-sprayed as they try to cross border into France
Police and migrants clashed near Ventimiglia, northern Italy, Friday, as they occupied the site of Balzi Rossi beach.
Video ID: 20160805 037
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Revelation (Helicopters Eurocopters French Riviera Monaco 2015)
Eurocopters moving thru the French Riviera catching the iconic Mediterranean Sea landscape. Zero Traffic Ec130 AS365N etc. The Heliport to the Hublot Helipad few minutes of Eurocopter Heaven Glory2God