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  • Pointe du Hoc, a WWII airplane remembers the anniversary of the D-Day. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II. a German bunker. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303183.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc, a WWII airplane remembers the anniversary of the D-Day. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II. a German bunker. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303181.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc, a WWII airplane remembers the anniversary of the D-Day. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II. a German bunker. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303313.jpg
  • 1972. Central Park. Political rally against the Vietnam war.
    em1210227.jpg
  • 1972. Manhattan. Political rally against the Vietnam war.
    em1210223.jpg
  • Manhattan. Political rally against the Vietnam war and My Lai massacre.
    em1210151.jpg
  • 1972. Central Park. Political rally against the Vietnam war.
    em1210231.jpg
  • The Story of Berlin Museum. One highligh is an original nuclear bomb shelter from the Cold War below the Kurfürstendamm which still can be used by 3.600 persons in case of an emergency.
    em7705234.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. Posters of DDR (German Democratic Republic) time. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700454.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303178.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303172.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc, a WWII airplane remembers the anniversary of the D-Day. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303179.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303175.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303171.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc. View from a German bunker. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303168.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. Posters of DDR (German Democratic Republic) time. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700450.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald), open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer, but a small portion has been retained as a memorial. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700436.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) a popular Trabant Car of the time of DDR (German Democratic Republic) in open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700408.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald), open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. Military vehicles of ancient DDR (German Democratic Republic). This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700406.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald), open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer, but a small portion has been retained as a memorial. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700399.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald), open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer, but a small portion has been retained as a memorial. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700376.jpg
  • Pointe du Hoc. View from a German bunker. Pointe du Hoc is a clifftop on the coast of Normandy. Marking the Western end of the Omaha beach sector, it was a point of attack by the United States Army Ranger Assault Group during Operation Overlord in World War II.
    em7303167.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. Posters of DDR (German Democratic Republic) time. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700455.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald), open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer, but a small portion has been retained as a memorial. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700378.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) a sovietic thank in open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700375.jpg
  • Modlareüth (Frankenwald) a sovietic thank in open-air museum about the border between East and West Germany. This village at Cold War time was called the Little Berlin because in 1945, Thuringia became part of the Soviet occupation zone, while Bavaria went to the American occupation zone. Divided by the Tannbach River (only one foot wide) which flows through Mödlareuth, the small village became divided by the border between two states. A pass was required to cross between the two parts of town. After the Berlin Wall was built in 1961, walls were built in other towns on the border as well. The wall of Mödlareuth was built in 1966. From that point on, the East German part of the village was strictly monitored day and night, while on the West German side the wall became a kind of tourist attraction. .In 1983, the then U.S. Vice President George H. W. Bush visited and exclaimed, "Ich bin ein Mödlareuther!", an allusion to John F. Kennedy's "Ich bin ein Berliner" statement.[1]..On 17 June 1990, seven months after the Berlin Wall fell and four months before German reunification, the Mödlareuth Wall was knocked down using a bulldozer. A small portion has been retained as a memorial...[edit]
    em7700368.jpg
  • Kippur War 1973, Syrian convoy destroyed by Israel airforce.
    em2511851.jpg
  • Tel Aviv 1991, First Gulf War.
    em2511859.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the back the church of the movie "The longest Day". Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302926.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, fireworks near the church, remembering the night before the D-Day when many paratroopers of the US Airborne landed in the village. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7303298.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302963.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, dancing in the main square, remembering the night before the D-Day when many paratroopers of the US Airborne landed in the village. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302955.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the wall of the church is projected the movie "The longest Day" with the same location. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302935.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the back the church of the movie "The longest Day". Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302931.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302964.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302960.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the wall of the church is projected the movie "The longest Day" with the same location. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302942.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the back the church of the movie "The longest Day". Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302930.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, fireworks near the church, remembering the night before the D-Day when many paratroopers of the US Airborne landed in the village. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302952.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, on the wall of the church is projected the movie "The longest Day" with the same location. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302958.jpg
  • Longues. German artillery bunker between Arromanches and Port-en-Bessin. These are the only  guns still inside a German bunker.
    em7303059.jpg
  • Arromanches. The town lies along the coastline designated as Gold Beach used by British troops during the D-Day landings. Arromanches was the site for a Mulberry Harbour built on the Normandy coast.
    em7303077.jpg
  • Longues. German artillery bunker between Arromanches and Port-en-Bessin. These are the only  guns still inside a German bunker.
    em7303052.jpg
  • Northen Frankenwald, a Bavaria's finger in the hearth of Turingia. View tower Thuringian Warte (look-out), built in the year 1963, rises 26.5 meters high on the top of the Ratzenberg hill. The air-line distance from there to the border of Thuringia is only 200 meters. Because of its unique situation at the former border between Bavaria and the German Democratic Republic, it was not only a "window" to the other part of Germany, but also an important touristic attraction in Bavaria, which has seen up to about 1 million visitors until present. Even today, after the reunification of the two German states, the Thuringia Warte is still an attraction.
    em7700351.jpg
  • 1969. Suez Canal. Local families expelled to Egypt by Tsahal, Israel's army.
    em2511863.jpg
  • Caen, the Peace and WWII Memorial.
    em7303242.jpg
  • Sainte-Marie-du-Mont. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302920.jpg
  • Colleville-sur-Mer, American Cemetery near Omaha Beach.
    em7303050.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, Airborne Museum built to look like a parachute . A C47 airplane.
    em7303333.jpg
  • Sainte-Mére-Eglise. Stained glass window in village chapel depicting the landing of the paratroopers.
    em7303325.jpg
  • Bayeux, the cathedral.
    em7303259.jpg
  • Caen, the Peace and WWII Memorial. Political protest against the French Vichy's government allied to the Nazi.
    em7303252.jpg
  • Caen, the WWII memorial..
    em7303239.jpg
  • Courseulles-sur-Mer. The memorial remembers that here in 1944 landed Montgomery, Churchill, King George VI and on June 14th the French General Charles de Gaulle.
    em7303230.jpg
  • Ouistreham, the lighthouse of the harbour was the eastern point of the D-Day beaches
    em7303227.jpg
  • Benouville, Pegasus Bridge. A unit of the British Airborne taked the bridge intact limiting the  German counter-attacks. The original bridge on the ground of the Pegasus Museum.
    em7303216.jpg
  • Benouville, Pegasus Bridge. A unit of the British Airborne taked the bridges intact limiting the  German counter-attacks. French in US Airborne WWII dress near the bridge.
    em7303195.jpg
  • Utah Beach, Memorial of Lt Winters of the Easy Company, made famous in the movie "Band of Brothers".
    em7303159.jpg
  • Utah Beach.
    em7303152.jpg
  • Arromanches. Museum of the Mulberry Bridge utilised by the Allied Forces after the D-Day landings. Explosives kit.
    em7303090.jpg
  • Arromanches. The town lies along the coastline designated as Gold Beach used by British troops during the D-Day landings. Arromanches was the site for a Mulberry Harbour built on the Normandy coast.
    em7303080.jpg
  • Arromanches. The town lies along the coastline designated as Gold Beach used by British troops during the D-Day landings. Arromanches was the site for a Mulberry Harbour built on the Normandy coast. Sections of this harbour still survive with  concrete blocks on the beach and out at sea.
    em7303064.jpg
  • Colleville-Sur-Mer, Omaha Beach. The Memorial remembers the WWII D-Day of June 6, 1944.
    em7303000.jpg
  • Sainte-Marie-du-Mont. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302913.jpg
  • Longues. German artillery bunker between Arromanches and Port-en-Bessin. These are the only  guns still inside a German bunker.
    em7302906.jpg
  • Colleville-Sur-Mer, Omaha Beach. The Memorial remembers the WWII D-Day of June 6, 1944.
    em7302902.jpg
  • Caen, the Peace and WWII Memorial.
    em7303255.jpg
  • Juno Beach, Canada's Memorial and museum..
    em7303236.jpg
  • Courseulles-sur-Mer. The memorial remembers that here in 1944 landed Montgomery, Churchill, King George VI and on June 14th the French General Charles de Gaulle.
    em7303231.jpg
  • Benouville, Pegasus Bridge. A unit of the British Airborne taked the bridge intact limiting the  German counter-attacks. The historical Café Gondrée, "the first French house liberated by allied forces". The owner Mme Arlette Gondrée this night was 4 years old only.
    em7303207.jpg
  • Benouville, Pegasus Bridge. A unit of the British Airborne taked the bridge intact limiting the  German counter-attacks.
    em7303191.jpg
  • Utah Beach ,museum shop.
    em7303156.jpg
  • German bunker.
    em7303126.jpg
  • Utah Beach. German bunker.
    em7303123.jpg
  • Longues. German artillery bunker between Arromanches and Port-en-Bessin. These are the only  guns still inside a German bunker.
    em7303056.jpg
  • Longues. German artillery bunker between Arromanches and Port-en-Bessin. These are the only  guns still inside a German bunker.
    em7303053.jpg
  • Omaha Beach. View from the American Cemetery of Colleville-sur-Mer.
    em7303021.jpg
  • Omaha Beach. View from the American Cemetery of Colleville-sur-Mer.
    em7303015.jpg
  • Omaha Beach. US MEmorial to the falled soldiers of the National Guard.
    em7303010.jpg
  • Omaha Beach. Every afternoon a town council civil servant hauls down the allied flags.
    em7303006.jpg
  • Colleville-Sur-Mer, Omaha Beach. The Memorial remembers the WWII D-Day of June 6, 1944.
    em7303002.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, a "English officer", on the back the church of the movie "The longest Day". Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302924.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, a vintage airplane of WWII flying over the village remembers the D-Day.
    em7302923.jpg
  • Sainte-Marie-du-Mont. Every year, for some days the villages and the roads are full of the last veterans and youngers, many dressed in camouflage jacket, going around with jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles. A celebration between a militare ceremony and a country fair.
    em7302917.jpg
  • Frankenwald, DDR (Eastern German Democratic Republic)  border police items and memorabilia in a old watch tower in the earth of the forest near the village of Probstzella in Turingia.
    em7700475.jpg
  • Frankenwald, the old border marks of DDR (Eastern German Democratic Republic in the earth of the forest near the village of Probstzella in Turingia
    em7700465.jpg
  • El Arish-1969. Local families looking for other families expelled to Egypt by Tsahal, Israel's army.
    em2511862.jpg
  • Utah Beach.
    em7302910.jpg
  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, the church where a parachute with an effigy of US Airborne paratrooper John  Steele in his Airborne uniform hangs from the belltower. John Steel, made famous in the movie The Longest Day, was caught in one of the back steeples of the church, leaving him hanging on the backside of the church to witness the carnage.
    em7303299.jpg
  • Utah Beach.
    em7303292.jpg
  • Caen, the Peace and WWII Memorial.
    em7303248.jpg
  • Quineville, Liberty Museum (Musée de la Liberté Retrouvée), A reproduced village life of the German occuped France.
    em7303162.jpg
  • Utah Beach , museum..
    em7303138.jpg
  • Media City with 2 millions square km, 19 studios and  more of 15 open air locations, where have been rebuilt the most important historical places of the country, is the biggest production center of all Middle East. Here the Pyramids and the Sphinx.
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  • Utah Beach, a Victory Rd with a fallen soldier name.
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  • Colleville-sur-Mer, American Cemetery near Omaha Beach.
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  • Arromanches. The town lies along the coastline designated as Gold Beach used by British troops during the D-Day landings. Arromanches was the site for a Mulberry Harbour built on the Normandy coast.
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  • Sainte-Mére-Eglise. Stained glass window in village chapel depicting the landing of the paratroopers.
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  • Sainte-Mère-Eglise, the church where a parachute with an effigy of US Airborne paratrooper John  Steele in his Airborne uniform hangs from the belltower. John Steel, made famous in the movie The Longest Day, was caught in one of the back steeples of the church, leaving him hanging on the backside of the church to witness the carnage.
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  • Arromanches. The town lies along the coastline designated as Gold Beach used by British troops during the D-Day landings. Arromanches was the site for a Mulberry Harbour built on the Normandy coast. Sections of this harbour still survive with  concrete blocks on the beach and out at sea.
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enrico martino

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