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  1. During the Second World War, the city of Wuppertal suffered numerous Allied air raids, primarily nighttime attacks from the Royal Air Force 's Bomber Command during its Battle of the Ruhr bomber offensive. The largest raids were on the night of 29-30 May 1943, heavy enough to cause a firestorm, and on 24-25 June.

  2. Oct 8, 2015 · Some 25,000 people were killed in a firestorm and 75,000 of its 220,000 homes were destroyed. ... to mark buildings of special interest. ... that even during the war, people were speaking out ...

  3. Jun 18, 2019 · According to the book 50% of all buildings in the city were destroyed or damaged during WWII. There was an ME-109 factory just outside the city were you could still see bomb craters during the 80s. Cities like Cologne, Frankfurt and Berlin, we were told that 90% of the buildings were destroyed or damaged.

  4. Ronsdorf is a district of Wuppertal which was first mentioned in 1494 and was also made a part of Wuppertal in 1929. It is the seat of various industries which spelled its sorry fate. Only a few old buildings are left as Ronsdorf was heavily destroyed during bombings on the night of May 29th 1943.

  5. Footnote 43 Harkening back to heritage ‘pruning’ and heritage zoning traditions of the early 1900s, and following the practice suggested by the German Task Force in the early 1940s, Footnote 44 post-World War II maps of cities such as Munich, Kassel, Augsburg and Essen, as well as informal damage maps of the Old Town of Warsaw, specifically marked heritage buildings in historic zones.

  6. During the Second World War, the city of Wuppertal suffered numerous Allied air raids, primarily nighttime attacks from the Royal Air Force 's Bomber Command during its Battle of the Ruhr bomber offensive. The largest raids were on the night of 29-30 May 1943, heavy enough to cause a firestorm, and on 24-25 June.

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  8. cities. In Wurzburg, for instance, 89% of built-up area was destroyed, while the figure in Remscheid and Bochum was 83%, in Hamburg and Wuppertal 75% (Diefendorf, 1993). Though the largest numbers of destroyed buildings were apartment houses, in every bombed city also schools, hospitals, churches, museums and many other kinds of public

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