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Military Administration in France Militärverwaltung in Frankreich Territory under German military administration 1940–1944 Flag Emblem German military administration in occupied France during World War II From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Military Administration in France (German: Militärverwaltung in Frankreich; French: Occupation de la France par l'Allemagne) was an interim occupation authority established by Nazi Germany during World War II to administer the occupied zone in areas of northern and western France. This socalled zone occupée was renamed zone nord ("north zone") in November 1942, when the previously unoccupied zone in the south known as zone libre ("free zone") was also occupied and renamed zone sud ("south zone"). Its role in France was partly governed by the conditions set by the Second Armistice at Compiègne after the blitzkrieg success of the Wehrmacht leading to the Fall of France; at the time both French and Germans thought the occupation would be temporary and last only until Britain came to terms, which was believed to be imminent. For instance, France agreed that its soldiers would remain prisoners of war until the cessation of all hostilities. Replacing the French Third Republic that had dissolved during France's defeat was the "French State" (État français), with its sovereignty and authority limited to the free zone. As Paris was located in the occupied zone, its government was seated in the spa town of Vichy in Auvergne, and therefore it was more commonly known as Vichy France. While the Vichy government was nominally in charge of all of France, the military administration in the occupied zone was a de facto Nazi dictatorship. Its rule was extended to the free zone when it was invaded by Germany and Italy during Case Anton on 11 November 1942 in response to operation Torch, the Allied landings in Vichy French North Africa on 8 November 1942. The Vichy government remained in existence, even though its authority was now severely curtailed. The military administration in France ended with the Liberation of France after the Normandy and Provence landings. It formally existed from May 1940 to December 1944, though most of France had been lost by the end of summer 1944. Contents

German Military Administration in Occupied France During World War II

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  • MilitaryAdministrationinFrance

    MilitrverwaltunginFrankreich

    TerritoryunderGermanmilitaryadministration

    19401944

    Flag Emblem

    GermanmilitaryadministrationinoccupiedFranceduringWorldWarIIFromWikipedia,thefreeencyclopedia

    TheMilitaryAdministrationinFrance(German:MilitrverwaltunginFrankreichFrench:OccupationdelaFranceparl'Allemagne)wasaninterimoccupationauthorityestablishedbyNaziGermanyduringWorldWarIItoadministertheoccupiedzoneinareasofnorthernandwesternFrance.Thissocalledzoneoccupewasrenamedzonenord("northzone")inNovember1942,whenthepreviouslyunoccupiedzoneinthesouthknownaszonelibre("freezone")wasalsooccupiedandrenamedzonesud("southzone").

    ItsroleinFrancewaspartlygovernedbytheconditionssetbytheSecondArmisticeatCompigneaftertheblitzkriegsuccessoftheWehrmachtleadingtotheFallofFranceatthetimebothFrenchandGermansthoughttheoccupationwouldbetemporaryandlastonlyuntilBritaincametoterms,whichwasbelievedtobeimminent.Forinstance,Franceagreedthatitssoldierswouldremainprisonersofwaruntilthecessationofallhostilities.

    ReplacingtheFrenchThirdRepublicthathaddissolvedduringFrance'sdefeatwasthe"FrenchState"(tatfranais),withitssovereigntyandauthoritylimitedtothefreezone.AsPariswaslocatedintheoccupiedzone,itsgovernmentwasseatedinthespatownofVichyinAuvergne,andthereforeitwasmorecommonlyknownasVichyFrance.

    WhiletheVichygovernmentwasnominallyinchargeofallofFrance,themilitaryadministrationintheoccupiedzonewasadefactoNazidictatorship.ItsrulewasextendedtothefreezonewhenitwasinvadedbyGermanyandItalyduringCaseAntonon11November1942inresponsetooperationTorch,theAlliedlandingsinVichyFrenchNorthAfricaon8November1942.TheVichygovernmentremainedinexistence,eventhoughitsauthoritywasnowseverelycurtailed.

    ThemilitaryadministrationinFranceendedwiththeLiberationofFranceaftertheNormandyandProvencelandings.ItformallyexistedfromMay1940toDecember1944,thoughmostofFrancehadbeenlostbytheendofsummer1944.

    Contents

  • German(pink)andItalian(green)occupationzonesofFrance:thezoneoccupe,thezonelibre,thezone

    interdite,theMilitaryAdministrationinBelgiumandNorthernFrance,andannexedAlsaceLorraine.

    Capital Paris

    Politicalstructure

    Militaryadministration

    MilitaryCommander 19401942 OttovonStlpnagel 19421944 CarlHeinrichvonStlpnagel 1944 KarlKitzinger

    Historicalera WorldWarII

    Contents

    1Occupationzones2Administrativestructure3Collaboration4Occupationforces5Antipartisanactions6Civilians

    6.1Dailylife6.2NightlifeinParis6.3Oppression

    7Aftermath8Seealso9Notes10Furtherreading11Externallinks

    Occupationzones

    AlsaceLorraine,whichhadbeenannexedaftertheFrancoPrussianwarin1871bytheGermanEmpireandreturnedtoFranceaftertheFirstWorldWar,wasreannexedbytheThirdReich(thussubjectingtheirmalepopulationtoGermanmilitaryconscription.)ThedepartmentsofNordandPasdeCalaiswereattachedtothemilitaryadministrationinBelgiumandNorthernFrance,whichwasalsoresponsible[1]forcivilianaffairsinthe20kilometres(20,000m)widezoneinterditealongtheAtlanticcoast.Another"forbiddenzone"wereareasinnortheasternFrance,correspondingtoLorraineandroughlyabouthalfeachofFrancheComt,ChampagneandPicardie.Warrefugeeswereprohibitedfromreturningtotheirhomesthere,anditwasintendedforGermansettlersandannexation[2]inthecomingNaziNewOrder(NeueOrdnung).

  • SecondCompignearmistice 22June1940

    CaseAnton 11November1942 German

    retreatsummer1944

    GermansoldiersmarchthroughtheArcdeTriompheontheAvenuedesChampslysesinParis(June1940).

    GermancontrolpostontheDemarcationLine[5]

    Theoccupiedzone(French:zoneoccupe,Frenchpronunciation:[zonkype],German:BesetztesGebiet)consistedoftherestofnorthernandwesternFrance,includingthetwoforbiddenzones.

    ThesouthernpartofFrance,exceptforapproximatelythewesternhalfofAquitaine,becamethezonelibre("freezone"),wheretheVichyregimeremainedsovereignasanindependentstate,thoughunderheavyGermaninfluenceduetotherestrictionsoftheArmistice(includingaheavytribute)andeconomicaldependencyonGermany.Itconstitutedalandareaof246,618squarekilometres,approximately45percentofFrance,andincludedapproximately33percentofthetotalFrenchlaborforce.[3]Thedemarcationlinebetweenthefreezoneandtheoccupiedzonewasadefactoborder,necessitatingspecialauthorisationandalaissezpasserfromtheGermanauthoritiestocross.[4]

    ThoserestrictionsremainedinplaceafterVichywasoccupiedandthezonerenamedzonesud("southzone"),andalsoplacedundermilitaryadministrationinNovember1942.

    TheItalianoccupationzoneconsistedofsmallareasalongtheAlpsborder,anda50kilometres(50,000m)demilitarisedzonealongthesame.Itwasexpandedtoallterritory[6][7]ontheleftbankoftheRhneriverafteritsinvasiontogetherwithGermanyofVichyFranceon11November1942,exceptforareasaroundLyonandMarseille,whichwereaddedtoGermany'szonesud,andCorsica.

    TheItalianoccupationzonewasalsooccupiedbyGermanyandaddedtothezonesudafterItaly'ssurrenderinSeptember1943,exceptforCorsica,whichwasliberatedbythelandingsofFreeFrenchforcesandlocalItaliantroopsthathadswitchedsidestotheAllies.

    Administrativestructure

    AfterGermanyandFranceagreedonanarmisticefollowingthedefeatsofMayandJune,MarshalWilhelmKeitelandGeneralCharlesHuntzinger,representativesoftheThirdReichandoftheFrench

    governmentofMarshalPhilippePtainrespectively,signediton22June1940attheRethondesclearinginCompigneForest.AsitwasdoneatthesameplaceandinthesamerailroadcarriagewherethearmisticeendingtheFirstWorldWarwhenGermanysurrendered,itisknownastheSecondCompignearmistice.

  • Francewasroughlydividedintoanoccupiednorthernzoneandanunoccupiedsouthernzone,accordingtothearmisticeconvention"inordertoprotecttheinterestsoftheGermanReich".[8]TheFrenchcolonialempireremainedundertheauthorityofMarshallPtain'sVichyregime.FrenchsovereigntywastobeexercisedoverthewholeofFrenchterritory,includingtheoccupiedzone,AlsaceandMoselle,butthethirdarticleofthearmisticestipulatedthatFrenchauthoritiesintheoccupiedzonewouldhavetoobeythemilitaryadministrationandthatGermanywouldexerciserightsofanoccupyingpowerwithinit:

    IntheoccupiedregionofFrance,theGermanReichexercisesalloftherightsofanoccupyingpower.TheFrenchgovernmentundertakestofacilitateineverywaypossibletheimplementationoftheserights,andtoprovidetheassistanceoftheFrenchadministrativeservicestothatend.TheFrenchgovernmentwillimmediatelydirectallofficialsandadministratorsoftheoccupiedterritorytocomplywiththeregulationsof,andtocollaboratefullywith,theGermanmilitaryauthorities.[8]

    ThemilitaryadministrationwasresponsibleforcivilaffairsinoccupiedFrance.Itwasdividedintokommandanturen(singularkommandantur),indecreasinghierarchicalorderOberfeldkommandanturen,Feldkommandanturen,Kreiskommandanturen,andOrtskommandanturen.

    Collaboration

    Inordertosuppresspartisansandresistancefighters,themilitaryadministrationcooperatedcloselywiththeGestapo,theSicherheitsdienst,theintelligenceserviceoftheSS,andtheSicherheitspolizei,itssecuritypolice.ItalsohaditsdispositionthesupportoftheFrenchauthoritiesandpoliceforces,whohadtocooperatepertheconditionssetinthearmistice,toroundupJews,antifascistsandotherdissidents,andvanishthemintoNachtundNebel,"NightandFog".ItalsohadthehelpofcollaborationistsauxiliariesliketheMilice,theFrancGardesandtheLegionaryOrderService.ThetwomaincollaborationistpoliticalpartiesweretheFrenchPopularParty(PPF)andtheNationalPopularRally(RNP),eachwith20,000to30,000members.

    TheMiliceparticipatedwithLyonGestapoheadKlausBarbieinseizingmembersoftheresistanceandminoritiesincludingJewsforshipmenttodetentioncentres,suchastheDrancydeportationcamp,enroutetoAuschwitz,andotherGermanconcentrationcamps,includingDachauandBuchenwald.

    FrenchmenalsovolunteereddirectlyinGermanforcestofightforGermanyand/oragainstBolsheviks,suchastheLegionofFrenchVolunteersAgainstBolshevism.Volunteersfromthisandotheroutfitslaterconstitutedthecadreofthe33rdWaffenGrenadierDivisionoftheSSCharlemagne(1stFrench).

  • StanleyHoffmannin1974,[9]andafterhim,otherhistorianssuchasRobertPaxtonandJeanPierreAzmahaveusedthetermcollaborationnistestorefertofascistsandNazisympathiserswho,forideologicalreasons,wishedareinforcedcollaborationwithHitler'sGermany,incontrastto"collaborators",peoplewhomerelycooperatedoutofselfinterest.ExamplesofthesearePPFleaderJacquesDoriot,writerRobertBrasillachorMarcelDat.Aprincipalmotivationandideologicalfoundationamongcollaborationnisteswasanticommunism.[9]

    Occupationforces

    Untilthethreatofinvasionbeganloominglarge,withtheDiepperaidmarkingitsrealbeginning,theWehrmachtmaintainedacoupledozendivisionsinFrance.WhenthebulkoftheWehrmachtwasfightingontheeasternfront,GermanunitswererotatedtoFrancetorestandrefit.Asthewarwenton,garrisoningtheAtlanticWallandsuppressingtheresistancebecameheavierandheavierduties.TheactionsofBritishCommandosagainstGermantroopsbroughtHitlertocondemnthemasirregularwarfare.InhisCommandoOrderhedeniedthemlawfulcombatantstatus,andorderedthemtobehandedovertotheSSsecurityservicewhencapturedandliabletobesummarilyexecuted.

    SomenotableunitsandformationsstationedinFranceduringtheoccupation:

    1940:Luftflotte2,Luftflotte3operatedfromairfieldsinnorthernFranceduringtheBattleofEngland.Luftflotte3stayedtheretodefendagainstthealliedstrategicbombinguntilithadtoretreatin1944.

    1941:BattlecruisersScharnhorstandGneisenau.ThebattleshipBismarckwassunkwhiletryingtoreachFrenchAtlanticharboursafteritscommissioning.

    1942:2ndSSPanzerDivisionDasReich,4thSSPoliceRegiment

    1943:AttheheightofthebattleoftheAtlantic,between60andovera100GermanUboatswerestationedinsubmarinepensinFrenchatlanticportssuchLaRochelle,Bordeaux,SaintNazaire,Brest,andLorient.

    1944:157thMountain(Reserve)Division,PanzerLehr,XIXthArmy,716thStaticInfantryDivision,12thSSPanzerDivisionHitlerjugend.

    Antipartisanactions

  • AvolunteeroftheFrenchRsistanceinteriorforce(FFI)atChteaudunin1944

    The"Appealof18June"bydeGaulle'sFreeFrancegovernmentinexileinLondonhadlittleimmediateeffect,andfewjoineditsFrenchForcesoftheInteriorbeyondthosethathadalreadygoneintoexiletojointheFreeFrench.AftertheinvasionoftheSovietUnioninJune1941,theFrenchcommunistparty,hithertounderordersfromtheCominterntoremainpassiveagainsttheGermanoccupiers,begantomountactionsagainstthem.deGaullesentJeanMoulinbacktoFranceashisformallinktotheirregularsthroughouttheoccupiedcountrytocoordinatetheeightmajorRsistancegroupsintooneorganisation.Moulingottheiragreementtoformthe"NationalCounciloftheResistance"(ConseilNationaldelaRsistance).

    Moulinwaseventuallycaptured,anddiedunderbrutaltorturebytheGestapo,possiblybyKlausBarbiehimself.TheresistanceintensifiedafteritbecameclearthetideofwarhadshiftedaftertheReich'sdefeatatStalingradinearly1943,andby1944largeremoteareaswereoutoftheGermanmilitary'scontrolandfreezonesforthemaquisards,socalledafterthemaquisshrublandthatprovidedidealterrainforguerrillawarfare.

    ThemostimportantantipartisanactionwastheBattleofVercors.ThemostinfamousoneOradoursurGlane.OthernotableatrocitiescommittedweretheLeParadismassacre,theMaillmassacre,andtheAscqmassacre.LargemaquisweresignificantmilitaryoperationswereconductedincludedthemaquisduVercors,themaquisduLimousin,themaquisdesGlires,themaquisduMontMouchet,andthemaquisdeSaintMarcel.MajorroundupoperationswerethebattleofMarseillesandtheVlodromed'Hiverroundup.

    AlthoughthemajorityoftheFrenchpopulationdidnottakepartinactiveresistance,manyresistedpassivelythroughactssuchaslisteningtothebannedBBC'sRadioLondres,orgivingcollateralormaterialaidtoResistancemembers.OthersassistedintheescapeofdownedUSorBritishairmenwhoeventuallyfoundtheirwaybacktoBritain,oftenthroughSpain.

    Bytheeveoftheliberation,numerousfactionsofnationalists,anarchists,communists,socialistsandothers,countingbetween100,000andupto400,000combatants,wereactivelyfightingtheoccupationforces.SupportedbytheSpecialOperationsExecutiveandtheOfficeofStrategicServicesthatairdroppedweaponsandsupplies,aswellasinfiltratingagentslikeNancyWakethatprovidedtacticaladviceandspecialistskillslikeradiooperationanddemolition,theysystematicallysabotagedrailwaylines,destroyedbridges,cutGermansupplylines,andprovidedgeneralintelligencetothealliedforces.Germanantipartisanoperationsclaimedaround13,00016,000Frenchvictims,including4,000to5,000completelyinnocentcivilians.[10]

    Attheendofthewar,some580,000Frenchhaddied(40,000ofthesebythewesternAlliedforcesduringthebombardmentsofthefirst48hoursofoperationOverlord).Militarydeathswere92,000in193940.Some58,000werekilledinactionfrom1940to1945fightingintheFreeFrenchforces.Some40,000malgrnous("againstourwill"),citizensofreannexedAlsaceLorrainedraftedintotheWehrmacht,becamecasualties.Civiliancasualtiesamountedtoaround150,000(60,000byaerialbombing,60,000intheresistance,and30,000murderedbyGermanoccupationforces).Prisonersofwaranddeporteetotalswerearound1.9million.Ofthis,around240,000diedincaptivity.Anestimated40,000wereprisonersofwar,100,000racialdeportees,60,000politicalprisonersand40,000diedasslavelabourers.[11]

  • Civilians

    Dailylife

    ThelifeoftheFrenchduringtheGermanoccupationwasmarked,fromthebeginning,byendemicshortages.Theyareexplainedbyseveralfactors:

    1. Oneoftheconditionsofthearmisticewastopaythecostsofthe300,000strongoccupyingGermanarmy,whichamountedto20millionReichmarksperday.TheartificialexchangerateoftheGermancurrencyagainsttheFrenchfrancwasconsequentlyestablished

    as1RMto20FF.[12]ThisallowedGermanrequisitionsandpurchasestobemadeintoaformoforganisedplunderandresultedinendemicfoodshortagesandmalnutrition,particularlyamongstchildren,theelderly,andthemorevulnerablesectionsofFrenchsociety

    suchastheworkingurbanclassofthecities.[13]

    2. Thedisorganisationoftransport,exceptfortherailwaysystemwhichreliedonFrenchdomesticcoalsupplies.3. ThecuttingoffofinternationaltradeandtheAlliedblockade,restrictingimportsintothecountry.4. Theextremeshortageofpetrolanddieselfuel.Francehadnoindigenousoilproductionandallimportshadstopped.5. Labourshortages,particularlyinthecountryside,duetothelargenumberofFrenchprisonersofwarheldinGermany.

    Ersatz,ormakeshiftsubstitutes,tooktheplaceofmanyproductsthatwereinshortsupplywoodgasgeneratorsontrucksandautomobilesburnedcharcoalorwoodpelletsasasubstitutetogasoline,andwoodensolesforshoeswereusedinsteadofleather.Soapwasrareandmadeinsomehouseholdsfromfatsandcausticsoda.Coffeewasreplacedbytoastedbarleymixedwithchicory,andsugarwithsaccharin.

    TheGermansseizedabout80percentoftheFrenchfoodproduction,whichcausedseveredisruptiontothehouseholdeconomyoftheFrenchpeople.[14]Frenchfarmproductionfellinhalfbecauseoflackoffuel,fertilizerandworkersevensotheGermansseizedhalfthemeat,20percentoftheproduce,and80percentofthechampagne.[15]SupplyproblemsquicklyaffectedFrenchstoreswhichlackedmostitems.

    Facedwiththesedifficultiesineverydaylife,thegovernmentansweredbyrationing,andcreatingfoodchartsandticketswhichweretobeexchangedforbread,meat,butterandcookingoil.Therationingsystemwasstringentbutbadlymismanaged,leadingtomalnourishment,blackmarkets,andhostilitytostatemanagementofthefoodsupply.Theofficialrationprovidedstarvationleveldietsof1300orfewercaloriesaday,supplementedbyhomegardensand,especially,blackmarketpurchases.[16]

  • RationingticketsfortheFrenchpopulation(July1944)

    Hungerprevailed,especiallyaffectingyouthinurbanareas.Thequeueslengthenedinfrontofshops.Intheabsenceofmeatandotherfoodsincludingpotatoes,peopleateunusualvegetables,suchasSwedishturnipandJerusalemartichoke.Foodshortagesweremostacuteinthelargecities.Inthemoreremotecountryvillages,however,clandestineslaughtering,vegetablegardensandtheavailabilityofmilkproductspermittedbettersurvival.

    Somepeoplebenefitedfromtheblackmarket,wherefoodwassoldwithoutticketsatveryhighprices.Farmersdivertedespeciallymeattotheblackmarket,whichmeantthatmuchlessfortheopenmarket.Counterfeitfoodticketswerealsoincirculation.Directbuyingfromfarmersinthecountrysideandbarteragainstcigaretteswerealsofrequentpracticesduringthisperiod.Theseactivitieswerestrictlyforbiddenhoweverandthuscarriedoutattheriskofconfiscationandfines.

    Duringtheday,numerousregulations,censorshipandpropagandamadetheoccupationincreasinglyunbearable.Atnight,inhabitantshadtoabideacurfewanditwasforbiddentogooutduringthenightwithoutanAusweis.Theyhadtoclosetheirshuttersorwindowsandturnoffanylight,topreventAlliedaircraftusingcitylightsfornavigation.

    Withnearly75,000inhabitantskilledand550,000tonsofbombsdropped,Francewas,afterGermany,thesecondmostseverelybombdevastatedcountryontheWesternFrontofWorldWarII.[17]AlliedbombingswereparticularlyintensebeforeandduringOperationOverlordin1944.

    TheAllies'TransportationPlanaimingatthesystematicdestructionofFrenchrailwaymarshallingyardsandrailwaybridges,in1944,alsotookaheavytolloncivilianlives.Forexample,the26May1944bombinghitrailwaytargetsinandaroundfivecitiesinsoutheasternFrance,causingover2,500civiliandeaths.[18]

    CrossingthelignededmarcationbetweenthenorthzoneandthesouthzonealsorequiredanAusweis,whichwasdifficulttoacquire.[4]Peoplecouldwriteonlytotheirfamilymembers,andthiswasonlypermissibleusingaprefilledcardwherethesendercheckedofftheappropriatewords(e.g.'ingoodhealth','wounded','dead','prisoner').[4]TheoccupiedzonewasonGermantime,whichwasonehouraheadoftheunoccupiedzone.[4]Otherpoliciesimplementedintheoccupiedzonebutnotinthefreezonewereacurfewfrom10p.mto5a.m,abanonAmericanfilms,thesuppressionofdisplayingtheFrenchflagandsingingtheMarseillaise,andthebanningofVichyparamilitaryorganizationsandtheVeterans'Legion.[4]

    Schoolchildrenweremadetosing"Marchal,nousvoil!"("Marshall,hereweare!").TheportraitofMarshalPhilippePtainadornedthewallsofclassrooms,thuscreatingapersonalitycult.PropagandawaspresentineducationtotraintheyoungpeoplewiththeideasofthenewVichyregime.However,therewasnoresumptioninideologyasinotheroccupiedcountries,forexampleinPoland,wheretheteachingelite

  • TheshowwentonduringtheGermanoccupation,andprostitutionwasinitsheyday.

    wasliquidated.Teacherswerenotimprisonedandtheprogramswerenotmodifiedoverall.IntheprivateCatholicsector,manyschooldirectorshidJewishchildrenbyprovidingeducationforthemuntiltheliberation.

    NightlifeinParis

    Onemonthaftertheoccupation,thebimonthysoldiers'magazineDerDeutscheWegleiterfrParis(TheGermanGuidetoParis)wasfirstpublishedbytheParisKommandantur,andbecameasuccess.[19]Furtherguides,suchastheGuidearyien,countede.g.theMoulinRougeamongthemustseelocationsinParis.[20]FamousclubssuchastheFoliesBellevilleorBobinowerealsoamongthesoughtaftervenues.AwidearrayofGermanunitswererotatedtoFrancetorestandrefittheGermansusedthemotto"JedereinmalinParis"("everyoneonceinParis")andprovided'recreationalvisits'tothecityfortheirtroops.[21]Variousfamousartists,suchasEdithPiaf,YvesMontand,orlaterLesCompagnonsdelachanson,startedtheircareersduringtheoccupation.PiafherselflivedaboveL'toiledeKlber,afamousbordelloontheRueLauriston,whichwasneartotheCarlingueheadquartersandoftenfrequentedbyGermantroops.ThecurfewinPariswasnotupheldasstrictlyasinothercities.

    TheDjangoReinhardtsongNuages,performedbyReinhardtandtheQuintetoftheHotClubofFranceintheSallePleyel,gainednotorietyamongbothFrenchandGermanfans.ReinhardtwaseveninvitedtoplayfortheOberkommandoderWehrmacht.[22]TheuseandabuseofParisinthevisitationsofGermanforcesduringtheSecondWorldWarledtoabacklashtheintensiveprostitutionduringtheoccupationmadewayfortheLoideMartheRichardin1946,whichclosedthebordellosandreducedraunchystageshowstomeredancingevents.

    Oppression

    DuringtheGermanoccupation,aforcedlabourpolicy,calledServiceduTravailObligatoire("Obligatoryworkservice,STO"),consistedoftherequisitionandtransferofhundredsofthousandsofFrenchworkerstoGermanyagainsttheirwill,fortheGermanwareffort.Inadditiontoworkcampsforfactories,agriculture,andrailroads,forcedlabourwasusedforV1launchsitesandothermilitaryfacilitiestargetedbytheAlliesinOperationCrossbow.Beginningin1942,manyrefusedtobedraftedtofactoriesandfarmsinGermanybytheSTO,goingundergroundtoavoidimprisonmentandsubsequentdeportationtoGermany.Forthemostpart,those"workdodgers"(rfractaires)becamemaquisards.

    TherewereGermanreprisalsagainstciviliansinoccupiedcountriesinFrance,theNazisbuiltanexecutionchamberinthecellarsoftheformerMinistryofAviationbuildinginParis.[23]

  • ManyJewswerevictimsoftheHolocaustinFrance.Approximately49concentrationcampswereinuseinFranceduringtheoccupation,thelargestofthematDrancy.Intheoccupiedzone,asof1942,JewswererequiredtoweartheyellowbadgeandwereonlyallowedtorideinthelastcarriageoftheParisMtro.13,152JewsresidingintheParisregionwerevictimsofamassarrestbyproNaziFrenchauthoritieson16and17July1942,knownastheVel'd'HivRoundup,andweretransportedtoAuschwitzwheretheywerekilled.[24]

    Overall,accordingtoadetailedcountdrawnunderSergeKlarsfeld,slightlybelow77,500oftheJewsresidinginFrancediedduringthewar,overwhelminglyafterbeingdeportedtodeathcamps.[25][26]OutofaJewishpopulationinFrancein1940of350,000,thismeansthatsomewhatlessthanaquarterdied.Whilehorrific,themortalityratewaslowerthaninotheroccupiedcountries(e.g.75percentintheNetherlands)and,becausethemajorityoftheJewswererecentimmigrantstoFrance(mostlyexilesfromGermany),moreJewslivedinFranceattheendoftheoccupationthandidapproximately10yearsearlierwhenHitlerformallycametopower.[27]

    TheyellowDavid'sstarmademandatorybytheVichyregimeinFrance

    "Jewsnotadmittedhere".SignoutsidearestaurantinParis,ruedeChoiseul

    FrenchJewishwomenwearingtheyellowbadge

    GermansoldiersenteringasynagogueinBrestthathasbeenconvertedintoaSoldatenbordell(militarybrothel)

    AdolfHitlerstrollinginfrontoftheEiffeltowerinParis,23June1940.

  • ExecutionchamberinspectedbyaParisianpolicemanandmembersoftheFFIaftertheliberation.

    GermanroadsignsinoccupiedParis.TheFeldgendarmeriewasresponsibleformilitarytraffic.

    Germansoldiersandcapturedcommunists,July1944

    Aftermath

    TheLiberationofFrancewastheresultoftheAlliedoperationsOverlordandDragooninthesummerof1944.MostofFrancewasliberatedbySeptember1944.SomeoftheheavilyfortifiedFrenchAtlanticcoastsubmarinebasesremainedstaybehind"fortresses"untiltheGermancapitulationinMay1945.TheFreeFrenchexilegovernmentdeclaredthereestablishmentofaprovisionalFrenchRepublic,insuringcontinuitywiththedefunctThirdRepublic.ItsetaboutraisingnewtroopstoparticipateintheadvancetotheRhineandtheinvasionofGermany,usingtheFrenchForcesoftheInteriorasmilitarycadresandmanpowerpoolsofexperiencedfighterstoallowaverylargeandrapidexpansionoftheFrenchLiberationArmy(ArmefranaisedelaLibration).ItwaswellequippedandwellsupplieddespitetheeconomicdisruptionbroughtbytheoccupationthankstoLendLease,andgrewfrom500,000meninthesummerof1944tomorethan1.3millionbyVEday,makingitthefourthlargestAlliedarmyinEurope.[28]

    TheFrench2ndArmouredDivision,tipofthespearoftheFreeFrenchforcesthathadparticipatedintheNormandyCampaignandhadliberatedParison25August1944,wentontoliberateStrasbourgon23November1944,thusfulfillingtheOathofKuframadebyGeneralLeclercalmostfouryearsearlier.Theunitunderhiscommand,barelyabovecompanysizewhenithadcapturedtheItalianfort,hadgrownintoafullstrengtharmoureddivision.

    ThespearheadoftheFreeFrenchFirstArmythathadlandedinProvencewastheICorps.Itsleadingunit,theFrench1stArmouredDivision,wasthefirstWesternAlliedunittoreachtheRhne(25August1944),theRhine(19November1944)andtheDanube(21April1945).On22April1945,itcapturedtheSigmaringenenclaveinBadenWrttemberg,wherethelastVichyregimeexiles,includingMarshalPtain,werehostedbytheGermansinoneoftheancestralcastlesoftheHohenzollerndynasty.

  • AplaquecommemoratingtheOathofKufranearthecathedralofStrasbourg,thecapitalofAlsaceandElsaLothringen,andafterthewar,acapitalofEuropeasasymbolofpeaceandreconciliation.

    Collaboratorswereputontrialinlegalpurges(purationlgale),andanumberwereexecutedfortreason,amongthemPierreLaval,Vichy'sprimeministerin194244.TheMarshalPtain,"ChiefoftheFrenchState"andVerdunhero,wasalsocondemnedtodeathbuthissentencewascommutedtolife.ThousandsofcollaboratorsweresummarilyexecutedbylocalResistanceforcesinsocalled"savagepurges"(purationsauvage).

    Seealso

    FreeFranceVichyFranceMilitaryAdministration(NaziGermany)

    Notes

    1. Vinen,Richard(2006).TheUnfreeFrench:LifeundertheOccupation(1sted.).London:AllenLane.pp.1056.ISBN0713994967.2. Schttler,Peter(2003)." 'EineArt"GeneralplanWest":DieStuckartDenkschriftvom14.Juni1940unddiePlanungenfreineneuedeutsch

    franzsischeGrenzeimZweitenWeltkrieg.".Sozial.Geschichte(inGerman)18(3):83131.3. "Lalignededmarcation",CollectionMmoireetCitoyennet,No.7(http://www.defense.gouv.fr/sga/content/download/46040/457868/file/n7_

    _la_ligne_de_demarcation_mc07.pdf)PDF4. Jackson,Julian(2003).France:thedarkyears,19401944.OxfordUniversityPress.p.247.ISBN0199254575.5. Thenamelignededmarcationdidnotfigureinthetermsofthearmistice,butwascoinedasatranslationoftheGermanDemarkationslinie.6. GiorgioRochat,(trad.AnnePilloud),Lacampagneitaliennedejuin1940danslesAlpesoccidentales,Revuehistoriquedesarmes,No.250,2008,

    pp7784(http://rha.revues.org/index187.html),surlesiteduServicehistoriquedelaDfense,rha.revues.org.Misenlignele6juin2008,consultle24octobre2008.

    7. Loccupationitalienne(http://www.resistanceenisere.com/Commun/docs/1/Doc185.PDF),resistanceenisere.com.Retrieved24October2008.8. Laconventiond'armistice(http://mjp.univperp.fr/france/1940armistice.htm),surlesitedel'UniversitdePerpignan,mjp.univperp.fr,accessed

    November29,2008.9. Hoffmann,Stanley(1974)."LadroiteVichy".EssaissurlaFrance:dclinourenouveau?.Paris:LeSeuil.

    10. PeterLieb:KonventionellerKriegoderNSWeltanschauungskrieg?KriegfhrungundPartisanenbekmpfunginFrankreich1943/44,Mnchen,OldenbourgWissenschaftsverlag,2007,ISBN9783486579925

    11. DearandFoot2005,p.321.DearFoot(2005).TheOxfordCompaniontoWorldWarII.p.321.

  • Furtherreading

    Bueltzingsloewen,Isabellevon(ed)(2005)."Mortsd'inanition":FamineetexclusionsenFrancesousl'Occupation.Rennes:PressesUniversitairesdeRennes.ISBN275350136XPhilippeBurrin(1998).FranceUndertheGermans:CollaborationandCompromise.NewYork:NewPress.ISBN1565844394.

    12. TheAmericanHistoricalAssociation.act=justtop&url=http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/111.5/br_161.html"BookReviewofMortsd'inanition:FamineetexclusionsenFrancesousl'Occupation"(http://www.historycooperative.org/cgibin/justtop.cgi?).Retrieved20071215.

    13. MarieHelenMercierandJ.LouiseDespert."EffectsofWaronFrenchchildren"(http://www.psychosomaticmedicine.org/cgi/reprint/5/3/266.pdf).Retrieved20071215.

    14. E.M.Collingham,TheTasteofWar:WorldWarTwoandtheBattleforFood(2011)15. KennethMour,"FoodRationingandtheBlackMarketinFrance(19401944),"FrenchHistory,June2010,Vol.24Issue2,p272316. Mour,"FoodRationingandtheBlackMarketinFrance(19401944)"pp262282,17. Centred'tudesd'histoiredeladfense,LesbombardementsallissurlaFrancedurantlaSecondeGuerreMondiale,Stratgies,bilansmatrielset

    humains,Conferenceof6June2007,Defense.gouv.fr(http://www.cehd.sga.defense.gouv.fr/spip.php?article224)retrieved5November200918. SeeFrenchlanguageWikipediaarticlefr:bombardementdu26mai194419. Hetch,Emmanuel(October2013)."LeGuidedusoldatallemandParis,oucommentoccuperFritz"(http://www.lexpress.fr/culture/livre/leguidedu

    soldatallemandcommentoccuperfritz_1293448.html?xtmc=Der_Deutsche_Wegleiter_f%FCr_Paris&xtcr=1#4ygQU2BpCE8RQ27K.99).www.lexpress.fr(inFrench).L'Express.Retrieved23October2013.

    20. EmotioninMotion:Tourism,AffectandTransformation,DrDavidPicard,ProfessorMikeRobinson,AshgatePublishing,Ltd.,28.11.201221. Parisundertheoccupation[GillesPerrault&PierreAzema],GillesPerraultJeanPierreAzmaLondon:Deutsch,1989.22. MichaelDregni:DjangoTheLifeandMusicofaGipsyLegend.344Seiten.OxfordUniversityPress200623. "NAZIPERSECUTION"(http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205194365).ImperialWarMuseum.2011.Retrieved20120418.24. OnlineEncyclopediaofMassViolence:CaseStudy:TheVlodromed'HiverRoundup:July16and17,1942(http://www.massviolence.org/TheVeld

    Hivroundup)25. SummaryfromdatacompiledbytheAssociationdesFilsetFillesdesdportsjuifsdeFrance,1985.26. Azma,JeanPierreandBdarida,Franois(dir.),LaFrancedesannesnoires,2vol.,Paris,Seuil,1993[rd.Seuil,2000(PointsHistoire)]27. FranoisDelpech,HistoriensetGographes,no273,maijuin1979,issn004675x28. Talbot,C.ImlayDuffyToft,Monica.TheFogofPeaceandWarPlanning:MilitaryandStrategicPlanningUnderUncertainty.Routledge,2007.

    p.227.ISBN9781134210886.

  • Wikisourcehasoriginaltextrelatedtothisarticle:Conventiondarmisticedu22juin1940

    Gildea,Robert(2002).MarianneinChains:InSearchoftheGermanOccupation19401945.London:Macmillan.ISBN9780333782309Hirschfeld,G.&MarshP.(eds)(1989).CollaborationinFrance:PoliticsandCultureduringtheNaziOccupation19401944.Oxford:Berg.Jackson,JulianT.(2001).France:TheDarkYears,19401944.Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress.ISBN0198207069

    Externallinks

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