The destruction of the British city during the German Air Force attack was a source of important UK domestic experience during World War II. In World War II, bombs were used against nonhuman military goals, enemy forces, and civilians (Dukievel and Spielvogel 758). The Internet has proved to be a powerful resource for many web sites and personal anecdotes searching for Blitz. The Internet provides many historical materials to students with various educational and economic backgrounds.
Dengeki began on September 7, 1940. The bombing of London lasted 37 weeks, 57 consecutive explosions. Of all the German Air Force, 20,000 bombs were dropped in London with 71 missions. They have destroyed over 1 million homes and buildings. You can explore the exact location of many bombs in the interactive map of the Bomb Sight website of the National Archives Research Project. When the battle is over, rebuilding will begin. One of the solutions used in the city is the tower, which made more than 500,000 apartments for the people of London in the 1960s. After the bomb exploded, the House had to recover as well, almost completely destroyed in Cripple Gate district on the evening of 29th December 1940. Currently located in the center of Barbican, on the premises, home, office, art center, art museum are mixed.
This is the beginning of the electric blast fight - intense bombing to London and other cities will continue until next May. After that, in the 57 days, London was bombed regardless of day and night. Fire consumes many parts of the city. Residents are seeking refuge in places where they can be found - many evacuate to subway stations and as many as 177,000 people are evacuated in the evening. In one of the most serious cases, 450 people died when the school used as a bomb shelter was destroyed by a bomb. In the war arsenal of the 20th century, London and the world were introduced with new weapons of terrorism and destruction. Dengeki ended on May 11, 1941, and Hitler canceled the raid to move his bomber east in preparation for the Russian invasion of Russia.