The Siege of Leningrad (1941-1944) was a brutal 872-day blockade where German and Finnish forces encircled the Soviet city, cutting off all land routes and trapping approximately 3 million civilians. Rather than direct military assault, Hitler ordered systematic starvation, reducing bread rations to as little as 125 grams per day mixed with sawdust and fillers. Winter temperatures dropped below -30°C while fuel shortages eliminated heating, electricity, and water systems. Civilians resorted to consuming leather, glue, and even pets to survive, with thousands dying daily. The Soviet Union maintained a fragile supply route across frozen Lake Ladoga, known as the 'Road of Life,' which delivered limited supplies under constant attack. The siege ended in January 1944, leaving over 1 million civilians dead, primarily from starvation.
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872 Days of Starvation - The Siege of Leningrad #history #ww2 #darkhistory #didyouknow #war #facts本站添加:
September 1941, Adolf Hitler chose to destroy Leningrad through [music] starvation rather than costly urban combat. German and Finnish forces encircled the city, cutting all land routes and trapping [music] nearly 3 million civilians inside. The plan was systematic. Surround the city, block supplies, force surrender through hunger and cold. Within weeks, [music] supply lines collapsed and food reserves ran out across the city. The Soviet responded by issuing rations, [music] 125 g of bread a day, but it was not a real bread. Mixed with sawdust, cellulose, and [music] fillers. Anything to survive. Winter arrived, temperatures dropped below -30°. Fuel [music] shortages shut down entire systems. No heating, no electricity, water [music] frozen pipes. People burned furniture, book, anything, pushing civilians into extreme [music] conditions. Then starvation took over. Thousands died each day in streets and homes, [music] while families became too weak to bury the dead. Desperation forced people to boil leather belts and shoes, consume [music] glue, and eat whatever they could find, including pets, even resorting to cannibalism. The Soviet response created a fragile lifeline across Lake Ladoga, where trucks delivered limited supplies over ice under constant attack, bringing just enough to keep Leningrad breathing.
Months turned into years as bombardment continued and the population endured. By January [music] 1944, sustained offensives broke the siege after 872 days, leaving over 1 million civilians dead. This battlefield of starvation [music] and survival would be remembered as the Siege of Leningrad.
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