Blood And Iron: The German Conquest Of Sevastopol Access
The conquest of Sevastopol was Erich von Manstein’s greatest triumph, earning him the baton of a Field Marshal. However, it was a pyrrhic victory in a strategic sense. The 11th Army was so depleted by the "Blood and Iron" approach that it could not immediately participate in the drive toward Stalingrad as originally planned.
The Soviet "no retreat" policy, fueled by Order No. 227, meant that the garrison fought long after the situation became hopeless. When the city finally fell on July 4, 1942, the Germans took nearly 100,000 prisoners, though thousands of Soviet troops were left behind to perish in the coastal cliffs or attempt desperate, suicidal escapes by sea. Legacy and Aftermath Blood and Iron: The German Conquest of Sevastopol
The final assault, Operation Sturgeon (Unternehmen Störfang), began in June 1942. For five days, the city was subjected to a relentless "feu roulant" (rolling fire). The Luftwaffe’s Luftflotte 4 flew thousands of sorties, dropping more tonnage of bombs on Sevastopol than had been dropped on London during the Blitz. The "Blood and Iron" philosophy was literal: the German strategy was to physically reshape the landscape, collapsing the underground bunkers through sheer kinetic force. The Human Cost The conquest of Sevastopol was Erich von Manstein’s
The Siege of Sevastopol (1941–1942), often summarized by the chilling German operational moniker "Blood and Iron," represents one of the most grueling and technically complex military undertakings of the Second World War. It was not merely a battle for a port; it was a collision between the Third Reich’s industrial might and the Soviet Union’s fanatical defensive resolve. For 250 days, the Crimean fortress became a crucible that tested the limits of 20th-century siege warfare. The Strategic Imperative The Soviet "no retreat" policy, fueled by Order No