Bombing of Amsterdam explained

The first bombing of Amsterdam in the Second World War, and the only attack on the city center, occurred on 11 May 1940 when a German plane bombed the Blauwburgwal neighborhood and completely destroyed seven buildings, killing 44 and wounding 79.

Possible explanations

A Junkers Ju 88 bomber dropped four bombs on the neighborhood, one of which levelled seven buildings and a café near the Herengracht.[1] Two other bombs exploded in the canals and a fourth landed in the water without exploding, where it remained.[2]

The bombing was an isolated event and did not have any apparent military goal. Two possible explanations have been given:[3]

Commemoration

Dutch newspapers reported the bombing at the time, but the major bombing of Rotterdam a few days later received more attention, and further coverage was banned by the German occupiers. The killed civilians were buried without being specifically identified as bombing victims, and were only identified in 2016.

The bombing is remembered every year.[4] In May 2020, a memorial plaque with the victims' names was unveiled in the neighborhood.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Geukes Foppen, Fred . Bommen op de Blauwburgwal . Champlemy Pers . 2019 . 9789079567072 . Amsterdam . nl.
  2. News: Freriks . Kester . 2019-12-06 . Het onbekende bombardement . 2024-03-06 . NRC . nl-NL.
  3. https://nos.nl/artikel/2170971-slachtoffers-onbekend-amsterdams-bombardement-krijgen-een-naam.html NOS, "Slachtoffers krijgen een naam."
  4. https://www.parool.nl/amsterdam/die-bom-die-70-jaar-geleden-44-man-doodde-op-de-blauwburgwal~a293694/ Het Parool, "Die bom die 70 jaar geleden 44 man doodde op de Blauwburgwal."
  5. Web site: 2020-06-02 . Onthulling . 2024-03-07 . Wijkcentrum d'Oude Stadt . nl-NL.