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Nicolas Trudgian

Kursk - Clash of Steel

The Germans launched their attack on the Kursk salient on 5 July 1943, and for both sides this was ‘maximum effort’. The Soviets however, informed by intelligence of the impending German attack, had ample time to prepare huge defensive works with hundreds of planned anti-tank belts. They deployed 10 Tank Corps, 5 Tank armies, 1 mechanized Corps and 14 Field Armies equipped with 4000 anti-tank guns and 6000 tanks. The Soviet Air Forces were equally impressive – 2600 aircraft. The Germans, outnumbered in every department, were forced to scrape together whatever serviceable tanks they could from their badly under-strength Panzer formations. Most of the tanks deployed were old Panzer III or IVs, with only 147 Tigers available for action.

The northern German attack made very little headway but, in the south, the Germans had grouped all of the SS Panzer forces into the II SS Panzer Corps and these units, despite the enormous Soviet forces ranged against them, began to smash their way through the Soviet defenses.

The Luftwaffe too had brought together 1200 aircraft and these made an immediate impact on the fighting – on the first day alone German fighters broke up massive formations of Soviet aircraft, over 400 victories being claimed.

On 8 July the Soviets counter-attacked against the II SS Panzer Corps and it is this action that Nicolas Trudgian has magnificently captured in his dramatic, and highly detailed painting. A Tiger and other elements of the 2nd SS Panzer Division “Das Reich” clash with Soviet armor, while overhead the Luftwaffe attack at very low level. The Me109Gs of JG52 find themselves in the midst of this fiery cauldron providing close cover for the Luftwaffe anti-tank aircraft – in this case the Henshel 129s of SchG1 armed with heavy 30mm cannon to hunt the Soviet armor. By the end of the day’s fighting the Soviet III Mechanized Corps had been virtually destroyed.

This was only the beginning however, and for another five days the opposing sides clashed at close quarters, but the Soviets withstood the violent onslaught to take the initiative. For the Germans it was the beginning of an agonizing retreat that ultimately would end in defeat amongst the burning ruins of Berlin two years later.

Adding great historical significance to Nicolas Trudgian’s authentic rendition of this epic battle, every print of ‘Kursk – Clash of Steel’ is individually signed in pencil by two Luftwaffe fighter Aces who flew on the Eastern Front during World War II.

   

 

Overall print size: 33 3/8" wide x 23 1/2" high.

Image size: 26 3/4" wide x 16" high.

Kursk - Clash Of Steel by Nicolas Trudgian
350 s/n prints w/TWO signatures.

US $185

 

Feldwebel Erich Brunotte
Born in 1923, Erich Brunotte joined the Luftwaffe and started immediate pilot training in June 1941. He flew on the Eastern Front with 1./Gruppe Nahaufklarungs-Gerschwader 102, and later transferred to fly with IV./Jagdgeswader 51 “Molders”, in the 13th Staffel. Promoted to Unteroffizier in December 1944, and feldwebel in April 1945, he flew most marks of the Bf109, and the Fw190. His very last combat mission was in the Fw ‘Dora’ 9 on 3 May 1945 at Flensburg in northern Germany.

Feldwebel Heinz Radlauer
Heinz Radlauer learnt to fly gliders in 1940, aged 17, and joined the Luftwaffe in August 1941. After Fighter School, in June 1944 he was posted to join JG51 “Molders” then fighting on the eastern Front near Minsk, scoring his first victory in October of that year. Heinz Radlauer flew the Bf109G, the Fw190A, and at the end of the war the Fw190D, by which time he had notched up over 100 combat missions, flying his last combat mission on 30 April 1945. Credited with 15 air victories, all on the Eastern Front, he was awarded the Iron Cross 1st & 2nd Class.