Read Crete: The Battle and the Resistance Online
Authors: Antony Beevor
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #War, #History
'On finding that entire staff . . .', PRO WO 218/166.
'Come on, Lofty . . .', Tanner, conversation, 2.12.90.
'had a personal . . .', Graham, letter to Davie.
'My orders were to go with the men . . .', Laycock, PRO DEFE 2/699.
'Presume Ivor . . .',
The Letters of Anne Fleming
(ed. Mark Amory), p.155.
'I replied that if . . .', Waugh,
The Diaries of Evelyn Waugh,
6 July 1955, p.728.
"Then came the . . .', quoted Long, p.307.
'It's all right . . .', quoted Messenger,
The Middle East Commandos,
p.93.
'What are you . . .', quoted Long, p.307.
'There they proceeded . . .,' Hildyard diary.
20.
Cairo and London
'There was Cairo . . .', Forrester, conversation, 4.10.90.
'The reaction of the US . . .', Eccles,
By Safe Hand,
p.274.
'I don't . . .', Killearn Diaries, 29 May 1941, St Antony's College, Oxford.
'hum of splenetic . . .', Lee, p.lll.
'Everyone was . . .', Wilkinson, conversation, 20.2.90.
'I am far from reassured . . .', Churchill, 14 June 1941, PRO PREM 3/109.
'Of course, you know . . .', Farrar-Hockley, p. 101.
'a bitter memory', Pöppel, p.67.
'attributed by the German command . . .', Memorandum, Canea, 1942.
'His attitude . . .', de Winton, conversation, 28.9.90.
'in my view . . .', Laycock, PRO DEFE 2/699.
'Our case was indeed . . .', C.J. Hamson, p.12.
The Resistance
21.
Reprisal, Evasion and Resistance
'Ten Commandments . . .', quoted Mabire,
La Crete,
p.449.
'Many parachutists ...', quoted Zayas,
The Wehrmacht War Crimes Bureau,
p.155.
'It is certain that the civilian population . . .', General Student, Order of 31.5.41, quoted Memorandum, Canea, 1942.
'certain punitive measures . . .', PRO FO
371/28885,
quoted Zayas, p.99.
‘as inclined to agree',
ibid.
Ah yes, we have plenty of those', quoted Powell, p.164.
'thrash them . . .', Psychoundakis,
The Cretan Runner,
p.37.
'Usual drill . . .', Sandover, conversation, 12.10.90.
'to feel out the country . . .', Stockbridge, conversation, 27.6.90.
'the restless, furtive . . .', Smith-Hughes, conversation, 20.8.90.
'fruity, flippant and bloodthirsty', Rendel,
Appointment in Crete,
p.25.
'a few hasty words . . .', quoted Powell, p. 155.
'immensely brave and . . .', Fräser, conversation, 12.6.90.
'It is ill-gleaning after Pendlebury', quoted Powell, p. 159.
'One of Tom's . . .', Leigh Fermor, letter to the author, 28.8.90.
'The villagers were so hospitable . . .', quoted Powell, p.159.
'Everything depended . . .', Stockbridge, letter to the author, 20.8.90.
22.
Into the Field
'SOE was a strange . . .', Woodhouse,
Something Ventured,
p.28.
‘his rather surprised . . .', Diaries of Lord Killearn, 24 March 1941.
'outhouse over the road . . .', Smith-Hughes, conversation, 20.8.90.
'SOE and SIS were separated . . .', War Cabinet Defence Committee (Operations) SOE Operations in Europe: Note by Minister of Economic Warfare DO (44) 2 of 11 January 1944.
'SOE was basically . . .', Stockbridge, conversation, 27.6.90.
'I can't tell you . . .', Ward, conversation, 28.5.90.
'a subject which anyone . . .', Rendel, p.18.
'the personnel people . . .', Ward, conversation, 28.5.90.
'Four months after . . .', Woodhouse,
Apple of Discord,
p.45. See also Denys Hamson,
We Fell Among
Greeks,
p. 149.
'This part of our . . .', Rendel, p.22.
'more like a practical joke . . .', Rendel, p.27.
'like marching through . . .', Rendel, p.57.
'Some talk . . .', John Pendelbury, quoted Hammond and Dunbabin, p.47.
'What, never seen . . .', Stanley, conversation, 4.7.90.
'pallikari-complex',
Fielding,
The Stronghold,
p.28.
'Stand still Turk . . .', Psychoundakis, p.87.
'Your knees began . . .', Verney, conversation, 17.7.90.
23. The Peak of German Power
'the deaths of . . .', Pitt,
Special Boat Squadron,
p.32.
'To be out of . . .', Fielding,
Hide and Seek,
p.79.
'a dynamic tubby . . .', Woodhouse,
Something Ventured,
p.8.
'Nobody who did not experience it...', Sweet-Escott,
Baker Street Irregular,
p.73.
'the reddish beard . . .', Leigh Fermor, letter to the author, 28.8.90.
'Mandakas wanted to be . . .', Psychoundakis, conversation, 24.5.90.
'Young man . . .', Manoussakis, conversation, 26.5.90.
'Nearly the whole population . . .', Memorandum, Canea, 1942.
24. The Year of Change
'Germans! You have now . . .', Leigh Fermor, letter, 26.7.90.
'a nice old boy', Stanley, conversation, 4.7.90.
'large, bluff . . .', Hammond,
Venture into Greece,
p. 124.
'none of that Cretan swagger', Fräser, conversation, 12.6.90.
'rather as one would suggest coming to . . .', Stockbridge, conversation, 27.6.90.
'a fox-terrier quivering with eagerness', Rendel, p.18.
'I'm only lighting . . .', Psychoundakis, conversation, 24.5.90.
25. The Italian Armistice
'Chiromantie belief . . .', Deakin,
The Brutal Friendship,
p.183.
'a lot of flattery . . .', Leigh Fermor, conversation, 26.7.90.
'so long the object . . .', Churchill,
Closing the Ring,
p.168.
'Should the Italian troops in Crete and Rhodes .. .', Churchill,
Closing the Ring,
p.167.
'this is a time . . .', Churchill,
Closing the Ring,
p.102.
'If there had been . . .', Leigh Fermor, letter to the author, 14.9.90.
'Ah, ah, mon capitaine!'
Leigh Fermor, letter to the author, 12.10.90.
'And now Greco . . .', quoted Hadjipateras and Fafalios, p.300.
'rotten to the core', quoted Cooper,
Cairo in the War,
p.271.
'a shiny round . . .', Woodhouse,
Something Ventured,
p.8
'What will history . . .', Manoussakis, conversation, 29.9.90.
'more trouble than it was worth', Ciclitira, conversation, 26.6.90.
26. The Abduction of General Kreipe
'As far as the ultimate . . .', Moss,
III Met by Moonlight,
p.39.
Was wollen sie in Kreta?'
Akoumianakis, conversation, 22.5.90.
'NOTIFICATION . . .',
Paratiritis,
Friday, 5 May 1944. 'Everybody felt taller . . .', Manoussakis, conversation, 26.5.90.
'Kreipe Befehl: Wir Folgen!',
Dunbabin, Final Report, p.45.
'care and foresight', text of Decree of Municipal Council of Heraklion 15.2.48, provided by Miki Akoumianakis.
27.
The German Withdrawal
'gather political . . .', Fräser, conversation, 12.6.90.
'Ah, you're back . . .', Lodwick,
The Filibusters,
p.174.
'the stage was . . .', Moss,
A War of Shadows,
p.46.
'Since the . . .', quoted Kokonas,
The German Occupation of Crete,
p.339.
'the impression that . . .', Verney, conversation, 17.7.90.
'Nicht boom-boom!',
Manoussakis, conversation, 26.5.90.
'Keep calm . . .', Verney, conversation, 17.7.90.
'seated in a captured German . . .', Rendel, p.223.
'tell Major . . .', Manoussakis, conversation, 26.5.90, and Verney, 17.7.90.
'Yassou,
Herr Glembin . . .', Psychoundakis, p.232.
28.
The Last Days of the Occupation
'the high-spirited . . .', Psychoundakis, pp.225-6.
'looked like boarders . . .', Seferis,
A Political Diary,
Athens 1979, p.269, quoted Papastratis,
British
Policy Towards Greece During the Second World
War,
p.204.
'the Greek gendarmerie on the corner . . .', Sweet-Escott (an eye-witness to the event), p.226.
'aimed at a political solution', Grambas, 'The Greek Communist Party 1941—1945: The Internal Debate on Seizing Power', published in Sarafis,
Background to Contemporary Greece,
Vol. ii, p. 194.
'a hair-raising walk', Stanley, conversation, 4.7.90.
Very dejected', Ciclitira, conversation, 26.6.90.
'an agreeable example . . .', Hunt, p.46.
'The Cretans strongly resented . . .', Scott Daniell,
Regimental History of the Royal Hampshire
Regiment,
p. 207.
'Ah, Herr Major . . .', Leigh Fermor, conversation, 26.7.90.
'I have seen . . .', dialogue reconstructed, Psychoundakis, conversation, 24.5.90.
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