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Authors: Rick Stroud

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Notes

A Note on Sources

The main sources I have used in the research for this book have been the collection of Second War War history in the Historical Museum of Crete (HMC), the huge private collection of the museum’s curator, Mr C. E. Mamalakis (CEMA), and the Patrick Leigh Fermor archive in the National Library of Scotland (NLS/PLF). I was privileged to be given access to this archive before it was curated and I have used the box numbers that were in use on my visits. I have also consulted documents in the National Archive (NA) and the Imperial War Museum (IWM). The London Library was a valuable source of wartime memoirs both Cretan and British SOE. From other published material I found Anthony Beevor’s
Crete: The Battle and the Resistance
,
Alan Clark’s
The Fall of Crete
and
Geoffrey Cox’s
A Tale of Two Battles: A Personal Memoir of Crete and the Western Desert,
1941
, very useful when writing my short account of what happened in the eleven days after the invasion. Finally, in the Leigh Fermor archive in the National Library of Scotland, there is a typewritten fragment of ‘The Eagles of Mount Ida’
written by the guerrilla fighter Giorgios Frangoulitakis, translated and annotated by Leigh Fermor.

1
An Island of Heroes

 
‘Cretan mountain men’: NLS/PLF,
13338
/
6
, Black file, ‘Fred Warner and Foreign Office Docs’.

‘Blood vendettas over family honour’: Mr C. E. Mamalakis, in a letter to the author, wrote: ‘You would rather get cancer than be involved in a Cretan feud.’

‘Cretans, especially those’: ibid.

‘In Roman times’: Pendlebury,
Archaeology of Crete
, p.
6
.

 
‘The mountains hide a series’: Grundon,
Rash Adventurer
, p.
247
.
 

When will we have
’:
verses translated by Dr Stavrini Ionnadou,
2013
.
 
‘Before the Second World War’:
Pendlebury, p.
6
.
 
‘“with the speed of a cheetah”’: Patrick Leigh Fermor in ‘John Pendlebury and the Battle for Crete’,
Spectator
,
20
October
2001
.
 
‘Pendlebury’s home on Crete’: see Powell,
The Villa Ariadne
.

‘When he was not moving’: author interview with Mamalakis.

‘One, an Austrian woman’: ibid.

‘Jan Knoch was a German tourist’: ibid.

 
‘“I know Crete”’: Foreign Office SOE archive quoted in Grundon, p.
235
.

‘His friend and fellow agent’: Grundon,
Rash Adventurer
, p.
291
.

 
‘The military situation in Greece’: see Beevor,
Crete: The Battle and the Resistance
, Kindle edition.

‘“From the first days”’:
The Dixon Papers
quoted in Grundon,
Rash Adventurer
,
p.
256
.

 
‘“The struggle needs blood”’: Fielding,
Hide and Seek
,
Kindle edition.

2
Defenders of Crete

 
‘The general’s desertion’: author interview with Mr C. E. Mamalakis.
 
‘But it also acted’: filmed interview Giorgios Tzitzikas,
The Eleventh Day
, dir. Christos Eperson, Archangel Films,
2006
.

‘“ There was fear”’: Tzitzikas,
The Eleventh Day
.

3
Operation
Merkur

 
‘On the same day’: see Martin Pöppel,
Heaven and Hell: The War Diary of a German Paratrooper
.
 
‘For the first’:
German Airborne Troops
1936

45
Roger Edwards
1974
. Purnell Book Services Ltd (Book Club Edition) p.
53
.

‘Clumsy as it was’: author interview Warwick Woodhouse, late Lt. Col. Royal Marines.

‘Before being allowed to jump’: Kurowski,
Jump into Hell
, p.
18
.
 
‘The paratroops piled their parachutes’: Mamalakis, Private Collection.
 
‘To stop it snagging’: Pöppel.

‘At last, each great, yellow-nose Ju
52
’: Cox,
A Tale of Two Battles
, p.
69
.

 
‘One by one they lifted’: Becker,
The Luftwaffe War Diaries
, p.
187
.

‘Feldwebel Wilhelm Plieschen took’: Sutherland and Canwell, p.
61
.

‘Aircraft and gliders stretched’: Gilberto Villahermosa,
Hitler’s Paratrooper
, p.
89
.

‘In a leading glider sat’: Becker,
p.
193
.

 
‘Hundreds of canopies blossomed’: Cox, p.
72
.

‘On the terrace’: Beevor.

4
The Battle of Crete

 
‘Blinded by the sun’: Beevor,
Crete: The Battle and the Resistance
.
 
‘Coloured clouds of parachutists’: US Army Special Report No.
5
G-
2
/
2657
-
231
, The Battle of Crete.

‘As far away as Paleochora’: Beevor.

‘At the northern port’: Spurr,
To Have and to Lose
, p.
186
.

 
‘An agonised scream’: ibid.
 
‘A Greek, Captain Kalaphotakis’: Beevor.

‘Spurr shouted to a British’: Spurr, p.
200
.

 
‘Twenty-six miles away’: Clark,
The Fall of Crete
, p.
81
.
 
‘One of the villagers’: MacDonald,
The Lost Battle: Crete
1941
, p.
177
.
 
‘Just over an hour’: Clark, p.
83
.

‘By now the German commander’: Kiriakopoulos
The Nazi Occupation of Crete,
1941

1945
, p.
160
.

 
‘“I was enormously impressed”’: Grundon,
Rash Adventurer
,
p.
307.

‘“You will give one”’: ibid., p.
308
.

‘At headquarters he found’: Tzitzikas,
Freedom and Glory (Memoirs
1939

1945
)
, p.
39
.

 
‘Late on that first afternoon’: Pöppel,
Heaven and Hell
, p.
55
.
 
‘“Today has been a hard one”’: quoted in Churchill,
The Grand Alliance
, p.
254
.

 

 

5
The Next Nine Days

 
‘On the evening of
20
May’: Beevor.

‘On one wall’: Heydte,
Daedalus Returned
, p.
111
.

 
‘Maleme was overlooked’: Clark,
Fall of Crete
, p.
102
.

‘Very early in the morning’: Beevor.

 
‘An Allied artillery commander’: ibid.
 
‘they were forbidden’: ibid.

‘At Heraklion, a group’: C. E. Mamalakis interview.

‘One, Colonel Tzoulakis’: ibid.

‘Near the harbour’: ibid.

‘A fierce firefight’: ibid.

‘only his leg’: ibid.

 
‘A few miles south’: Mamalakis interview.

‘The battle lines in Heraklion’: ibid.

 
‘The sun set’: Cox, p.
88
.

‘The bombers left’: ibid., p.
90
.

 
‘“My son, we know”’: Beevor, Kindle edition.

‘The men were ordered’: Mamalakis interview.

‘“Nobody could get”’: Fergusson,
The Black Watch and the King’s Enemies
, p.
88
.

‘There was a stench’: Gavin Long,
Greece, Crete and Syria
, p.
91
.

 
‘I never expected’: NA/WO
231
/
3
.
 
‘Brigadier Chappel left’: NA/WO
231
/
3
.

‘The remaining troops’: Cox, p.
94
.

‘Every ridge promised’: author interview with the late John Pumphrey, who fought and was captured in Crete. The interview, which was really a series of conversations, took place years before I had the idea for this book. Pumphrey was my uncle-in-law and his reminiscences have coloured my descriptions of the chaos that overtook the British Army on its retreat to the beaches on the south coast of Crete.

 
‘“a round fertile plain”’: Cox, p.
98
.

‘John Pendlebury never’: Powell,
The Villa Ariadne
,
p.
126
. The precise details of the fate of John Pendlebury have been lost in the mists of time and the Cretan habit of mythologising events. Dilys Powell’s account is the most complete, and I have used it in conjunction with an intereview with Mr C. E. Mamalakis.

6
The Occupation Begins

 
‘In the meantime’: Kurowski,
Jump into Hell
, p.
166
.

‘“Those who fought on Crete: Theodore Papkonstantinou,
Die Schlacht um Griechenland
,
1966
, quoted in Kaloudis,
Crete May
1941
,
p.
42
.

 
‘“the murder of a German”’: Stewart,
The Struggle for Crete
, p.
316
.

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