June 2004

Sixty years ago, the largest invasion fleet in history stormed the northern shore of France on D-Day, the start of the great Normandy Invasion of World War II. On June 6, 1944, over 150,000
  British troops land at Gold Beach. The Trustees of the Imperial War Museum, London
British, Canadian, and American troops fought their way onto beaches whose codenames are now well-known: Sword, Juno, Gold, Omaha, and Utah. (View Shockwave map of beaches.)

U.S. soldiers heading to Omaha Beach on D-Day. National Archives, Washington, D.C.  
Landing in France
Planned by generals Bernard Montgomery and Dwight D. Eisenhower, the invasion actually began the night before, when airborne troops landed on the Contentin Peninsula and near the Orne and Dives rivers. By the end of D-Day, German general Erwin Rommel's coastal defenses had been broken.

Breaking out of Normandy, August 1944. AP/Wide World Photos  
Paris Liberated
After almost two months of fighting in the hedgerows and ruined towns of Normandy, armoured divisions under General George S. Patton were finally able to break through the German lines and begin a race across France. On August 26, 1944, French general Charles de Gaulle led a victory parade in Paris, and the Normandy Invasion was over. Since then, the nations that participated in the campaign have celebrated it as the birth of a free and peaceful Europe.
Some of Adolf Hitler's top military officials weren't fond of Der Führer and his politics. Gerd von Rundstedt, considered one of Germany's ablest generals during the war, despised Hitler. Shortly after D-Day, he was replaced by Günther von Kluge, who committed suicide after being implicated in the July Plot
to kill Hitler. Another victim of the failed plot was Erwin Rommel, commander of the coastal defenses in Normandy, who accepted an offer to take poison rather than face a public trial.

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The events of D-Day are revisited through these Britannica features:

Watch the Normandy Invasion unfold and see the aftermath in modern-day France. (Note: Video requires Windows Media or RealOne Player.)
Watch Video

Hear a firsthand account of the invasion as BBC correspondent Chester Wilmot reports on D-Day from inside a British glider.
Play Audio

Discover the lay of the land, artillery, and soldiers in these interactive illustrations:

- German defenses at Omaha Beach
  View Chart

- Allied landing craft
  View Chart

- The Sherman tank in Normandy
  View Chart

- Seven soldiers in Normandy
  View Chart

Find more maps, video, audio, and articles in Britannica's Normandy Spotlight, where you can also read firsthand accounts of D-Day from the soldiers who were there.

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