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Enigma: The Battle for the Code [Hardback]

3.86/5 (1107 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 450 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Feb-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Trade Paper Press
  • ISBN-10: 1620456346
  • ISBN-13: 9781620456347
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 37,80 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 450 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Feb-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Trade Paper Press
  • ISBN-10: 1620456346
  • ISBN-13: 9781620456347
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Recounts a true tale of espionage, retracing the successful Allied effort to break the German "Enigma" code.

ACCLAIM FOR ENIGMA

“CRACKING STUFF…VIVID AND HITHERTO UNKNOWN DETAILS.” –Sunday Times (London)

“IN A CROWD OF BOOKS DEALING WITH THE ALLIED BREAKING OF THE WORLD WAR II CIPHER MACHINE ENIGMA, HUGH SEBAG-MONTEFIORE HAS SCORED A SCOOP.” –Washington Post

Winston Churchill called the cracking of the German Enigma Code “the secret weapon that won the war.” Now, for the first time, noted British journalist Hugh-Sebag-Montefiore reveals the complete story of the breaking of the code by the Allies—the breaking that played a crucial role in the outcome of World War II.

This fascinating account relates the never-before-told, hair-raising stories of the heroic British and American sailors, spies, and secret agents who faced death in order to capture vital codebooks from sinking ships and snatch them from under the noses of Nazi officials. Sebag-Montefiore also relates new details about the genesis of the code, little-known facts about how the Poles first cracked the Luftwaffe’s version of the code (and then passed it along to the British), and the feverish activities at Bletchley Park, Based in part on documents recently unearthed from American and British archives—including previously confidential government files—and in part on unforgettable, firsthand accounts of surviving witnesses, Enigma unearths the stunning truth about the brilliant piece of decryption that changed history.

List of Illustrations
v
Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1(8)
Prologue 9(6)
1 The Betrayal
15(6)
Belgium and Germany, 1931
2 The Leak
21(10)
Poland, Belgium and Germany, 1929--38
3 An Inspired Guess
31(8)
Poland, 1932
4 A Terrible Mistake
39(7)
Poland, 1933--9
5 Flight
46(13)
Germany, Poland and England, 1939--40
6 The First Capture
59(10)
Scotland, 1940
7 Mission Impossible
69(10)
Norway and Bletchley Park, 1940
8 Keeping the Enigma Secret
79(14)
France and Bletchley Park, May-September 1940
9 Deadlock
93(10)
Bletchley Park, August-October, 1940
10 The Italian Affair
103(14)
Bletchley Park and the Mediterranean, March 1941
11 The End of the Beginning
117(6)
Norway, March 1941
12 Breakthrough
123(9)
North of Iceland, May 1941
13 Operation Primrose
132(15)
The Atlantic, May 1941
14 The Knock-Out Blow
147(9)
North of Iceland, June 1941
15 Suspicion
156(12)
Bletchley Park, the Atlantic and Berlin, May-October 1941
16 A Two-Edged Sword
168(10)
The Atlantic and the Cape Verde Islands, September 1941
17 Living Dangerously
178(10)
The South Atlantic and Norway, November 1941-March 1942
18 The Hunt for the Bigram Tables
188(14)
Bletchley Park and Norway, December 1941
19 Black Out
202(17)
The Barents Sea, Bletchley Park and the Admiralty, February-July 1942
20 Breaking the Deadlock
219(14)
The Mediterranean and Bletchley Park, October-December 1942
21 The Turning Point
233(13)
South of France, the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, November 1942-September 1943
22 Trapped
246(7)
South of France, November 1942-March 1943
23 The Arrest
253(5)
Berlin, March-September 1943
24 Sinking the Scharnhorst
258(9)
The Barents Sea, December 1943
25 Operation Covered
267(19)
Paris, the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, August 1943-March 1944
26 The Last Hiccough
286(18)
Germany, France and the South Atlantic, March-June 1944
Epilogue-Where did they go? 304(6)
Chronology 310(11)
Glossary 321(3)
Appendix 1 Polish Codebreaking Techniques 324(5)
Appendix 2 The Bombe 329(12)
Appendix 3 Naval Enigma 341(13)
Appendix 4 Cillis 354(3)
Appendix 5 Rodding 357(11)
Appendix 6 Naval Enigma Offizier 368(6)
Notes 374(36)
Bibliography 410(3)
Index 413