History & Warfare Now

History & Warfare Now

TV guide - Friday, 25/04/25

00:15
Fighting the Blue
This is the inside story of Sir Hugh Dowding, Commander-In-Chief of RAF Fighter Command, one of the unsung heroes of the Second World War.
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01:14
Fighting the Blue
A New Revolution
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02:14
Fighting the Blue
The Fighting Few
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03:13
More than Just Enemies
More than Just Enemies
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04:17
More than Just Enemies
Days of Engagement
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05:21
The Presidents: Reagan
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06:17
Above & Beyond
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07:25
Journey Home to the USS Arizona
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08:32
D-Day: Over Normandy
American football coach Bill Belichick narrates the events of D-Day, combining modern-day aerial and archival footage and interviews with veterans.
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09:36
Building Modern Paris: An Esoteric Vision
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10:40
America's Secret War
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11:49
Fighting the Blue
Fire in their Hearts
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12:48
Plane Resurrection
Huey
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13:51
Hitler's Propaganda Machine
Building The Brand
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14:55
Hitler's Propaganda Machine
Power and Persuasion
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16:00
Hitler's Propaganda Machine
Why We Fight
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17:02
D-Day: Over Normandy
American football coach Bill Belichick narrates the events of D-Day, combining modern-day aerial and archival footage and interviews with veterans.
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18:06
D-Day: The Price of Freedom
Get an intimate look into the lives of five veterans as they return to Normandy and revisit the locations where they landed on June 6, 1944.
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19:11
Navy Heroes of Normandy
Operation Neptune-Overlord began the largest amphibious landing assault in the history of WWII and was critical to the success of the Allied invasion.
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20:17
Undermining the Nazis: Paris' Secret Tunnels
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21:21
Battlefields
In June of 1944, at the height of World War II in Europe, Americans stormed the beaches of Normandy. Everyone thought it would be a relatively easy move into enemy territory and past Adolf Hitler's Nazi forces. They were wrong. It took nearly two months to advance only 50 kilometers into the French countryside. Now, commanders and historians study the events of Normandy to improve modern tactics.
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22:31
Battlefields
August 1944. For four years, the Swastika flag flew over Paris in a time of deprivation, humiliation, and repression. Despite Hitler's vow to destroy Paris rather than surrender it, Parisians rose up to play a crucial role in driving the Nazis out. General Charles de Gaulle now returned to Paris to address the people in a moment of national reconciliation, "the greatest hours of our History."
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23:46
Battlefields
This infamous battle was one of the worst moments of World War II. On one August evening, after 9 hours of fighting, over 2,000 mostly Canadian Allied soldiers were killed in a raid on a Nazi-occupied port. How did this terrible fiasco unfold? What strategic goals were served by this perilous operation? What lessons did the Allies learn as they planned for the Normandy landings two years later?
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TV guide - Saturday, 26/04/25

00:55
Battlefields
June 1940, in Southeastern France, a handful of French soldiers faced off against an invasion of 300,000 Italian troops. Elsewhere, the French army was in disarray. The Government fled to Bordeaux. The Germans entered Paris. The roads were crowded with refugees and retreating soldiers. Why did this handful of French soldiers continue to fight when all was lost? What explains their heroic victory?
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02:09
D-Day: Over Normandy
American football coach Bill Belichick narrates the events of D-Day, combining modern-day aerial and archival footage and interviews with veterans.
en
03:13
D-Day: The Price of Freedom
Get an intimate look into the lives of five veterans as they return to Normandy and revisit the locations where they landed on June 6, 1944.
en
04:18
Navy Heroes of Normandy
Operation Neptune-Overlord began the largest amphibious landing assault in the history of WWII and was critical to the success of the Allied invasion.
en
05:24
Inside Hitler's Killing Machine
It took less than 10 years for Hitler to set up the concentration camps, many of which became centers for mass killing. As research and archaeological exploration continue, this documentary reveals the established historiographical elements to explain how a system of concentrating populations so quickly became the rationalized apparatus of genocide.
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