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・ Bombing of Duisburg in World War II
・ Bombing of Durango
・ Bombing of Enkhuizen
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・ Bombing of France during World War II
・ Bombing of Frankfurt am Main in World War II
・ Bombing of Freiburg on 10 May 1940
・ Bombing of Friedrichshafen in World War II
・ Bombing of Granollers
・ Bombing of Guernica
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・ Bombing of Hamburg in World War II
・ Bombing of Hanau in World War II
Bombing of Helsinki in World War II
・ Bombing of Hildesheim in World War II
・ Bombing of Hiratsuka in World War II
・ Bombing of Innsbruck in World War II
・ Bombing of Iraq
・ Bombing of Iraq (1998)
・ Bombing of Jaén
・ Bombing of Kassa
・ Bombing of Kassel in World War II
・ Bombing of Katyr-Yurt
・ Bombing of Kobe in World War II
・ Bombing of Kure (July 1945)
・ Bombing of Königsberg in World War II
・ Bombing of Kōfu in World War II
・ Bombing of La Garriga


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Bombing of Helsinki in World War II : ウィキペディア英語版
Bombing of Helsinki in World War II

The capital of Finland, Helsinki was bombed several times during World War II. Between 1939–1944 Finland was subjected to a number of bombing campaigns by the Soviet Union. The largest raids were three raids in February 1944, which have been called The Great Raids Against Helsinki.
== Helsinki's air defense ==

In the autumn of 1939, Helsinki was protected by the ''1st Anti Aircraft Regiment'' consisting of four heavy anti-aircraft batteries of three to four guns each, one light AA battery and one AA machine gun company.
The air defense of Helsinki was significantly strengthened from spring 1943 onwards under the lead of Colonel Pekka Jokipaltio. During the Continuation War Germany provided two early warning radars and four gun laying radars to Helsinki, further, 18 very effective German heavy 88 mm AA guns were also placed in Helsinki. The new six-gun batteries were grouped at Lauttasaari, Käpylä and in Santahamina. By February 1944 Helsinki was protected by 13 light and heavy AA-batteries. Air defenses included 77 heavy AA-guns, 41 light AA-guns, 36 search lights, 13 acoustic locators and 6 radars in addition to visual spotters and the Finnish Navy's anti-aircraft. Germany also provided some night fighter support against the Soviet attacks.
The air defense command system was based on the German system and was quite effective – key personnel had trained in Germany. Due to manpower shortages, the air defense also used 16-year-old boy volunteers from Suojeluskunta to man the guns and young girls of the Lotta Svärd organization to man search lights.
The Germans had also based a night fighter unit, consisting of 12 Bf 109G-6 nightfighters in Helsinki on 12 February 1944 and the German night fighter direction vessel Togo cruised in the Gulf of Finland between Tallinn and Helsinki.
Helsinki's air defenses prioritized stopping bombs from reaching the city over the destruction of air targets. In a special type of barrage, several batteries would fire a wall of flak in front of the approaching bombers in an attempt to scare them into dropping their payloads too early and breaking away. AA shells had been jury-rigged by drilling the fuze-hole larger and filling the extra space with magnesium mixed with aluminium, turning their explosion from a dull red to a searing white.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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