Allied Operational Maps Eastern Bloc (1 results)
Seller: Max Rambod Inc, Woodland Hills, U.S.A.Max Rambod Inc
Contact seller5-star sellerArchive of six large original World War II-era maps used by a United States Army soldier in the European Theater of Operations during the Allied liberation of Europe. Lithographed maps, various issuers, 1938-1939 (wartime use 1944-1945). Beyond their immediate tactical utility, these maps occupy a pivotal geopolitical moment. Th…e Czech sheets document territories liberated by American forces in May 1945, particularly around Plze?, which marked the effective western limit of U.S. advance before demarcation lines were fixed with Soviet forces. Within months, these same regions fell firmly within the Soviet sphere of influence, formalized through postwar agreements and culminating in the 1948 Communist coup in Czechoslovakia. Cartographically, borders, administrative divisions, and place names shifted to reflect the new socialist state, while subsequent Eastern Bloc map production emphasized different political geographies aligned with Moscow. Thus, these pre-Communist and German-printed sheets capture a fleeting interstice: cities momentarily under American military administration before incorporation into the Soviet Eastern Bloc. The 1938 promotional map of Czechoslovakia preserves the nation's pre-Munich territorial identity, prior to its partition under Nazi pressure, while the 1939 Hamburg map reflects the industrial heartland of the Third Reich before Allied devastation and Germany's eventual division into East and West. In this sense, the archive charts not only wartime movement but the rapid redrawing of Europe's political landscape-where American operational cartography was almost immediately superseded by Cold War boundary-making. Sizes range from 19" x 24" to 34" x 22". The archive comprises detailed city and regional maps of western Czechoslovakia-M?sto Teplá (19" x 24"), Plze? (Sheet 4151, 24" x 19", black and white with green overlay), Hor?ovský Týn (Sheet 4150, 24" x 19"), and Kralovice (Sheet 4051)-together with a large 1938 promotional map of Czechoslovakia (34" x 22") and a 1939 German-printed map of Hamburg (28" x 24"). All are original period printings retained by the soldier following his service. Good overall, with expected wartime folds, creasing, and moderate wrinkling from field use and storage; no significant losses observed. A rare and materially resonant survival of Allied operational maps that document both the liberation of Central Europe and the swift geopolitical transformation that consigned much of that terrain to the Soviet Eastern Bloc, rendering these sheets artifacts of a brief and transitional military presence.