Due to urban redevelopment and World War
II bomb damage, their pictorial chronicle of life in London before and during World War I has an independent historical value all of its own.
Not exact matches
Was the
bombing of Dresden in World War
II, for example, just collateral
damage, or an intentional strike against civilians?
The sight of the
damaged Hogwarts buildings strongly evokes the look of the
bombed out buildings throughout parts of England after World War
II, touching on some of the Nazism imagery that found its way into Part 1.
During World War
II, it was used as a concentration camp and suffered heavy
damage from
bombings at the end of the War.
The painting relates both to Wylie's own experiences in London during the Blitz of World War
II and to the history of Plymouth, which suffered severe
bomb damage in 1941.
Though many of the city's buildings were severely
damaged in the
bombing campaigns of World War
II, Dresden has worked to restore its landmarks including the Royal Palace with its incredible sgraffiti (a mural technique involving multiple layers of plaster in contrasting colors) and the Frauenkirche, a Protestant church with outstanding Baroque architecture.
Turned into a maze of factory sweatshops during the 1930's and suffering severe
bomb damage during World War
II, many of the homes original features had been tragically lost.