Unsolved Mysteries of World War II
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Unsolved Mysteries of World War II

Hitler's niece was found dead in his apartment, was it murder or suicide? In 1941 Rudolf Hess made a secret trip to Britain, why was this shrouded in mystery? The work of the code breakers and why the Nazi's never knew. Why did Hitler become so convinced of the threat to the Pas de Calais and sacrifice the security of possible coastline invasions?
20043 episoderX-Ray13+
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Episoder

  1. S3 E1 - The Death of Geli Raubal

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    31. august 2004
    13min
    13+
    On the night of September 17, 1931 Angela Raubal, Adolf Hitler's niece, was found dead in Hitler's apartment. Was her death a suicide as the Nazi party claimed at the time or did Hitler himself murders his own niece in a fit of jealous rage?
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  2. S3 E2 - The Riddle of Rudolf Hess

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    31. august 2004
    25min
    13+
    On May 10, 1941 Rudolf Hess, former Deputy Fuhrer of the Third Reich, made an extraordinary lone flight to Britain. Why did the British government, instead of treating the incident as a propaganda coup, shroud the Hess affair in a web of official secrecy?
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  3. S3 E3 - The Phantom Invasion

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    31. august 2004
    25min
    13+
    By June of 1944 Adolf Hitler had become convinced that the main Allied invasion of France would be launched against the Pas de Calais. Even when the Allied forces began to land on the Normandy coast, Hitler still refused to succumb to what he saw as a distraction, maintaining the heavy defenses at the Pas de Calais.
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