Operation Gearbox

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Operation_Gearbox an entity of type: Thing

L' Opération Gearbox était une opération norvégienne et britannique sur l'île arctique de Spitzberg, dans l'archipel du Svalbard, durant les opérations navales arctiques pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. rdf:langString
Operation Gearbox (30 June – 17 September 1942) was a joint Norwegian and British operation to occupy the Arctic island of Spitsbergen during the Second World War. It superseded Operation Fritham, an expedition in May, to secure the coal mines on Spitsbergen, the main island of the Svalbard Archipelago which had failed when attacked by four German Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor reconnaissance bombers. The Norwegian force, with 116 long tons (118 t) of supplies, arrived by British cruiser on 2 July. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Opération Gearbox
rdf:langString Operation Gearbox
rdf:langString Operation Gearbox
xsd:float 78.0
xsd:float 16.0
xsd:integer 57539484
xsd:integer 1117087004
xsd:date 2018-06-01
rdf:langString Global view of Norway
xsd:integer 4
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dr Erich Etienne
rdf:langString Operation Gearbox
xsd:gMonthDay --06-30
xsd:date 2011-07-24
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString the Arctic Campaign of the Second World War
rdf:langString Norwegian–British victory
xsd:integer 18 57
xsd:string 78.0 16.0
rdf:langString L' Opération Gearbox était une opération norvégienne et britannique sur l'île arctique de Spitzberg, dans l'archipel du Svalbard, durant les opérations navales arctiques pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale.
rdf:langString Operation Gearbox (30 June – 17 September 1942) was a joint Norwegian and British operation to occupy the Arctic island of Spitsbergen during the Second World War. It superseded Operation Fritham, an expedition in May, to secure the coal mines on Spitsbergen, the main island of the Svalbard Archipelago which had failed when attacked by four German Focke-Wulf Fw 200 Condor reconnaissance bombers. The Norwegian force, with 116 long tons (118 t) of supplies, arrived by British cruiser on 2 July. The survivors from Fritham had salvaged what equipment they could and set up camp in Barentsburg (deserted since the Operation Gauntlet evacuation and sabotage operation in August–September 1941) and sent out reconnaissance parties. The Admiralty arranged a survey flight by a Catalina flying boat from RAF Coastal Command but already knew much of what had happened, through Ultra decrypts of Luftwaffe Enigma coded wireless signals. The reinforcements consolidated the Barentsburg defences and sent parties to attack the German weather party at Longyearbyen on 12 July, only to find that they had departed three days earlier. The German airstrip was blocked and on 23 July, a Ju 88, carrying an experienced crew and two senior officials, was shot down while flying low over the landing ground. In Operation Gearbox, Norwegian sovereignty had been asserted, no casualties had been suffered, the German plan to send another weather party had been thwarted and preparations had begun for Operation Gearbox II.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 45349
xsd:date 1942-09-17
xsd:string Norwegian–British victory
xsd:string 57 men 18 men
<Geometry> POINT(16 78)

data from the linked data cloud