Saving Italy

the race to rescue a nation's treasures from the Nazis

When Hitler's armies occupied Italy in 1943, they continued their plunder of Europe's artistic and architectural masterpieces. On the eve of the Allied invasion, U. S. General Dwight Eisenhower appointed artist Deane Keller and Scholar Fred Hartt to leave Naples and track billions of dollars of missing art. As the German army retreated up the Italian peninsula, Nazi orders were to transport truckloads of art into the Reich. Standing in the way was top-level Nazi officer General Karl Wolff who commandeered the great collections of the Uffizi Gallery, and Pitti Palace.

W. W. Norton & Company
2013
9780393082418
book

Holdings

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119962048794232164185351277768FAHS174FAHS40015TN EDSEL100015814652241708963493