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German bombs Collection

German bombs were a type of explosive device developed and used by the German military during World War II

Choose a picture from our German bombs Collection for your Wall Art and Photo Gifts

2,269 items

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Spitfires over Forth

Spitfires over Forth
German Heinkel IIIs over the Forth Bridge are intercepted by Spitfires - the first defensive aerial action of the war

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Holland House library after an air raid BB83_04456

Holland House library after an air raid BB83_04456
HOLLAND HOUSE, Kensington, London. An interior view of the bombed library at Holland House with readers apparently choosing books regardless of the damage. Photographed in 1940

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: St. Pauls Survives

St. Pauls Survives
The iconic view of St. Pauls Cathedral from the roof of the Daily Mail newspaper building, through the smoke and flames of the nights German bombing raids, 29 December 1940 St Paul in the Blitz

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Attack of the Ulster Division, 1 July 1916, (c1930). Creator: James Prinsep Beadle

Attack of the Ulster Division, 1 July 1916, (c1930). Creator: James Prinsep Beadle
Attack of the Ulster Division, 1 July 1916, (c1930). Scene from the Battle of the Somme in northern France during the First World War

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Propaganda poster for the RAF

Propaganda poster for the RAF during World War Two. Victory of the Allies is assured. Intensive bombing of Germanys war industries continues

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Cutaway Diagram of the V-1 Flying Bomb; Second World War

Cutaway Diagram of the V-1 Flying Bomb; Second World War
Cutaway diagram of the German V-1 Flying Bomb, showing the inner workings of this rocket propelled bomb, 1944

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: North Sheffield marked with bombing targets, c. 1940

North Sheffield marked with bombing targets, c. 1940
Full title: Ordnance Survey map of north Sheffield copied by the Germans, and marked with bombing targets, c. 1940 Original at Sheffield Libraries: y06718

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: King George VI and Winston Churchill, 1940

King George VI and Winston Churchill, 1940
Wartime British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill photographed with King George VI and Queen Elizabeth at Buckingham Palace in September 1940 after the Palace had been damaged by German bombs during

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: The London Blitz An ARP warden rescues a young girl from the wreckage of a building

The London Blitz An ARP warden rescues a young girl from the wreckage of a building bombed by Germany. V1 attack Buckingham Gate, Victoria

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Recruitment Poster 'Remember Scarborough! Enlist Now', pub

Recruitment Poster "Remember Scarborough! Enlist Now", pub
3025356 Recruitment Poster " Remember Scarborough! Enlist Now", pub. 1914 (colour lithograph) by Kemp-Welch, Edith (1869-1941); Private Collection; (add.info)

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Sectional view of a Mills grenade, WW1

Sectional view of a Mills grenade, WW1
Drawing reproduced from a German weekly newspaper article which gave particulars of British and Russian hand grenades. Figs. 1, 2, 3 & 4 illustrate the Mills grenade. Date: 1918

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Ordnance Survey map of north Sheffield copied by the Germans, and marked with bombing targets

Ordnance Survey map of north Sheffield copied by the Germans, and marked with bombing targets
Original at Sheffield Local Studiess 26 M/4

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: British Army Captain Chris Goddard, left, and Cpl Gary Fisher check out the Second

British Army Captain Chris Goddard, left, and Cpl Gary Fisher check out the Second World War German bomb they had just made safe on a building site beside Tower Bridge, London

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Bomb damage to the centre of Berlin. March 1944

Bomb damage to the centre of Berlin. March 1944

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Bomb damage, Exeter BB42_00712

Bomb damage, Exeter BB42_00712
Exeter, Devon. A view looking towards the remains of the terrace of houses comprising numbers 25-36 Southernhay West showing bomb damage

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: WWI Poster, Remember Scarborough

WWI Poster, Remember Scarborough
WWI Parliamentary Recruiting Committee Poster, Remember Scarborough! Great Britains resolve to crush the German Barbarians. Enlist Now! Date: 1915

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Damage to Canterbury Cathedral Library, WW2 - Baedeker Blitz

Damage to Canterbury Cathedral Library, WW2 - Baedeker Blitz
" Canterbury under fire" - Damage sustained to the Cathedal LIbrary examined by Dr. Hewlett Johnson, Dean of Canterbury, by bombing on the city by German planes of the luftwaffe during WW2

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: WW2 - Chef cooking in a bombed-out street - Blitz, London

WW2 - Chef cooking in a bombed-out street - Blitz, London
WW2 - His restaurant and kitchen destroyed by German bombing, a Chef continues to cook al fresco in a bombed-out street - Blitz, London. Date: circa 1941

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Liverpool birds eye view, 1886

Liverpool birds eye view, 1886
A magnificent birds eye view of Liverpool from the Mersey in 1886, showing the then-new public buildings, at the time of Queen Victorias visit to the Liverpool Exhibition

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: King and Queen inspecting bomb damage at Buckingham Palace

King and Queen inspecting bomb damage at Buckingham Palace
King George VI and Queen Elizabeth pictured among the rubble at Buckingham Palace following German air raids during the Blitz, September 1940

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Berlin, Germany

Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Berlin, Germany
The Protestant Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church (Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedachtniskirche) on the Kurfurstendamm in Berlin, Germany. It was badly damaged in a bombing raid in 1943

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: The High Altar of St. Pauls Cathedral; Second World War, 19

The High Altar of St. Pauls Cathedral; Second World War, 19
Photograph showing the High Altar of St. Pauls Cathedral, London, after a German bomb had exploded on the choir roof and destroyed a large section of roof, 1940

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: RAF Bristol Blenheim Fighter-Bombers; Second World War, 19

RAF Bristol Blenheim Fighter-Bombers; Second World War, 19
Illustration showing three Royal Air Force Bristol Blenheim mark IV fighter-bomber-reconnaissance airplanes over enemy territory in 1941

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Frankfurt am Main

Frankfurt am Main
before the bombing Date: 1916

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: German inventions for war in the air by G. H. Davis

German inventions for war in the air by G. H. Davis
The ingenuity of German scientists applied to the war in the air. Illustrating the methods and machines exploited and used by the Germans during the Second World War. Date: 1945

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Blitz in London -- bomb disposal at Charing Cross

Blitz in London -- bomb disposal at Charing Cross
Blitz in London -- soldiers using a trolley to remove a land mine on Hungerford Railway Bridge, Charing Cross, on 17 April 1941

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Back Them Up - World War Two poster

Back Them Up - World War Two poster
World War Two poster depicting British bombers (they look like the Bristol Beaufort) carrying out a daytime bombing raid on the city of Berlin

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Blitz in London -- bomb disposal at Charing Cross

Blitz in London -- bomb disposal at Charing Cross
Blitz in London -- soldiers using a trolley to remove a land mine on Hungerford Railway Bridge, Charing Cross, on 17 April 1941

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: V-1 Flying Bomb in flight; Second World War, 1944

V-1 Flying Bomb in flight; Second World War, 1944
Photograph showing a German V-1 Flying Bomb rocket in flight over Southern England, 1944. Flames can be seen streaking from the exhaust of the machine

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Bomb damage to locomotives at Newton Abbot Station, 1940

Bomb damage to locomotives at Newton Abbot Station, 1940
On 20th August 1940 Newton Abbot Station was attacked by three German planes. This image shows the devastation that was caused by both bomb damage and extensive machine gun fire

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Mogul locomotive No. 8314 with bomb damage in 1941

Mogul locomotive No. 8314 with bomb damage in 1941
A 4300 Mogul locomotive, No. 8314, lies amongst the debris following an air raid in Weymouth on 17th January 1941. Star Class locomotive, Princess Charlotte

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Bomb Damage at Royal Oak near Paddington c. 1940

Bomb Damage at Royal Oak near Paddington c. 1940
Bomb damage to stations was inevitable after the sustained air attacks by the German Luftwaffe in late 1940 and early 1941

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Londoners sheltering from a German air raid on a platform in Piccadilly Underground Station during

Londoners sheltering from a German air raid on a platform in Piccadilly Underground Station during the Blitz
6015286 Londoners sheltering from a German air raid on a platform in Piccadilly Underground Station during the Blitz, World War II, September 1940 (b/w photo) by English Photographer

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: WW II - partly assembled Focke-Wulf 190 Bremen factory

WW II - partly assembled Focke-Wulf 190 Bremen factory
Vintage photograph World War II - partly assembled Focke-Wulf 190 aircraft in the companys Bremen factory, following RAF bombing

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Scene showing a destroyed residential street in the city of Plymouth following an air

Scene showing a destroyed residential street in the city of Plymouth following an air raid by the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War. 13th August 1943

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Hull, Yorkshire, World War Two. A bomb disposal unit pictured with an

Hull, Yorkshire, World War Two. A bomb disposal unit pictured with an unexploded bomb that has been found in Craven Street, Hull

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: York North locomotive depot, London & North Eastern Railway, 29 April 1942

York North locomotive depot, London & North Eastern Railway, 29 April 1942
York North locomotive depot, London & North Eastern Railway. A4 locomotive 4-6-2 no. 4469 Sir Ralph Wedgwood damaged beyond repair as a result of a German air raid during the Second World War

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: WW1 - The King Stephen fishing boat and Zeppelin L19, 1916

WW1 - The King Stephen fishing boat and Zeppelin L19, 1916
WW1 - The zeppelin L19 (also known as the LZ 54), was a World War I airship of the of the Imperial German Navy. After its first bomb raid in the UK, the L19 crashed in the North Sea

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Map, Britain -- Spearhead of Attack, WW2

Map, Britain -- Spearhead of Attack, WW2. Date: 1940s

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Ordnance Survey map of north east Sheffield copied by the Germans

Ordnance Survey map of north east Sheffield copied by the Germans, and marked with bombing targets, c. 1940
Original at Sheffield City Archives MD7731/4 and Sheffield Local Studies Librarys 26 M/5

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: (1874-1965). Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill. English statesman and writer

(1874-1965). Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill. English statesman and writer
WINSTON CHURCHILL (1874-1965). Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill. English statesman and writer. Prime Minister Churchill inspecting bomb damage in the Battersea area of London, England

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Royal Opera House in Valletta, Malta - Ruins

Royal Opera House in Valletta, Malta - Ruins
Ruins of the Royal Opera House in Valletta, Malta - severely damaged in 1942 following German bombing raids during World War Two and pulled down following the war

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: British terriorials charging at Loos

British terriorials charging at Loos
Illustration by S. Begg showing British troops wearing anti-gas masks charging German trenches of the fortified second line at the Battle of Loos with bombs and bayonets

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Bombers of the German Luftwaffe in flight over London during the Battle of Britain

Bombers of the German Luftwaffe in flight over London during the Battle of Britain. Picture shows: Two Dornier 217s flying above fires started by bombs in the neighbourhood of Beckton gas works in

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Liberation of Europe: German Destroyer Aground off Ile De Batz

Liberation of Europe: German Destroyer Aground off Ile De Batz. (Picture shows) A beached enemy destroyer was successfully attacked recently by rocket

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: The Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedachtniskirche church and surrounding buildings in Berlin Germany

The Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedachtniskirche church and surrounding buildings in Berlin Germany devastated by Allied bombing during WW2 - 1st July 1945

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: Junkers Ju-87D Stuka

Junkers Ju-87D Stuka
Six Luftwaffe Junkers Ju-87D Stuka flying in formation Very Early During WW2 Enroute to Bomb Poland on 18th October 1939 Date: 1939

Background imageGerman bombs Collection: New German incendiary bomb by G. H. Davis

New German incendiary bomb by G. H. Davis
Details of the new German explosive incendiary bomb produced during the Second World War. Explanatory drawings showing how the bomb is constructed, and the proper methods of tackling it. Date: 1942



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German bombs Collection

German bombs were a type of explosive device developed and used by the German military during World War II. The bombs were designed to be dropped from aircraft and were capable of causing significant damage upon impact. They contained high explosives such as TNT or RDX and could be detonated by either a time-delay fuse or an impact fuse. The bombs could be used for both offensive and defensive purposes, allowing the Germans to target enemy forces on the ground or in the air. German bombers also carried incendiary bombs which could cause massive fires when they exploded. These weapons played an important role in helping Germany gain air superiority during World War II and allowed them to carry out devastating bombing campaigns against their enemies.
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Our beautiful pictures are available as Framed Prints, Photos, Wall Art and Photo Gifts

The German bombs collection is a stunning assortment of wall art, framed prints, photo prints, canvas prints, jigsaw puzzles and greeting cards that depict the devastation caused by German bombing during World War II. Our collection features powerful images captured by renowned photographers such as Cecil Beaton and Bill Brandt. These photographs capture the destruction wrought upon London and other British cities during the Blitz in 1940-41. Our collection includes iconic images such as St Paul's Cathedral standing tall amidst smoke-filled skies, bombed-out buildings with rubble strewn across streets and people going about their daily lives amid the chaos. The images are poignant reminders of the resilience of ordinary people in extraordinary times. Whether you're looking to add historical depth to your home or office decor or seeking a unique gift for someone interested in history or photography, our collection offers something for everyone. With its high-quality printing techniques and materials used to create each piece of artwork, it ensures that these important moments from history will be preserved for generations to come.
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What are German bombs (Artists Arts) art prints?

German bombs art prints are a collection of striking and powerful images that depict the destructive power of German bombs during World War II. These prints showcase the intricate details and technical precision of these deadly weapons, while also highlighting their devastating impact on both military targets and civilian populations. Created by talented artists from around the world, these art prints offer a unique perspective on one of the most significant events in modern history. From dramatic aerial views to up-close depictions of bomb casings and fuses, each print captures a different aspect of this complex subject matter. Whether you're a history buff or simply appreciate fine art, German bombs art prints are sure to make an impression. With their bold colors, intricate details, and thought-provoking imagery, we offer a fascinating glimpse into one of humanity's darkest moments.
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What German bombs (Artists Arts) art prints can I buy from Media Storehouse?

We offer a wide range of German bombs art prints for purchase. These prints are perfect for those interested in military history or aviation enthusiasts. The collection includes various types of German bombs, including the SC 250 and the SD 2 Butterfly Bomb. The artwork is created by talented artists who have captured the intricate details of each bomb with precision and accuracy. The prints are available in different sizes to suit your preferences and can be framed to enhance their aesthetic appeal. Whether you're looking to decorate your home or office space, these German bombs art prints from Media Storehouse make an excellent addition to any collection. We offer a unique perspective on one of the most significant events in modern history and serve as a reminder of the bravery and sacrifice made by those who fought during World War II.
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How do I buy German bombs (Artists Arts) art prints?

To purchase German bombs art prints from Media Storehouse, you can browse our extensive collection of artwork online. Once you have found the print that you would like to purchase, simply add it to your cart and proceed to checkout. During the checkout process, you will be prompted to enter your billing and shipping information. We offer a variety of payment options including credit card and PayPal. Once your order has been processed, your art print will be printed on high-quality paper using state-of-the-art printing technology. It is important to note that all prints are for personal use only and cannot be used for commercial purposes without permission from the artist or copyright holder. Additionally, Media Storehouse does not offer acrylic prints at this time. Purchasing German bombs art prints from Media Storehouse is a simple and straightforward process that allows you to bring beautiful artwork into your home or office space.
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How much do German bombs (Artists Arts) art prints cost?

We offer a wide range of German bombs art prints at varying prices. Our collection features high-quality reproductions of some of the most iconic and historically significant artworks from this genre. Each print is carefully crafted using premium materials to ensure that it captures the essence and beauty of the original artwork. We understand that our customers have different budgets and preferences when it comes to purchasing art prints, which is why we offer a variety of sizes and framing options to suit every taste. Whether you're looking for a small print to display on your desk or a large canvas to hang in your living room, we've got you covered. Our German bombs art prints are perfect for anyone who appreciates fine art or has an interest in history. They make great gifts for friends and family members who share these interests as well. So if you're looking for beautiful, high-quality art prints at affordable prices, look no further than Media Storehouse.
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How will my German bombs (Artists Arts) art prints be delivered to me?

We take pride in delivering your German bombs art prints with utmost care and efficiency. We use high-quality packaging materials to ensure that your artwork arrives at its destination in pristine condition. Our standard delivery method is through a trusted courier service, which allows us to track the progress of your order from dispatch to delivery. Once you have placed an order for your German bombs art print, our team will carefully prepare it for shipment. We will securely package it using protective wrapping and place it inside a sturdy cardboard tube or flatpack envelope depending on the size of the artwork. We understand how important receiving your artwork is to you, so we strive to make sure that our delivery process is as smooth and hassle-free as possible. You can rest assured that when you order from Media Storehouse, your German bombs art print will be delivered safely and promptly right to your doorstep.