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From tunnels to towers, artillery sites, resistance nests and communication centers, Nazi Germany left their footprint throughout the world. To this day, silent remains still exist, sentinels guarding clues about plots that Hitler was unable to carry out. Secret Nazi Ruins digs up mysteries from some of the most covert projects as experts dissect and reveal the purpose of these structures, their makeup, and technical design.
Guided missiles, the Wasserfall, and the war-changing V2 were dreamed up and tested in Peenemunde, a German seaside city suddenly overtaken by Nazi elite. Along the Baltic coast, scientists like Wernher von Braun, designed and tested weapons to bring the Allies to their knees.
Germany's preparations for WW2 began years before 1939. Under various guises, Germany began work on what would become their most technologically advanced front.
In Poland lies a forgotten Nazi complex which could have sheltered up to 27,244 people from Allied bombs, the purpose of which largely remains a mystery.
Hidden in a remote mountainous forest is a structure nicknamed the Fly Trap or Hitler's Stonehenge. Researchers still have no definitive idea what it is.
Outside the town of Pölitz lie the ruins of what was once one of Germany's most important assets - a place that kept the German war machine moving.
When the Nazis took Ksiaz Castle, it wasn't for the view. Secret staircases and lifts were built, while underneath, a vast network of tunnels was taking form.
Built in 1934, Ordensburg Vogelsang, a virtual Nazi Castle, was constructed to build the New German elite future leaders of the Reich.
In 1933, Heinrich Himmler signed a 100-year lease for Wewelsburg castle in Büren, Germany. The space became a clandestine training space for the SS.
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