Mount Sapun
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Mount Sapun or Sapun Ridge (Russian: Сапун-Гора, Ukrainian: Сапун-гора, Crimean Tatar: Sapun dağı, Сапун дагъы) is a 240 m high ridge to the southeast of Sevastopol, situated on the disputed Crimean peninsula.
It became the site of heavy fighting during the siege of Sevastopol (1941-1942), and also during its recapture in 1944.
When defending Sevastopol the Soviet troops held the Sapun Ridge and could observe German movements to the city from the south. It took Wehrmacht nearly 2 weeks of desperate fighting to take control over these positions in late June 1942. As a consequence, Soviet troops had to evacuate from Crimea.
In 2 years, on the final stage of the Crimean Offensive the assault of Sapun-gora on the 7th of May, 1944 was successful for Red Army. On 9 May 1944, just over one month after the start of the battle, Sevastopol fell. German forces were evacuated from Sevastopol to Constanța.
Later in 1944 the first monuments to the Soviet warriors on this place were erected, in 1959 the diorama showing the assault of the German fortifications was opened.
External links
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- Articles containing Ukrainian-language text
- Articles containing Crimean Tatar-language text
- Eastern Front (World War II)
- Battles and operations of the Soviet–German War
- History of Crimea
- Crimea in World War II
- World War II memorials in Ukraine
- Landforms of Crimea
- Hills of Ukraine
- Landforms of Sevastopol
- World War II sites in Ukraine
- Landforms of Russia
- Ridges