Battle of Stalingrad: The Week a City Became a Trap

On August 23, 1942, 600 German aircraft turned Stalingrad to rubble in an afternoon — and by nightfall, XIV Panzer Corps had reached the Volga, trapping the 62nd Army in a narrow strip against the river. This is the story of that first savage week: the firestorm, the factory workers who fought on their own shop floors, the snipers in the ruins, and how a city's destruction became the defender's greatest weapon.

Battle of Stalingrad: The Week a City Became a Trap
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On August 23rd, 1942, somewhere between 600 and 1,000 German aircraft appeared over Stalingrad in a single afternoon. By nightfall, the Volga River itself was on fire — burning oil from hit storage tanks pouring into the water — and a German armored column had punched all the way through Soviet lines to reach the riverbank, cutting off the 62nd Army in a narrow strip of rubble with the river at their backs.
That first week is the episode. Not the months of grinding street-to-street combat that followed, not the famous encirclement in November — just those opening seven days when the shape of the whole battle quietly locked into place. Why did the bombing ironically hand the defenders their best weapon? What did a tractor-factory worker do when the fighting reached his own shop floor? And how did a general nicknamed for nail-biting anxiety turn the city's destruction into a strategic doctrine? Those are the questions this episode sits with.

Pivot Points is a weekly history podcast. Each episode covers one specific world-history pivot moment in plain, conversational language — so any curious listener can follow every detail.

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