Discovery of Secret WWII Tunnels Raises Hopes of Finding Looted Russian " Amber Room " Treasure |
The
discovery of a secret Second World War tunnel network has raised hopes of
finally finding the lost Amber Room treasure looted from the Soviet Union by
the Nazis.
Five
entrances have been discovered in a 200-hectare forest in north-east Poland,
near the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad. The site at Mamerki was already
well-known for the bunker headquarters of the German army's Supreme Command of
the Land Forces.
The Amber The room, decorated with intricately carved amber panels, was looted by Nazi troops
from the Catherine Palace 20 miles south of St Petersburg — then Leningrad — in
1941 early on in the German invasion of the USSR.
Soviet
curators at the palace pasted wallpaper over the room to disguise it after
attempts to remove the panels found they had become brittle over time. But
the work of art was
too famous for the deception to succeed, and the room was transported
to Königsberg Castle in East Prussia — now Kaliningrad.
During the
final collapse of the Wehrmacht in January 1945, German Führer Adolf Hitler issued an order
prioritizing the transport of looted artifacts from the city to Germany.
However, Nazi Gauleiter of East Prussia Erich Koch
abandoned his post before the order could be carried out.
The find is not the first to prompt hopes
of recovering the treasure. The discovery of the wreck of the German cargo ship
the SS Karlsruhe in the Baltic Sea by Polish
divers in July 2020 led to speculation that sealed crates found aboard might contain
the remains of the Amber Room. The Karlsruhe was torpedoed and sunk by Soviet
aircraft on April 13, 1945, just four weeks before the Nazi surrender, and 933
of the 1083 refugees aboard perished when she went down.
The modern-day value of the lost treasure
has been estimated at up to $500 million. A reconstruction of the room at the
Catherine Palace — which the Nazis vindictively destroyed as they were forced
to retreat in 1944 during the Red Army's Operation Bagration — was begun by
Soviet authorities in 1979, taking 24 years to complete.
Think your
friends would be interested? Share this story!
Post a Comment