The Battle for Budapest, Part 1—Episode 90
22 December 2025

The Battle for Budapest, Part 1—Episode 90

Beyond Barbarossa: The Eastern Front of World War 2

About

"Budapest lay athwart the main entry route to Austria and Bohemia. It was the main railway hub of the region and also the largest Danubian port. The Red Army could not bypass it. This was the first time in the war that the Red Army had to lay siege to a major city." 


The Red Army assaults the capital of nazi Germany’s final remaining partner in the Second World War. The war appears to be almost lost—but that’s seen through hindsight. No one at the time knew that.


Map 1: The Eastern Front, December 1944


Map 2: Germany’s eastern and western fronts, 1 December 1944


Map 3: The Petsamo-Kirkenes operation in northern Finland


Map 4: The Red Army attacks Budapest

Operation Konrad II


People

 


Mihai I, King of Romania, 1944–1947


 


 


Miklos Horthy, Regent of Hungary


 


 


Miklos Horthy Jr.


 


 


Ference Szalasi, nazi dictator of Hungary, 1944–1945


 


 


Edmund Veesenmayer, Hitler’s “Special Envoy” to Hungary, 1944–1945


 



SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer-Wildenbruch, commander of IX SS Mountain Corps


Historical photos: Fighting in Budapest
  

 


Sources

Antony Beevor, The Second World War. New York, NY, USA: Little, Brown and Company, 2012. 


Evan Mawdsley, Thunder in the East: The Nazi-Soviet War, 1941–1945. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2016. 


Anthony Tucker-Jones, Slaughter on the Eastern Front: Hitler and Stalin’s War, 1941–1945. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: The History Press, 2017.


Morse code by Thane Brown


Music composed and recorded by Nicolas Bury