Artist's commentary
It was a very long time ago, when I was middle school student - even before I knocked on the doors of the aritst, Ritta Nakanishi, to try to become his apprentice - that I learned of the Tiger, or should I say Wittmann.
It was in the military magazine called “Maru” from the Showa 30’s (1955-1964) which I bought in a used book store in front of the Kawasaki Daishi Station (or at the street in front of the Kawasaki Station) that had an article on the Panzermeyer and other soldiers such as Michael Wittmann. The article wrote about the Battle of Villers-Bocage, and stated that “SS-Obersturmführer Michael Wittmann on the Tiger tank single handedly destroyed a brigade group of British tanks.”
I’ve been seeing the “Combat” show, which was aired on a different channel when baseball was on TV. There were other 30-minute documentary shows like “Forefront,” which featured the voices of soldiers from both sides of the Italian front in WWII. I started wondering what the “SS” was at around the age of 10, while watching those shows, and I finally had the answer in front of me with this magazine. I’ve read about the arrest of Eichmann on an extra issue, and I’ve also seen the documentary film “The Nuremberg Trials” and knew about the Holocaust and the Nazi war crimes, but to the introverted young boy I was, these things made my curiosity bloom.
Nowadays there are plenty of military references, but back then there was very little, maybe the Reader’s Digest article on the “Longest Day” with the stylish American illustrations, and a few translations from Japanese companies such as the “Battle of the Bulge” from Hayakawa and the “Last Battle” from Asahi Shimbun. I went wild with joy when I was finally able to watch the film version of the Battle of the Bulge at the Tokyo Theater, which no longer exists today.
I gained interest in Wittmann and started researching the number of vehicles destroyed by Wittmann and started listing it chronologically, through bits and pieces of records on various articles. Dainipponkaiga Company released a full record of Wittmann’s kills, and it closely matched my record so I went on to produce a comic on Wittmann, which became “Death of the Steel.”
Dainipponkaiga Company released “Villers-Bocage Through the Lens,” which also showed the records from the British perspective. This book showed Wittmann's vehicle as being the Tiger 205. However, there were no images of the Tiger 205 in the Villers-Bocage photos. The Tiger destroyed in the Villers-Bocage was mostly from the First Company and a Panzer VI from the Panzer Lehr.
The vehicle towed out of the village postwar was the Tiger 231, and the photo of this vehicle was initially captioned as Wittmann’s Tiger, and later disproved. So, what happened to Wittmann’s tank?
A photo together with Witmann’s gunner, Balthasar Woll, was taken right after the battle. Woll obtained a Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross for his actions in Russia, was promoted, and became a Tiger commander, but did not make it back to the frontlines. In the official record and in the comic, Woll says to Wittmann, “They think they’ve already won,” and Wittmann replies, “Let’s teach them a lesson then.” A pretty cool line, but it’s actually a fabricated conversation meant as German propaganda.
Anyway,
Wittmann was actually not at Villers-Bocage. (This is highly unlikely)
Wittmann’s Tiger 205 was salvaged before the Tiger 231.
Wittmann’s Tiger broke down, and he used the Tiger 231 at Villers-Bocage.
...many questions come up in my mind.
The Tiger tank was hastily developed to counter the threat of the T-34 and KV series tanks in the Soviet, and put into service by the winter of 1942, in the Leningrad front. The famous 502nd Heavy Panzer Battalion tank ace, Otto Carius is the most well-known Wehrmacht tank commander, but Wittmann in the Waffen SS performed better than Otto Carius in terms of the number of vehicles destroyed. Otto Carius retired from the army and started the Tiger-Apotheke after the war. There was a plan to invite Otto Carius to a military event in Japan called the “Victory Show,” but it was unfortunately cancelled due to his age.
There was a Wittmann Medal in World of Tanks a while ago, but it was renamed and deleted due to political reasons. A sad thing, in my opinion.
I think that if Germany mobilized earlier, it may have been able to build the Tiger tank before WWII started. What do you think?
There were several variations for the Tiger I tank: early, middle and late production models. Wittmann’s Tiger was of the latest production model, and you can tell by observing things such as the splash guard on the turret ring.
There are also many things about the Tiger that still remain unknown. For example, launch tubes were placed on the turret roof of tanks and assault guns for what is said to be S-mines beginning from 1944 onwards. Black powder was put under the S-mine in the tube, and by hitting the bottom of the tube, it was to be fired, but there are very few if any photos of these launch tubes actually being used. Maybe the mortar on the Israeli Merkava was inspired by the S-mine launchers on the Tigers.
Another peculiarity is the number of smoke dischargers mounted at Kursk in 1943; there are no detailed photographs of the smoke canisters. It is quite exciting to do research for the illustrations on how these war machines were used in extreme situations. Compared to a lot of people, I’m not an avid tank enthusiast or a military enthusiast. I’m just researching weapons and history in detail to draw realistic pictures.