General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Dresden was a civilian town with no military significance. Why did we burn its people? [View all]GreatGazoo
(4,683 posts)They were rebuilding a church which was destroyed in the bombings and they used computer modeling to put as many of the original stone blocks back into their original positions. You can tell which are the original stones by the soot on them

The city has many buildings with very thick facades. Layers were added as architectural styles changed. There were many buildings that used a lot of wood, like opera houses and older churches that were easy fodder for the phosphorous bombs. Even as fires raged and buildings were destroyed the city's archive of building plans (submitted over hundreds of years to obtain permits for the modifications or original construction) survived allowing buildings to be reconstructed in an exacting way.
The firebombing was the single most destructive bombing operation of WWII and that includes Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 135,000 were killed.
There was graffiti on a wall there, in English: "All war is terror."