2022년 3월 18일 금요일

Germany's territorial changes and gains and losses from World War II.

 In 1918, it was Alsas-Lorraine in the west, a little to Denmark in the north and Belgium in the northwest, and a great deal to Poland. It's called the "Polish corridor," and as a result, the East Prussia Tengkra in German territory falls separately at the eastern end. But there's no reason for the Germans or Hitler to rise... ...Alsas Loren was taken by France to Germany in 1648. It was found again in 1871 and then it was taken back, but the history of France is so long... In the case of Denmark, in 1864, when Bismarck carried out the Unification War, Prussia and Austria formed a "German coalition" and took away a lot of German residences in southern Denmark, and at this time, the Danish residence was returned slightly. Denmark was neutral in World War I anyway. Well, if you look at the textbooks of our country, at the end of the 19th century, a great man who lost a lot of useful land to Germany and forgot his name, came out of the dairy industry... ...and this great biography is about Alsas Loren, and everyone seems to think like him. I thought Denmark was being unfair to me at that time.Like the last lesson in Alsace. Tsk. In the case of the Polish Corridor, it was occupied by Germany when Poland was divided at the end of the 18th century, with a large number of Poles living there. After more than a hundred years of Poland's independence, Hitler said, "The land has been handed over to the inferior." In this way, the German territorial dispute in World War I was actually quite reasonable. Alsas Loren was a little unfair, and the Allies prevented Austria from annexing Germany, and there was a Czech Sudeten German problem, but if you think about it... ...it was during World War II that a tragedy really struck the Germans. Below... the whole eastern part of the capital Berlin has disappeared. They all fell to Poland and the Soviet Union. Twenty million Germans living there moved west under the torture of Soviet and Polish forces, and the Czech Republic's German settlement was also carried up by the Czechs under the protection of the Soviet army, killing 300,000 German girls. Well, the British testified that they made a German woman work naked and publicly rape her. The rest of the German territories also returned Alsace-Lorraine to France, and divided it into four parts: the U.S.-British fluoride, Berlin into four parts, Austria into four parts, and non-India into four parts. West Germany and East Germany, West Berlin and East Berlin were divided until the occupied territories of the United States and Britain and the Soviet Union became East Germany and unified in 1990. Forty-five years of division. Austria was promised a permanent separation from Germany and was established as a unified small Alps country. This situation was unimaginable considering the vast territories of Germany and Austria in 1871... all due to the foolishness of World War II. In World War II, Germany suffered a great loss of territory, but on the contrary, World War I couldn't speak completely differently. This is because 20 million Soviets and 4 million Jews slaughtered by the Nazi's, and 50 million people died in Europe alone in the war. Of course, some of Hitler's folly earned Germany. With the collapse of the British-French colonial system, Germany's commodity market expanded, and at least West Germany became an economic powerhouse. Austria is also a small country that lives well. However, East Germany has been a subjugation of the Soviet Union for 45 years, and Germany is still a well-off country... ...but it would be a bit bitter compared to the United States, Britain, France, Italy, and Japan, the same defeated country. In the old German book, there was a map of Germany in 1937... ...but when I searched for it, the strange thing was that the German territory a thousand years ago was similar to the combined German and Austrian. Then, the "Eastern Territory," which was taken back a thousand years ago by Poland and Russia, is an area where German pioneers migrated to Eastern Europe for a thousand years and gradually pioneered Prussia's center from the 17th and 8th centuries, achieving Prussian-centered unification in the 19th century. You brought it back... ...to Hankyu after the defeat of World War II. Put this on the next post. But the Germans are great. The United States, Britain, France, Spain, Russia, China, Japan, etc... ...there is a geopolitical glass called a historically successful country. Poland, South Korea and Ireland are all over the place. Germany is almost the only case of overcoming geopolitical disadvantages.

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