For about 400 years.
He never did. Bismarck was Prussia's, and then Germany's, Chancellor under Kaiser Wilhelm I. Sorry, my Germans not that good.
The Soviet Union entered Hungary in 1945 at the end of World War II. In 1949, their presence was formalized with the creation of a communist state. Hungary remained under Soviet control until June of 1991 when the last troops finally left.
Because a revolution did not cause German unification. German unification was a long process that involved Prussia, which is now part of Germany, taking control of the other states of Germany through various means- treaties, confederations, and even occasionally wars. The process was completed in 1871 when Prussia and a few other German states defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War.
Algeria came under French control in 1834 and became independent from France after a long war that ended in 1962.
D-Day was on June 6, 1944. The German garrison in Paris surrendered on September 25th, 1944. So the difference was 7 weeks.
The name of the German cannon that fired on Paris in World War 1 was the "Paris Gun" or "Kaiser Wilhelm Geschütz." It was a long-range artillery gun designed to shell targets from a distance of over 120 kilometers.
D-Day : 6 June 1944 - the Liberation of Paris :19-25 August 1944 .
about 3,5 century
Normally measured in hours not days.
the distance between Paris and Fréjus is 876 km. The driving time is just under 8 hours.
Germany is a large country, and it has a common border with France. You don't need to take a ferry.From Paris to the nearest point on the German border should take around 3½ hours by road.
It should take under 3 hour to drive the 296 km.
The Paris gun of WWI. It weighed 256 tons. it was 28m long and fired a 240mm round. It was made by Krupp of Germany. The German army used it on Paris France.
how long shall iflight from Paris to Tahiti
under good conditions (no delays) car: 9-11hrs (on highways) plane: 1.5-2hrs
Some countries that were under the control of Germany included Austria, Yugoslavia, France, Belgium, Denmark, Czechoslovakia, Netherlands, Greece, Poland, Norway, and many other European countries. The Germans also controlled parts of North Africa.