Are you under the impression that countries can move? In fact some countries have shifted. Compare Poland in 1938 and now, for example. Back to the question. Immediately before World War 2 Germany included, in addition to its present territory: Austria, a large part of what is now Poland and much of the Czech Republic plus most of the coastal strip of Lithuania.
the federal republic of Germany
Italy and the Austro-Hungarian Empire (which is now split into several different countries including Austria and Hungary). However when fighting actually started, Italy changed sides and fought against Germany because they were offered money at the end of the war.
No they didn't, but in some countries the Nazis had supporters who became the governing power. For example in Norway Vidkun Quisling was the Nazi Gauleiter & Quisling is now a word meaning traitor. The Nazis had popularity in Germany & to a lesser extent in Austria, but were never accepted in the countries that they occupied.
The Soviet Union 'liberated' the following countries in 1944-45: *Poland *Romania *Bulgaria *Hungary *Czechoslovakia *Parts of Austria *Parts of Germany It also annexed the following territories to the USSR: *Bessarabia (Moldova) *Areas of what is now the western part of Ukraine and Belarus *Lithuania *Latvia *Estonia Note that the Soviet Union had its zones of Germany and Austria.
Answer It is one country, but it has 2 capitals. One in Hungary and one in Austria.
actually 9 countries border germany but the 4 that are perhaps too big to miss are france poland austria & the czech republic
AnswerIt split the city of Berlin which was divided between East and West Germany. They have now reunited as Germany.
Czechoslovakia was a country in Central Europe that existed from 1918 to 1992. It later split into two separate countries, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Czech Republic is located in the heart of Europe, bordered by Germany, Austria, Slovakia, and Poland.
If by 'with' you mean fought with, then it was Italy (for the first bit), Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire (what we now know as Turkey)
No. Mali and Benin are separate countries.
They allowed a small conflict between Serbia and Austria-Hungary (Austria-Hungary taking over Serbia) to quickly grow larger and involve Germany, Russia, France, and UK. Serbia had an alliance with Germany, and Serbia was allied with Russia and Russia was allied with France and the UK. Now you see how two countries dragged in four more countries. Further into the war, the US joined the Allied Powers (UK, France, Serbia, and Russia) and the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria joined the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary).
They allowed a small conflict between Serbia and Austria-Hungary (Austria-Hungary taking over Serbia) to quickly grow larger and involve Germany, Russia, France, and UK. Serbia had an alliance with Germany, and Serbia was allied with Russia and Russia was allied with France and the UK. Now you see how two countries dragged in four more countries. Further into the war, the US joined the Allied Powers (UK, France, Serbia, and Russia) and the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria joined the Central Powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary).
Linda Christanell was born in 1939, in Vienna, Germany [now Austria].
Germany and Russia are two different countries. However from 1945 to 1991 the Soviet Union did "possess" and control East Germany and East Berlin. Now all of Germany is free and self-ruling. Russia no longer has anything to do with Germany.
Germany and France
Are you under the impression that countries can move? In fact some countries have shifted. Compare Poland in 1938 and now, for example. Back to the question. Immediately before World War 2 Germany included, in addition to its present territory: Austria, a large part of what is now Poland and much of the Czech Republic plus most of the coastal strip of Lithuania.