The first part of World War II saw British expeditionary troops attempting to stop the invading German forces in France. The attempt failed, and the British forces were forced back to the sea at Dunkirk, from where they had to be evacuated by anything that floated, all the while under heavy assault from the Germans. The defeat was an humiliating and costly debacle for the British, and a huge Propaganda victory for the Nazi invaders. After Dunkirk, it did appear for a while that there would be no stopping the spread of the nazi horror.
The D-Day invasion was in Normandy, not at Dunkirk.
No, Dunkirk is about 160 miles north east, in the province of Nord.
Dunkirk beach.
The Dunkirk evacuation, was codenamed Operation Dynamo by the British.
Between 27 May and 4 June 1940, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was forced to retreat to Dunkirk by German forces. The Dunkirk evacuation, code-named Operation Dynamo, was the evacuation back to Britain from the beaches and harbour of Dunkirk, France,
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i don't kow can you tell me
I think the Maginot line was entirely staffed by the French. It was. Before the British retreated to Dunkirk, the Maginot Line had already fallen.
that was a monday.
it got completely wiped out by bombs
in 1933 in1940 in1947
It happened at Dunkirk when the french were so badly injured they retreated.
India and some scenes in the UK.
No - the evacuation at Dunkirk happened late May/early June 1940. The US didn't become involved in World War II until December 1941
Dunkirk was the place in France from which about 340.000 British and French troops were evacuated to England after fleeing the advancing German army. It wasn't really a 'battle' as such, but you could call it a rearguard action. the british at the time called it 'The Miracle of Dunkirk' in that so many men were snatched from being prisoners of war.
The D-Day invasion was in Normandy, not at Dunkirk.