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  1. The Holocaust was the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators, between 1933 and 1945. Jews were the primary victims - six million were murdered.

  2. Eastern Europe after the German-Soviet Pact, 1939-1940.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Nazi_GermanyNazi Germany - Wikipedia

    Nazi Germany, officially known as the German Reich and later the Greater German Reich, is a term used to describe the German state between 1933 and 1945, when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party controlled the country, transforming it into a totalitarian dictatorship.

  4. Key Facts. 1. Nazi Germany had been at war with Great Britain and France since September 3, 1939, but little fighting took place on the western front until May 1940. 2. German military strategy involved invading the neutral Low Countries (Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg) in order to invade France. 3.

  5. 13 de nov. de 2014 · Germany knocked France out of the war by the end of June 1940, leaving the United Kingdom to face the Nazis alone. This map shows Hitler’s planned next step: an amphibious invasion of the ...

  6. 21 de jun. de 2024 · Greatest extent of territory controlled by or allied with Germany, November 1942. At the height of his success, Hitler was the master of the greater part of the European continent. German rule in the east was extended to wide areas of the Baltic states, Belorussia (now Belarus), Ukraine, and European Russia; Poland and the protectorate of ...

  7. Camps such as Auschwitz in Poland, Buchenwald in central Germany, Gross-Rosen in eastern Germany, Natzweiler-Struthof in eastern France, Ravensbrueck near Berlin, and Stutthof near Danzig on the Baltic coast became administrative centers of huge networks of subsidiary forced-labor camps.