How much territory did Germany lose after WWII?

Updated on military 2024-03-08
17 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Pomerania, East Prussia, Upper Silesia, and half of Brandenburg were lost, and more than 110,000 square kilometers of land, or a quarter of Germany's territory, were lost after World War II.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    After World War I, 10,000 square kilometers were lost; After World War II, it lost Silesia, East Prussia (10,000 square kilometers), East Pomerania (40,000 square kilometers), and (ominous area).

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Because it was an unconditional surrender, all the Sudetenland in the Czech Republic, which had been occupied before the war, was spit out.

    In addition, at Stalin's insistence, the Soviet Union acquired large territories of Poland, and Poland acquired large territories of the German region of East Prussia as compensation.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    I don't really know this, but I know that it was first divided into the GDR and the Federal Republic of Germany, and then merged after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Territory and the time of annexation.

    In March, Germany merged with Austria.

    In September, Hitler declared war on the Second Polish Republic in alliance with the Soviet Union, and quickly annexed Poland with the Soviet Union with blitzkrieg tactics.

    On April 9, Germany declared war on Norway and Denmark, launched the Norwegian Campaign, Denmark announced its surrender in less than 24 hours, and Norway resolutely resisted Germany under the leadership of King Haakon VII, but finally outnumbered, Germany finally completely occupied Norway on June 10, and King Haakon VII went into exile in England. As a result, Germany was provided with sufficient routes to transport iron ore from Sweden.

    In May of that year, the Battle of France broke out, and the German army gathered 141 divisions and more than 3,000 aircraft and more than 3,000 tanks to complete the French campaign within a month, and by the end of the campaign on June 25, the Netherlands, Belgium and France were completely occupied.

    From June 28 to September 13, 1942 to February 19, 1943, 10 army groups were engaged to attack the Soviet Union and occupy part of the territory.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    During World War II, it generally began with Germany's blitzkrieg on Poland and ended with Japan's unconditional surrender.

    During this period, Germany and the Soviet Union destroyed Poland, and Germany occupied Denmark, Norway, Luxembourg, Belgium, the Netherlands, and partially, France. Later in World War II, Germany also occupied Hungary, Yugoslavia, and Greece. In addition, Germany occupied large swaths of the Soviet Union.

    Before the start of World War II, Germany controlled Austria and Czechoslovakia in addition to its homeland, with a total area of 690,000 square kilometers. After the start of World War II, Germany successively occupied more than 2.4 million square kilometers of countries and territories. Therefore, during World War II, the area of territory actually controlled by Germany exceeded 3 million square kilometers at most.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    During World War II, Germany was the largest in 1941, including the mainland of today's German tourist countries, Alsace and Lorraine in present-day France, the whole of present-day Austria, northwestern Poland (Silesia, Pomerania, West Prussia, Danzig), East Prussia (present-day Russian-occupied), and Memel (present-day Lithuania).

    Then there were the occupation zones and the satrapies, the protectorates, for example, at the beginning of 1942: most of northern France, the western coast of France, all of Denmark, all of Norway, Slovakia, the satrapy of Poland, the satrapy of Ukraine, and the satrapy of the East (these three satrapies formed the area between the Eastern Front and the German mainland), as well as most of Yugoslavia and most of Greece. Hungary, Romania and Italy are friends.

    There have also been changes in the progress of the war at will in the occupied territories. At the end of 1942, it occupied all of mainland France, and in September 1943 it occupied most of Italy north of Naples, while the eastern front was somewhat reduced.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    15 were directly occupied.

    World war ii. Germany occupied Poland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Austria, France, Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece and other Balkan countries (due to the great changes in the political pattern of the Balkan Peninsula from World War II to the present, only a few major countries during World War II are named);

    And the former Soviet Union.

    The western republics mainly include Moldova and Ukraine.

    Belarus, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, and part of Russia.

    After Italy's surrender later in the war, Germany occupied northern Italy for a time. In addition, Germany had a number of client states: Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary, Finland, Hungary, Italy.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    During World War II, Germany occupied countries such as France, Poland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece and other Balkan Peninsula countries (because the political pattern of the Balkan Peninsula has changed too much from World War II to the present, only a few major countries during World War II are named); There are also the republics of the western part of the former Soviet Union, mainly Moldova, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, and part of Russia.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    It occupied about 15 countries, Poland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Austria, France, Yugoslavia, Albania

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Poland, Norway, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Belgium, Luxembourg, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Austria, France, Yugoslavia, Albania, Greece.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    With the exception of the British, it invaded almost all the countries of Europe

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Most of Europe.

    North Africa. Europe except the United Kingdom.

    And those neutrals.

    All fell.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    World war ii. Before the start of the war, Germany's territory was about 470,000 square kilometers, which is slightly less than that, but after the end of World War II, Germany's land area became 350,000 square kilometersThis means that Germany lost nearly 40% of its land in World War II and ceded 120,000 square kilometers of land, there is no way either, who let Germany first start the first World War of World War II, and then the defeated country.

    Since Germany was considered a major fascist in World War II.

    As a defeated country, Germany will definitely allocate land and reparations to the members of the anti-fascist alliance after the war. After the defeat of Germany, the west was more disputed Alsace.

    and Lorraine were ceded to France, and part of the northern part of Germany was ceded to Denmark.

    The eastern states of Silesia were all divided into Poland.

    Even parts of the Bordenburg region and the Oder River were ceded to Poland, and the German West Prussia was forcibly occupied by the Soviet Union, while East Prussia was now Kaliningrad, which is now part of the Russian lands.

    And the remaining few square kilometers of land in Germany were occupied by the Czechs.

    Carved up. Therefore, Germany suffered heavy losses in the war of World War II, which lasted for several years in World War II, and Germany basically spent a lot of population and strategic materials into itHowever, after the defeat of the war, not only reparations but also land were ceded, and Germany's scientific and technological talents were robbed by the United States. It's really a loss of pants left.

    And Germany lost land in World War II, even in World War I.

    Germany also lost territory, and before World War I, Germany had 540,000 square kilometers of land, the largest in all of Europe after Russia.

    However, after the First World War, Germany ceded 1 8 territories to other countries, about 10,000 square kilometers. And in World War I, it was forced to recognize Poland's independence, and at the same time to cede the Polish coastline, so this shows that it is better not to start a war easily, even if the victorious country will damage a lot of manpower, material and financial resources in the war, and the end of the defeated country will be even more miserable. If Germany had not participated in World War I and World War II, Germany might have been able to stand shoulder to shoulder with the United States at its current level, and it is precisely because of Germany's participation in the war, and even because it was the leading country in it, that Germany's economic level has not been able to fully recover until now.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Germany, defeated in the 2nd World War, lost almost 1 4 lands.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    He lost a lot of territory, almost 10 million territories, because their defeat was very serious.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    The defeat of Germany in World War II lost a lot of land, the most intuitive is to divide Germany into two countries, East Germany and West Germany were controlled by the Western world and the former Soviet Union respectively, and it became a decoration at all.

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It will still be weakened, after all, Britain was so affected in World War II that this influence cannot be changed by a single prime minister.