What was sudetenland in ww2




















If Hitler invaded Poland , Britain and France would have to go to war. TV A new online only channel for history lovers. Sign Me Up. This was the day when the premier of France and England signed the Munich agreement, sealing the fate of Czechoslovakia. Paul Schmidt, an interpreter, stands next to Hitler.

AP Photo. From the ashes of World War One After World War One at the Treaty of Versailles the defeated Germans were subjected to a series of humiliating terms, including the loss of much of their territory. Gross-Rosen concentration camp was a Nazi German network of Nazi concentration camps built and operated during World War 2.

Using the same tactics as in other events, he claimed that Germans were being treated unfairly. He claimed that the Czech government had lost control and that the German army should be sent in to restore order.

Hitler invited President Hacha to Berlin on 14 March and kept him waiting until while Hitler finished watching a film. Hitler demanded that Hacha agreed to split Czechoslovakia within a few hours. This was conquest pure and simple. Germany expanded and gained valuable resources as Czechoslovakia was rich in coal and possessed the huge Skoda armaments factory.

Despite its multinational population and tense relations with its neighbors, all of whom coveted its territory, Czechoslovakia remained a functioning parliamentary democracy until the Munich crisis of In late summer , Hitler threatened to unleash a European war unless the Sudetenland was ceded to Germany. The Sudetenland was a border area of Czechoslovakia containing a majority ethnic German population as well as all of the Czechoslovak Army's defensive positions in event of a war with Germany.

In what became known as the Munich Pact, they agreed to the German annexation of the Sudetenland in exchange for a pledge of peace from Hitler.

Under severe German pressure and Slovak separatist pressure from within, the rump state restructured itself into an authoritarian regime and renamed itself Czecho-Slovakia, reflecting the significant autonomy granted to Slovakia. These efforts did nothing to deter Nazi Germany from inviting Czechoslovakia's other neighbors to make demands on its territory. The German occupation authorities refashioned the two provinces as a German protectorate, annexed directly to the Reich, but under the leadership of a Reich Protector.

From until , former Minister of the Interior Wilhelm Frick held this post. Chamberlain believed that, faced with the prospect of war against Britain and France, Hitler would stop his aggression. Chamberlain was wrong. German troops invaded Poland on 1st September This post is part of our collection of resources on Nazi Germany.



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