Arts & Humanities: History: “Question: The Congress of Vienna is 1815 reduced the number of German states, True or False?” plus 5 more |
- Question: The Congress of Vienna is 1815 reduced the number of German states, True or False?
- Question: Garibaldi's actions in southern Italy were not aimed at creating a unified Italy. True or False?
- Question: Why Jewish people prison and killed by countries after world was 2 end?
- Question: What if Japan invaded The Soviet Union during WW2 when Nazi Germany and its allies did? How would the outcome of the war be affected?
- Question: So why was it hard to bypass the Berlin Wall?
- Question: History Fair HELP?
| Question: The Congress of Vienna is 1815 reduced the number of German states, True or False? Posted: 02 Jan 2016 06:57 AM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Posted: 02 Jan 2016 06:56 AM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Question: Why Jewish people prison and killed by countries after world was 2 end? Posted: 02 Jan 2016 06:48 AM PST Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel Report AbuseAdditional DetailsIf you believe your intellectual property has been infringed and would like to file a complaint, please see our Copyright/IP Policy Report Abuse Cancel |
| Posted: 02 Jan 2016 04:14 AM PST The Poles actually had a diplomat working with the Japanese to try to make this happen. Tadeusz Romer was the Polish ambassador to Tokyo in the beginning of the war, and he also worked with Japanese authorities (who didn't care about Hitler's Aryan race policies) to rescue and relocate Jews. The Japanese decided that striking north into Russia from Manchuria, where they were then fighting, would demand too many resources from their fight with China. The relationship between Poland, the USSR and Japan was actually pretty interesting and complex. Thomas Snyder's "Bloodlands" goes into it in some detail. But the Japanese simply didn't have the resources to fight China, the US, Britain and Russia all at the same time. |
| Question: So why was it hard to bypass the Berlin Wall? Posted: 02 Jan 2016 02:54 AM PST After World War 2, the victors divided Germany (the loser) into pieces. Essentially America got the western piece, which they governed well, and the Soviets got the eastern piece, which they made into a hell on Earth where everyone wanted to leave. But there was one exception. Germany's capital city of Berlin was located well within the eastern piece of the country, but America got the western portion of Berlin too. So West Berlin was cut off from the rest of America's piece, and it was surrounded by Soviet controlled territory. Here's a map: http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/08/1... There was no wall separating the main portion of West Germany from East Germany. But the Soviets did build a wall that went all the way around West Berlin. That was just half a city, so it wasn't too big to build a wall around it. So the next question is: why did East Germans keep trying to get into West Berlin? Why not just try to get into the main portion of West Germany instead, since it wasn't surrounded by a wall? I don't know the answer to that. |
| Posted: 02 Jan 2016 01:11 AM PST |
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