YES!!
Danzig is a city in Poland, now called Gdansk. It's an important sea port. The Polish Corridor was a big strip of land in western Poland that borders Germany. Before World War I, Danzig and the Polish Corridor belonged to Germany. After the war ended, Germany was forced to give up the Polish Corridor to the newly reformed country of Poland (in short summary, Poland ceased to exist about 120 years earlier when Germany, Austria and Russia conquered it and split it up between themselves; at the end of World War I, Poland was recreated). Danzig was made a "free city", basically a country of its own but protected by Poland. So the loss of the Polish Corridor and Danzig is when Germany lost World War I and was forced to give them to Poland. One of the causes of World War II was that Hitler wanted to get them back as part of Germany, and when he invaded Poland to take them, England and France declared war on him.
When Hitler ordered a Polish invasion, Britain and France declared war.
Hitler's youth took place in Austria.
Technically, Hitler took back Austria first - they were annexed by Germany in 1938. In terms of invasion, however, Poland was the first country taken back. It was invaded on September 1st, 1939.
He was the leader of Nazi Germany. His job was to try to take over the world and tried to kill the british and polish
He wanted the Polish Corridor and the port city of Danzig.
1. To annex Danzig and the area of Poland separating East Prussia from the rest of Germany. 2. To expand.
Danzig is a city in Poland, now called Gdansk. It's an important sea port. The Polish Corridor was a big strip of land in western Poland that borders Germany. Before World War I, Danzig and the Polish Corridor belonged to Germany. After the war ended, Germany was forced to give up the Polish Corridor to the newly reformed country of Poland (in short summary, Poland ceased to exist about 120 years earlier when Germany, Austria and Russia conquered it and split it up between themselves; at the end of World War I, Poland was recreated). Danzig was made a "free city", basically a country of its own but protected by Poland. So the loss of the Polish Corridor and Danzig is when Germany lost World War I and was forced to give them to Poland. One of the causes of World War II was that Hitler wanted to get them back as part of Germany, and when he invaded Poland to take them, England and France declared war on him.
The countries that are now Austria and the Czech Republic. He also grabbed a city in Lithuania called Memel (it had previously belonged to Germany and Hitler wanted it back).World War II started when Hitler claimed a city in Poland called Danzig (now Gdansk) and a strip of land called the "Polish Corridor" between Danzig and the German border. Poland wouldn't give either to him, so he sent in the German Army to take it, along with about half of Poland (Russia took the other half).
it shouldn't hurt but maybe you are allergic to the fingernail polish or fingernail polish remover you are putting on
Hitlers foreign policy may have been one of the principal causes of ww2, but the Anglo-French policy of appeasement was also to blame. In the thirties, hitler aquired Austria, the Sudetenland, Bohemia, Moravia and Memel, as well as remilitarising the Rhineland. By these actions, hitler defied the treaty of Versailles. His next move was to regain the polish corridor, which had been taken from Germany by the treaty. Britain and France then declared war, and although they had placed guarantees on Poland, they were geographically disadvantaged, and Hitler had no reason to think they would take action.
The Sudetenland.
September
He took back the Rhineland and the Sudetenland. You can call it 'take back' because these two regions had always been part of Germany until 1918.
When Hitler ordered a Polish invasion, Britain and France declared war.
it was all about unemployment figures and about party ideology. Though by 1936 ideology had to take a back seat as by then Hitler was encouraging women back to work.
At the Munich Conference they agreed to German occupation of the Sudetenland, Hitler's asserted last claim, in the hope of maintaining peace. This hope was short lived, for in March 1939, Hitler took over the rest of Czechoslovakia and seized the former German port of Memel from Lithuania. There followed demands on Poland with regard to Danzig (Gdansk) and the Polish Corridor. The Poles remained adamant, and it became clear to Hitler that he could attain his objectives only by force. After surprising the world with the announcement of a nonaggression pact with his sworn foe, the Soviet Union, he sent his armies across the Polish border on Sept. 1, 1939.