Maginot Line
The French fortification built between Germany and France in the years preceding World War II was called the Maginot Line. Constructed in the 1920s and 1930s, it was designed to deter a German invasion and protect France's eastern border. The line consisted of a series of fortresses, bunkers, and obstacles, but ultimately proved ineffective when German forces bypassed it during the 1940 invasion by attacking through Belgium.
the Maginot line was a heavily fortified line of fortresses and bunkers (many linked by tunnels) that ran down France's east side. Considered to be impregnable, the German army simply went round it! Phil
The Rhineland was a buffer zone between Germany and France.
It was called the Maginot Line, a series of French, not British, fortifications along the German border which were supposedly impenetrable. The Germans avoided this by flanking the line and going around it, invading France through the Ardennes and the Low Countries.
September 1st 1939 Germany declared war on Poland. To honour the treaty between Poland, France and UK, France and UK declared war on Germany.
Maginot Line
The French fortification built between Germany and France in the years preceding World War II was called the Maginot Line. Constructed in the 1920s and 1930s, it was designed to deter a German invasion and protect France's eastern border. The line consisted of a series of fortresses, bunkers, and obstacles, but ultimately proved ineffective when German forces bypassed it during the 1940 invasion by attacking through Belgium.
the Maginot line was a heavily fortified line of fortresses and bunkers (many linked by tunnels) that ran down France's east side. Considered to be impregnable, the German army simply went round it! Phil
The border between France and Germany, where the Rhine River runs through, is approximately 451 kilometers, or 256.25 miles. This part of the Rhine is the longest river in Germany. The Rhine Gorge, the part of the river that flows through Koblenz and Bingen, Germany, is known as the Romantic Rhine due to its many castles, fortresses and country villages built along it during the middle ages.
The Rhineland was a buffer zone between Germany and France.
It was called the Maginot Line, a series of French, not British, fortifications along the German border which were supposedly impenetrable. The Germans avoided this by flanking the line and going around it, invading France through the Ardennes and the Low Countries.
Saar was the new state that was created between France and Germany.
Between Germany and France at the time of World War 2. None (unless you count Belgium and Switzerland but it's just bordered with the two), after World War 2 there came LuxembourgAnswer 2There are no countries which are between Germany and France. But there are 3 countries which border both Germany and France: Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland.
France is the country between Spain and Germany.
Hmm. Not sure if this is what you mean. The Maginot Line was the defensive line of forts and bunkers that France built along its border with Germany after WW1. France thought Maginot Line would protect them from another invasion by Germany. However, the Germans simple attacked through Belgium and went around the forts.
Germany is the country located between France and Russia.
There really was no major tension between the two; France was just an ally of a country at war with Germany