Want this question answered?
Austria-Hungary was separated into two different countries Austria and Hungary
He created a compromise to give equal status to Austria and Hungary.
The Treaty of Versailles didn't in itself establish any new countries. Two countries came into being at the end of WWI: Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. Poland, which had been 'carved up' by Russia, Prussia and Austria between 1772 and 1795 was reunited as an independent country. In the Baltic area Finland gained complete independence from Russia, while Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania were reconstituted as independent countries. Austria and Hungary became fully separate.
Austria-Hungary, Germany and Italy.The Triple Alliance included Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Italy. It was created in 1882 under a treaty for mutual defense in which each of the three countries agreed to join forces if any one of them was attacked by another country (the greatest concern was an attack by France or Russia).In 1907 Britain, France and Russia created the Triple Entente to oppose the Triple Alliance if war occurred..When Germany and Austria-Hungary began World War I, Italy refused to join them because they had been the attackers, not the attacked. On the other side, the three members of the Triple Entente were the most significant members of the Allied forces until the U.S. joined their side in 1917.
The Dreikaiserbkommen or League of the Three Emperors was created in 1837. This was an alliance between Russia, Austria-Hungary, and Germany that lasted until 1887. The document was signed by Otto von Bismarck of Germany, Francis Joseph I of Austria-Hungary, and Nicolas I of Russia.
Czechoslovakia.
Austria and Hungary became separate countries
Austria and Hungary
Austria-Hungary was separated into two different countries Austria and Hungary
German Workers' Party - Austria-Hungary - was created in 1903.
Italy annexed the Südtirol (South Tyrol) from Austria immediately prior to the end of the war - they signed a cease fire and Italy violated it.Poland, when it was formed, gained several territories, primarily Cracow.Romania also gained parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, including Transylvania.The Soviet Union, or at the time Russia, gained Galicia, today part of the Ukraine.Czechoslovakia (today the Czech Republic and Slovakia), Hungary, and large portions of Yugoslavia.And of course Austria.___Galicia (the area round Lvov, aka Lemberg) went to Poland. The Soviet Union gained nothing from the Paris Peace Settlement. It was even recognized by any of the participants at the conferences.---Apologies. Territory in the Eastern Austrian Empire went to Slovakia, and that territory was later annexed to the USSR.
Countries Dissapeared = Ottoman Empire, Bosnia, Serbia, Austria-HungaryCountries Changed = Great Britain, Germany, France, Austria, Hungary, Italy, RussiaSome countries Created = Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon,Palestine,Albania, Cyprus, Iran,European Countries created=Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Albania, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland,Polandone of them were poland and ukraine
Austria-Hungary, Mentenegro, and Serbia
9; Poland, Finland, Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
In the Treaty of Versailles (1919-21), Hungary became an independent country; Czechoslovakia was formed,, in the south, Bosnia, Herzegovina, and Montenegro were added to Serbia and yugoslavia was formed; Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania were separated from the former Russian territory.
Czec Republic, Austria, Hungary, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Yugoslavia, Slovakia, and Turkey were created. Austria-Hungary, Czechoslavakia, the Ottoman Empire, and Serbia were broken up into new countries. This information is incorrect. Austria-Hungary broke apart after WW1 as did the Ottoman Empire. Poland, Latvia, Estonia, etc were all created after WW1. I believe the answer is almost entirely about the end of WW1 and not WW2 like the question states.
9; Poland, Finland, Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania