There was no Battle of France. The Germans invaded France (several times) and effectively took it over, if only temporarily.
The Canadians took 7 miles of land which the germans soon won back there was no real gain in the end Germans won by taking a total of 1000 yards
At different times the Germans had 90% of the city. However, this was only in early phase of the battle. After the initial attack, it slowly declined until the Germans surrendered and retreated westwards back to Germany.
The Germans fought and lost the Battle of Kursk to the Russians, and from then on, it was pretty much a nonstop retreat for the Germans (except for the Siege of Warsaw Poland) all the way to the Reistag in Berlin, Germany.
None
The Germans are essentially run out of supplies in a foreign land and the Russians must fight to survive in their homeland. Very much the same for Napoleon army before that and the French and American in Indochina later on.
Very much so! D Day - June 6th, 1944 - was the starting battle to land troops on France's coast line and begin the fight to free many European countries from German occupation forces.
British lost much of its land in the east between 1763 and1783
In land mass, France is much bigger than Ireland.
France was occupied by the Germans in the war. They couldn't do much to defend their own country let alone anything else. However, there were resistance movements within France.
Honestly 100 sq miles of land
Battle of Somme was a battle in first world war fought between English and French armies against German army on both sides of River Somme in France. At the end of battle the combined English and French forces had advanced 6 miles into German territory gaining much more ground than German forces.
Everything that one needs to know/find out can be found out at the website passchendaeleIt was pretty much a useless war, with 140 000 Allied casualties. The Allied Powers captured a total of about 5 miles/8 kilometres of land from the Germans, which the Germans captured back easily in the Battle of the Lys later on in the war.