The British Zone consisted of what are now the states of:
(Bremen was an exclave of the American Zone).,
Germany was divided into 4 different parts after WW2. There was the British Zone, Soviet Zone, French Zone, and American Zone.
British Columbia, Canada has two timezones. Vancouver is in PST (UTC-8) and Cranbrook is in MST (UTC-7). Frankfurt, Germany is in CET (UTC+1). Frankfurt is nine hours ahead of Vancouver, and eight hours ahead of Cranbrook. Both observe daylight savings.
they helped the British.
No, theyre their own country.
Geographically, Berlin was inside the Soviet Zone.
The Rhineland was a buffer zone between Germany and France.
no Yes, the UK is not part of the schengen zone.
The city of Berlin was in the middle of the Soviet zone. The Soviet zone is the part of German that ended up becoming Communist East Germany. But then in the city of Berlin you had occupation as well except in the city they were called 'sectors'. And just like the Soviet zone, the Soviet sector of Berlin ended becoming East Germany (the capitol, in fact). However the American, British and French sectors in the west part of the city stayed 'free' after the whole Berlin Blockade/Airlift debacle of 1948 and ended up a part of West Germany, although the capitol was moved to Bonn, and Berlin always had special legal and political status applied.
Germany was divided into four zones: the American, British, French, and Soviet Union. The first three zones were grouped together as West Germany, and the Soviet Zone became East Germany. West Germany became capitalistic and democratic, while East Germany became communistic.
Golden, British Columbia, is located in the Mountain Time Zone (MST/MDT).
Germany was divided in 1945 into 5 zones of occupation, one of which became a permanent part of Poland. The Russian zone became East Germany in 1949 and the French, British and American zones joined together to become West Germany in 1955. The two states united in 1990, although constitutionally East Germany became several extra 'lander' of West Germany.
It was divided into a French, British, American and Russian zone. The first three soon were merged into West Germany (the Bundesrepublik Deutschland); the Russian zone became the DDR (Deutsche Demokratische Republik). In 1989/1990 the DDR was merged with West Germany into present-day Germany.