Germany invaded the Netherlands in May 1940 and occupied that country till 1945. Today, Germany is a sovereign country like the Dutch.
No, Holland is in Amsterdam, which is in the Netherlands.
1933
It is Holland.
DenmarkNorwayThe NetherlandsBelgiumLuxembourgFrance
they moved to the Netherlands
The Neeson surname has origins in Scotland, Holland, and Germany.
Frankfurt am Main.
There is a South Holland and a North Holland province in the Netherlands. The Netherlands is in Europe.Holland is a province (actually two provinces) of the Netherlands, a country located in Europe (the Netherlands itself is sometimes also referred to as Holland).
The Nazis invaded the whole of the Netherlands and placed the country under German administration.
For the most part it was: France, Britain, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany and Holland.
No they are not ! The Netherlands (formerly known as Holland) are on the European mainland - bordered by Belgium and Germany.
The Franks originally lived in Germany before eventually migrating to the Netherlands (Holland). They were part of the Germanic tribes that settled in the area during the early medieval period.
The Netherlands is bordered by Belgium and Germany.
Holland is a western region of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
No, Holland is part of The Netherlands.
Germany did capture Holland
The occupation of Holland by Germany began May 14, 1940.
Nope but it is close. if you see a map of Europe look at France. up there will be two small countries. the top on that is looking at the north sea is where Holland is. Actually it is the Netherlands. But long ago the western part was Holland. the rest was Germany. but there came wore and the Netherlands got bigger.Actually this here is not true, holland and germany have (accept for a brief time during ww2 when holland was occupied) never been one country.) Holland is the name of the most western part of the netherland, bus has commonly used for the enitre netherlands. The borders between The netherlands (one country since 1581) and the german states (germany itself was not united untill the 19th centrury) has remaind almost as they are for 5 centuries.