yes there were because the king was trying to help them
there is no indication any french troops were with the Germans on d day
Yes, there were some, but they counted for a very small community. It is doubtful that there were more than a few thousand.
The Germans don't hang Hitler at Christmas (or any other time of the year)! What a strange story!
The German invasion of Norway was a dramatically daring military operation. The decision to embark on the venture was made by Adolf Hitler as Chief of State and also (since December 1938) as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the German Reich. He arrived at it over a period of six months during which the proposal was debated at length in the highest echelons of the German Armed Forces. Hitler's own attitude shifted during that time from lukewarmness verging on indifference to determination. Since the war the decision has been both praised and condemned; here it is presented as an example of decision-making in a developing situation. [1] Even though the occupation of Norway and Denmark had no significant effect on the outcome of the war, it established a milestone in the history of warfare by demonstrating the effective reach of modern military forces. Although lacking the resources to capitalize on it, the Germans had made a move of potential value to them in the development of a global strategy. It confronted the United States as well as Great Britain with a strategic threat. It brought Germany, theoretically at least, into a position to strike outward from the mainland of Europe toward Iceland, Greenland, and possibly the North American continent.
The Nazis took over Denmark during World War II primarily because it was strategically important for controlling the Baltic Sea and blocking any potential Allied invasion. Additionally, Denmark had been neutral at the beginning of the war, but after Germany invaded Norway in 1940, Denmark's government felt compelled to surrender in order to protect Danish citizens from a full-scale invasion. Nazi occupation of Denmark lasted until 1945 when Germany surrendered.
Denmark was occupied by Nazi Germany on the 9. April 1940. It was liberated by british army units on 5. may 1945. Denmark was never annexed by Germany, and the Germans never expressed any desire to try and annex Denmark, so no Denmark was not ever PART of Nazi Germany, but it was occupied by German forces.
Hitler conquered Czechoslovakia, Poland, Denmark, Norway, France, The Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Belgium during 1939 and 1940.
Denmark is a country. There aren't any countries located IN Denmark.
There was no significant "Battle of Denmark" . The Danish King Christian X and his Government surrendered only 2 hours after the German Army drove into Denmark on the morning of 9 April 1940. 16 Danish border guards were killed, The King and government thereafter co-operated with the Germans for the remainder of the war. Anyone who claims there was a battle is trying to re-write history. No Danish troops fought against the Germans at any point unless they were individuals who had left Denmark before the invasion.
there is no indication any french troops were with the Germans on d day
Yes, Denmark has lots of Museums.
Denmark is a country in itself. There aren't any countries in Denmark.
Denmark doesn't have any mountains.
Yes. During World War II, there were many Germans that went to other countries for their own safety.
How did Germans kill people during WWII? Well please keep in mind that not all Germans were Nazis. The Germans used the same weapons as did any of the other countries. The Nazis on the other hand used torture as a means of killing there victims. Starvation, burning, and experimentation were the main procedures used to kill the Jews, gypsies, and those they deemed unfit.
No.
In many ways king Christian had not ruled Denmark since the Easter Crisis in 1920, during which he accepted a reduction of his own role to a merely symbolical one, avoiding any future interference in the functioning of parlemetary democracy.