Hitler
No. Ignoring the debate as to whether Palestine is a country or not, Palestine is a Middle Eastern country and has no part in Europe.
Answer this question… European leaders created a strategy to prevent any one country from dominating Europe again.
They and their armies raided and destroyed European cities.
European leaders created a strategy to prevent any one country from dominating Europe again.
European leaders began trying to create a balance of power on the continent.
Widespread poverty was a primary factor that helped fascist leaders gain power in Eastern Europe. Russia is an example of an Eastern European country.
No. Ignoring the debate as to whether Palestine is a country or not, Palestine is a Middle Eastern country and has no part in Europe.
Answer this question… European leaders created a strategy to prevent any one country from dominating Europe again.
Europe does not have a president because it is not a country so it does not have one specific leader.
Europe is on a peninsula in the Arctic ocean
communism was rising, and people did not want to lose their businesses or their class rights. so they elected fascist dictators to govern instead of communists. they didn't like fascism, but liked it better than communism.
They and their armies raided and destroyed European cities.
They and their armies raided and destroyed European cities.
what was the name of the series of invasions of palestine launched by christians from europe
Italy was the first Fascist state in Europe, with Mussolini seizing power in 1922. Hitler's Germany is the most infamous of the fascist states, but along with Italy these powers did not last beyond WWII. Spain and Portugal also fell to Fascism in the 1930's, with the regimes lasting into the 1970s.Additionally, a puppet Fascist state existed in wartime Croatia and in Vichy France, and sympathetic Fascist leaders/individuals were active in perpetrating the Holocaust across Ukraine and the Baltic states.
The three major fascist dictatorships in Europe in the 1930s were Hitler's Nazi Germany, Mussolini's Fascist Italy, and Franco's Nationalist Spain. Other countries in Europe were not explicitly fascist, but many of them like Pilsudski's "Republic of Poland" were fascist dictatorships in all but name. Only France and Britain maintained completely anti-fascist (and non-communist) governments.
After the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte, European leaders met at the Congress of Vienna to settle issues that would hopefully bring lasting accord to Europe. The goal was to restore a balance of power in the hopes that this would bring peace.