It wasn't a turning point, it was the liberation of Western Europe. The turning point in Europe in WWII was the Battle Of Stalingrad.
Germany's invasion of Russia
Invasion of Normandy or D-Day was first turning point of the war on the western front, a 2nd turning point was Battle of the Bulge.
D-Day was the Allied invasion of German held France. It was the turning point of the war.
It was a turning point in the invasion of Greece by Persia. It was not a turning point in Greek history - yet another of the innumerable battles fought by the Greeks, most of which were, and continued to be, between each other.
The invasion was the turning point, after which the Allied forces began to push German forces back.
The Battle of Stalingrad was a disaster for the German Armies
In the Pacific, it was the Battle of Midway. In Europe, it was the invasion of Normandy (D-Day).
the invasion and sack of rome in 1527
Meade turned back Lee's last invasion of the North. Although the true strategic turning point was Vicksburg.
There was one major turning point. The Russian Winter. Trust me, that was the beginning of the end of Hitler's Eastern Front.
It stopped the Confederates invasion of the North and allowed the Union to chase them back into Maryland.