Maginot line
The maginot line
The Maginot Line was a line of French fortifications along the French/German border.
It was called the Maginot Line, a series of French, not British, fortifications along the German border which were supposedly impenetrable. The Germans avoided this by flanking the line and going around it, invading France through the Ardennes and the Low Countries.
France's smallest neighbor along its eastern border is Luxembourg.
Germany's western border is with France, Belgium and Holland .
The East German Army Engineering Command built the Berlin Wall, and also the fortifications along the inter-German border.
The Hurtgen Forest is located in Germany along the border between Belgium and Germany .
Workers constructed a 14-mile stone wall along the city's coastline and repaired the massive fortifications along its western land border.
Along the border of Belgium and France.
The Maginot Line
French defenses against Germany along the border in the wake of WWII.
The Rhine River runs through western Germany, specifically in the regions of North Rhine-Westphalia, Rhineland-Palatinate, and Baden-Württemberg. It is one of the longest and most important rivers in Europe, flowing from the Swiss Alps to the North Sea.