In 1870 In 1870
Hungrary slovakia Italy
it only took six weeks for Germany to defeat France
I think Germany took away Alsace-Lorraine, which is not a city but a region of France.
Normandy is in France
Germany is in a central location in Europe. It borders Italy, France, Poland and other countries. With control of Germany they could control Europe.
it depends you could go from France to Switzerland to Italy or from fance to Italy or from France to Germany through Switzerland (or) Austria to Italy, or from France to beligium to Germany to Switzerland (or) austria and then to Italy so the answer varies between 0, 1, 2, or 3 it depends which way you go.
April
In 1870 In 1870
Germany sure did. Germany took over Italy too, so Italy wasn't as powerful as Germany. The Germans sent bombs over England called V2 rockets. These things were mean since they were a bomb with a motor, so when the fuel ran out they fell on whatever they were over. Night after night they fell over London and the people had to hide in subways and bomb shelters. When Germany invaded France Hitler ordered Paris burned, but the commander of Paris kept putting it off and as a result Paris was saved. A book written on this several years ago is called " Is Paris Burning?"
They didn't take over any countries. Germany, Italy and Austria-Hungary did but in the end Britain, France and Russia won the war so Britain didn't need to take over any countries.
france
Hungrary slovakia Italy
I believe you mean the exploits of Napoleon Bonaparte in 1806, when he conquered most of Germany.
it was because the two dictators of Germany and Italy were planning to take over the world together
The Axis: Germany, Japan and Italy
On September 29 & 30, 1938, Germany, Britain, France, and Italy met in Munich to decide what action, if any, to take concerning Germany's aggression in Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia had no say in the discussion. BTW, the only delegate who did not need an interpreter was Mussolini. Source: "Il Duce: The Rise and Fall of Benito Mussolini" by Richard B. Lyttle.