skoda
In the summer of 1938, Germany and Czechoslovakia began to quarrel over the disputed border area of the Sudetenland.
Because the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia was legally given to germany. Whereas Poland was taken by force.
In 1939 Czechoslovakia was invaded by Nazi Germany
Poland in September 1939, followed by Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, the Nordic countries (Denmark, Sweden, Norway) and then ultimately France.
The United Kingdom allowed Germany to take over part of Czechoslovakia, but it came to Poland's defense when Germany invaded. However, Britain was ill-prepared to stop the occupation of Poland by Germany and by the Soviet Union.
The word pacifism means peaceful and it not an area in Czechoslovakia.
Austira and Czechoslovakia
In the summer of 1938, Germany and Czechoslovakia began to quarrel over the disputed border area of the Sudetenland.
Because the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia was legally given to germany. Whereas Poland was taken by force.
In 1939 Czechoslovakia was invaded by Nazi Germany
Germany lost land to Poland and Czechoslovakia as well as the territories of Alsace and Lorraine to France, which the two nations had been fighting over for centuries.
Austria, Czechoslovakia, and technically Poland because it was taken over on September 1st 1939 and the war began September 3rd, 1939.
The Sudetenland - that is, the ethnic German areas of Czechoslovakia adjoining Germany (and what had previously been Austria) were in effect handed over to Germany by Britain and France. As a result Germany didn't have to fight in order to get this area.
Germany invaded Czechoslovakia 16 March 1939 and had approximately five years to consolidate it's control over that nation .
I guess you could say that Germany (the home nation for the Nazi Party) was the first country taken over by the Nazis. Next would come Austria in 1936 & Czechoslovakia in 1938 before the war began. Then with the start of the war: Poland in 1939. Other countries were defeated & conquered in 1940 & 1941.
Austria and Czechoslovakia.
Turned Czechoslovakia, at the time called Sudetenland, over to Germany.