so that he knew he would be trusted by them no matter what. also so that he would not lose them if the German government had interviened when he was still on the rise to the to
There were approximately 2,550 German soldiers wounded in the Battle of Britain.
yes
Cloths
They were German soldiers. About half of them were from German region of Hesse and the other were from other small German small reigns. For that reason they were called "Hessians" without distinction by the Americans.
no, the french were very against the German soldiers, and sided with England instead Baloney. Some did, and some did not. France was split. Some French soldiers, most natably Marshal Petain, became German allies. Others like General de Gaulle sided with England and fought against the Germans.
The German word for "soldiers" is "Soldaten".
There were approximately 2,550 German soldiers wounded in the Battle of Britain.
4,247,143 German soldiers were wounded in battle during the Great War.
German soldiers during World War I were called "Huns" by the American soldiers. The Germans called their soldiers "The Bosch" during World War I.
German traitors
Answer this question…The Soviet army had more soldiers than the German army, and German soldiers were not prepared for the harsh Russian winter.
The soldiers were German, from Germany.
'Fritz' was the nickname for all German soldiers in WW1. The Bristish were called 'Tommy's' I believe.
german
yes
yes
Cloths