equator
Maginot line
trenches I suspect the answer you're looking for is the Maginot Line...but it was actually constructed after the end of WW I, between 1930 and 1940.== Perhaps the term you're looking for is "Western Front". The "Eastern Front" was on the other side of Germany and faced Russia. Hope this helps - I WarnerThis seems to be from a crossword+word search. It is Western Front.Magenot and Zeigfreid
The line had been drawn in the sand after the Sudentenland. France and the UK had said no to Germany about Poland. Germany crossed the line and WW-II was started in Europe.
The Hindenburg Line.
Hmm. Not sure if this is what you mean. The Maginot Line was the defensive line of forts and bunkers that France built along its border with Germany after WW1. France thought Maginot Line would protect them from another invasion by Germany. However, the Germans simple attacked through Belgium and went around the forts.
Maginot line
It was the Maginot line was a reinforced wall between France and Germany but stopped at the Belgium boarder where the NAZIS entered France un impeded
the dividing line between France and Germany
the vichy line
Try the Maginot Line named after the the French Minister of defence in the 1930's
Maginot Line
Maginot Line
France built the Maginot line, after the name of a minister who built it. It was a line of forts running on the eastern border to protect France against Germany, but which proved useless as the German invasion went by another route through Belgium.
The battle line in France is called the Maginot line. The German line was called the Hindbergh line. The Maginot was not able to prevent the German invasion of the 1930s
Maginot line along the board between Germany and France wrong section btw
A border was placed between Germany and France after World War I. It was named the Maginot Line after the French Minister of War.
The French fortification built between Germany and France in the years preceding World War II was called the Maginot Line. Constructed in the 1920s and 1930s, it was designed to deter a German invasion and protect France's eastern border. The line consisted of a series of fortresses, bunkers, and obstacles, but ultimately proved ineffective when German forces bypassed it during the 1940 invasion by attacking through Belgium.