Hungary was occupied by Germany in May, 1944.
There were several major invasions of occupied Europe, the largest was the invasion of Normandy in June 1944
Judaea (Palestine). In 70 AD they rebelled against the Romans and were defeated and scattered.
It didn't. The Mandate of Palestine (which was a British quasi-colonial territory) became partially independent as Israel and was partially occupied by neighbors Jordan and Egypt. In 1956, this status quo remained. Only in 1967 did Israel conquer the remaining parts of former Mandatory Palestine from the Jordanians and the Egyptians.
the invasion of German occupied Europe at Normandy, France, June 6, 1944
Zionism Jewish
Jew
Hungary was occupied by Germany in May, 1944.
Palestine was the Roman designation for a strip of territory that had never previously been occupied (in its entirety) by any other power. Palestine since that point (until the 1948) had always been occupied by a larger Empire that was not based in that region.
You are trying to compare an occupied zone with a city. Not easy.
The German military administration controlled Paris in 1940-1944
No country was occupied in full as a result of the Six Day War. The Egyptian Sinai was occupied by Israel, the Syrian Golan is still occupied by Israel, and areas previously controlled by Jordan and Egypt were also under Israeli occupation. These areas have been retroactively called Palestine, but as Palestine was not a country prior to the war, it cannot be considered an occupied country. (Those who consider the State of Palestine as the West Bank and Gaza, and believe that Israel is illegally occupying those areas militarily, still call Palestine a "disputed territory" since there was no Palestinian governmental apparatus in 1967.)
During the lifetime of Jesus, Palestine was occupied by the Roman Empire. The Roman authority in the region was represented by Pontius Pilate, who served as the Prefect of Judea from 26-36 AD.
Michael Eitan was born in 1944, in Tel Aviv, Palestine.
1940 to 1944 that's four years.
Germany invaded and occupied most of France, including Paris, during World War 2.
There were several major invasions of occupied Europe, the largest was the invasion of Normandy in June 1944