one word "Backstabbing"
They felt that they were being backstabbed by the allies because it was agreed that hitler took control of the sudetanland
1) the Czech defenses were very strong 2) the German generals, conscious of Germany's relative weakness at that moment, were actually prepared to attempt to remove Hitler had he continued to move forward.
Felt they did not value education and hard work.
Farmers
If they were expecting war, it was not immediately between Germany and themselves. Hitler at the time was making threats and incursions against Czechoslovakia, but although Czechoslovakia was 'created' by the Allies (including Britain) after WW 1, a defense treaty existed only between that country and France, not Britain. Up to then, Hitler had only annexed territories that had been part of Germany anyway until 1918, and the Austrians had themselves asked the Allies for a Union with Germany as far back as 1919 but had been refused. Czechoslovakia also had been partly made up of territories taken away from Germany after 1918 - most prominently the Sudetenland. And is was generally agreed at the time that Hitler's further-reaching ambitions were all directed eastward, not against France or Britain. So at the time the British people never felt themselves threatened. But many feared that finally Britain would be dragged into some military involvement by a country or ally crying out for its help. So apart from a few 'cynics' like Winston Churchill, the public in Britain generally stood firmly behind prime minister Chamberlain's policy of containing Hitler's further ambitions by the Munich treaty.
they didn't many people died because of fright
He felt that France and the UK were just giving in to Hitler's wishes and that they had abandoned Czechoslovakia.
My Father ( born 1907 ) discussed this with me before his death in 1982 when I asked him what he thought of Chamberlain and the Munich Agreement. He told me that the average Brit had a very poor opinion of Mr. Chamberlain and an even lower one of Adolph Hitler ( but for different reasons ) and that they doubted there would be peace in their time believing that Hitler would strike first. Most felt that the bit of paper that Mr. Chamberlain waved when he arrived back from Munich was not " Peace in our Time, " but more " No war this Year, " and history proved them right.
Technically it was one country but got split into two.Back in 1938, Czech Republic and Slovakia were one country, "Czechoslovakia". Parts of western Czech Republic had lots of German people living in them; this region was called Sudetenland. Hitler demanded Sudetenland, because he felt that German people should live in Germany (at least that's what he said). The leaders of France and England met with Hitler at Munich to decide what to do.After the Munich Agreement allowed him to take the Sudetenland (even though nobody bothered to ask Czechoslovakia if that was ok), Hitler used this to weaken the Czechoslovakian government and military. About six months after taking Sudetenland, Hitler invited the president of Czechoslovakia to meet him in Berlin, where Hitler informed the president that Germany was invading. The president had a heart attack, and Germany did in fact invade. The Slovakian part of Czechoslovakia was separated out and made into its own country, but this new country was mostly under Germany's control too.Perhaps you are also thinking of Austria? Austria was not part of the Munich Agreement, which is what "appeasement" typically refers to. Austria and Germany had been forbidden from merging by the treaties that ended World War I, and Hitler chose to ignore this. The Allies were not consulted, nor did they really do anything except complain when it happened.
Poland. After England and Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain gave away Czechoslovakia to Nazi Germany, (without asking the Czech people), Hitler felt he could take Poland easy.
1) the Czech defenses were very strong 2) the German generals, conscious of Germany's relative weakness at that moment, were actually prepared to attempt to remove Hitler had he continued to move forward.
1) the Czech defenses were very strong 2) the German generals, conscious of Germany's relative weakness at that moment, were actually prepared to attempt to remove Hitler had he continued to move forward.
They felt bad
The ancient Mongols are sometimes called The Felt Tent People because their homes were round tents made of felt.
People have been making felt for a very long time sio
they felt sad
stuupid that's how they felt what do you think?
They felt that they needed to speak to bob (the king of all the people). They also felt quite upset.