Czechoslovakia.
Sudetenland was the western border of Czechoslovakia where nearly 3 million people spoke German. Sudetenland was later given to Germany by Great Britain due to the signing of the Munich Agreement by Daladier and Neville Chamberlain on September 30, 1938 to avoid war.
Although it was part of Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland was populated by ethnic Germans.
Hitler believed that there was a vast majority of Sudeten Germans in the Sudeten Land, and that by taking over it he was only complying with Wilson's idea of self-determination. He also thought that if in a later war he were to be attacked by the Russians that it would act as a first line of defence. Also by taking over Czechoslovakia he would be that one step closer to Poland and his policy of expanding East.
The Sudetenland
The Sudetenland
Sudetenland is located in the western part of Czech Republic, near the border with Germany.
The Sudetenland was an area in western Czechoslovakia (as it was then) which was German speaking and had some sympathy with German nationalism
He was given permission to take the Sudetenland, part of Austria.
The western border of Czechoslovakia was an area known as Sudetenland.
Ethnic and German speaking people who live in Sudetenland which is located currently in the western part of the Czech Republic.
Hitler claimed that Sudetenland rightfully belonged to Germany because there were a lot of German people living there. Sudetenland was once a part of Austria; after World War I, it became a part of the new country of Czechoslovakia (which eventually split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993).
The Sudetenland
The western border of Czechoslovakia was an area known as the Sudetenland.
The western border of Czechoslovakia was an area known as the Sudetenland.
Bohemia, or the Sudetenland.
Austria and the Sudetenland
Libya was the most western.