The World Ignored Every Warning… | Road to WW2: 1935 — 36 Reaction

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6 комментария

  1. aye brothermann,aside from the absolute heat its a blast seeing you check out this series! especially stopping now by the spain part,id heavily recommend you check out the spanish civil war from the same creators! cheers.

  2. Responding to your question at the 1:34 no the Saarland was a separted question to the rest of demilitarized zone (the German demilitarized zone know as the Rhineland remained under German civilian administration in the post ww1 period to 1936 .But they had no right to have any tipe of military units or infrastrutture) the french wanted to make it a french province ( the saarland ) or at least an idepente state on they border and use the resource for france the Saarland’s mineral-rich coal and steel resources made it a heavily contested border region. After both World Wars, France sought to claim or permanently separate the region from Germany to strip the Reich of its industrial war-making capabilities and secure economic reparations.Following the 1919 Treaty of Versailles, the Saar Basin became a distinct territory governed by the League of Nations. France was given full ownership of the Saar’s lucrative coal mines to compensate for the destruction of French mines during the war. After 15 years of international administration, a plebiscite was held in 1935. Over 90% of the population voted to return to Germany (which was under Nazi control at the time). Following World War II, France occupied the Saarland with the intention of permanently annexing it or turning it into an independent state. In 1947, it became a semi-autonomous protectorate economically tied to France, using the Saar franc and having its own Olympic and World Cup football teams. By the mid-1950s, West Germany’s economy had largely recovered, and the Saarlanders grew weary of French control. In 1954, France and West Germany agreed to make the Saar an "independent" European territory under a European commissioner, but in a 1955 referendum, the Saarland population overwhelmingly rejected the plan. Following this vote, France and West Germany negotiated the 1956 Saar Treaty. On January 1, 1957, the Saarland was officially integrated into the Federal Republic of Germany as its 10th state, ending centuries of border disputes.

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