Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tripartite Pact (also called the Three-Power Pact, the Axis Pact, the Three-way Pact or the Tripartite Treaty), an agreement signed in Berlin on September 27, 1940, linked Germany, Italy and Japan as the Axis powers of World War II. On November 24, 1940, Slovakia also signed the Tripartite Pact.
The Shop on Main Street is a 1965 Czechoslovakian film [52] about the Aryanization program during World War II in the Slovak Republic. The film won the 1965 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, [53] and actress Ida Kamińska was nominated one year later for Best Actress in a Leading Role. [54] It was entered into the 1965 Cannes Film ...
The victorious Powers restored Czechoslovakia in 1945 in the wake of World War II, albeit without Carpathian Ruthenia, which Prague ceded to the Soviet Union. The Beneš decrees , adopted as a result of the events of the war, led to disenfranchisement and persecution of the Hungarian minority in southern Slovakia.
Military history of Slovakia during World War II (2 C, 11 P) S. Slovak people of World War II (4 C, 9 P) Pages in category "Slovakia during World War II"
The book covers the Slovak Armed Forces in World War II. 2003 Czech edition, ISBN 80-206-0596-7. Igor Baka: Slovensko vo vojne proti Poľsku v roku 1939 (Slovakia during the war against Poland in 1939), Vojenská história, 2005, No 3, pg 26 – 46.
World War II: Axis: Slovak Republic ... Slovakia; 2001–present War on Terror
1. The zone of protection. The German Zone of Protection in Slovakia, [1] or the Protective Zone (German: Schutzzone) was an area established in the western parts of the First Slovak Republic after the dissolution and division of Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany during 1939.
The Battle of the Dukla Pass, also known as the Dukla, Carpatho–Dukla, Rzeszów–Dukla, or Dukla–Prešov offensive, was the battle for control over the Dukla Pass on the border between Poland and Slovakia on the Eastern Front of World War II between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union in September–October 1944.