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  2. Wehrmacht foreign volunteers and conscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wehrmacht_foreign...

    These units were all commanded by General Ernst August Köstring (1876−1953). [9] A lower estimate for the total number of foreign volunteers that served in the entire German armed forces (including the Waffen SS) is 350,000. [10] These units were often under the command of German officers and some published their own propaganda newssheets.

  3. Flemish people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flemish_people

    Flemish people also emigrated at the end of the fifteenth century, when Flemish traders conducted intensive trade with Spain and Portugal, and from there moved to colonies in America and Africa. [28] The newly discovered Azores were populated by 2,000 Flemish people from 1460 onwards, making these volcanic islands known as the "Flemish Islands".

  4. Flemish Movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flemish_Movement

    During World War I several Flemish soldiers were punished for their active or passive involvement in the Flemish Movement. Ten of these soldiers were sent to a penal military unit in 1918 called the Special Forestry Platoon in Orne, Normandy, France. They were forced to work as woodchoppers in hard living conditions until several months after ...

  5. Waffen-SS foreign volunteers and conscripts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waffen-SS_foreign...

    The formations with volunteers of Germanic background were officially named Freiwilligen (volunteer) (Scandinavians, Dutch, and Flemish), including ethnic Germans born outside the Reich known as Volksdeutsche, and their members were from satellite countries. These were organised into independent legions and had the designation Waffen attached ...

  6. History of Flanders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Flanders

    During the interbellum and World War II, several fascist and/or national-socialistic parties emerged in Belgium, of which the Flemish ones drew upon the feeling of discrimination by the Wallonians against the Flemish. Since these parties were promised more rights for the Flemish by the German government during World War II, some of them ...

  7. Belgium in World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgium_in_World_War_I

    The German occupying authorities, under Von Bissing and influenced by pre-war Pan-Germanism, viewed the Flemish as an oppressed people and launched a policy to appeal to the demands of the Flemish Movement which had emerged in the late 19th century. These measures were collectively known as the Flamenpolitik ("Flemish Policy").

  8. Flemish Legion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flemish_Legion

    The Flemish Legion (Dutch: Vlaams Legioen, pronounced [ˈvlaːms leːɣiˈjun]) was a collaborationist military formation recruited among Dutch-speaking volunteers from German-occupied Belgium, notably from Flanders, during World War II.

  9. Belgian refugees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgian_refugees

    The Flemish showed a real zest for settling elsewhere, discarding the social fabric that was in place: they were "a brave and robust people, but very hostile to the Welsh and in a perpetual state of conflict with them". [3] The Normans and the Flemish built a line of over 50 castles – most of them earthworks – to protect south Pembrokeshire.