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2007-05-15 10:35:06 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

it's not my book or my teacher that's teaching me that its this video that they showed in class and I missed it so now i have to look up the answers which is way to hard because there r no good sources of info when I look...and I know the Treaty of Versailles was the actual end but i think it means that it was when the fighting stopped or something

2007-05-15 10:49:07 · update #1

it's not my book or my teacher that's teaching me that its this video that they showed in class and I missed it so now i have to look up the answers which is way to hard because there r no good sources of info when I look...and I know the Treaty of Versailles was the actual end but i think it means that it was when the fighting stopped or something

2007-05-15 10:49:15 · update #2

it's not my book or my teacher that's teaching me that its this video that they showed in class and I missed it so now i have to look up the answers which is way to hard because there r no good sources of info when I look...and I know the Treaty of Versailles was the actual end but i think it means that it was when the fighting stopped or something

2007-05-15 10:49:17 · update #3

4 answers

The end of the war was the Treaty at Versailles.

2007-05-15 10:37:30 · answer #1 · answered by regerugged 7 · 0 0

It wasn't Germany's reoccupation of the Rhineland that began the slide into WWII. Germany already occupied it. Alsace and Lorraine went back to France. Germany was not allowed to have any military forces in the Rhineland, so it would be a buffer zone for France. Hitler remilitarized the Rhineland and the appeasement fans in Britain and France did nothing. Maybe if they had called Hitler on that action, things could have been slightly different. Not saying the war wouldn't have happened, but it may not have been as devastating and worldwide in scope. One of those "What if?" questions...

2007-05-15 11:00:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i hope your history book isn't telling you that it is .... because in actuality, ww 2 is seen as a continuation of world war 1, with a 22 year pause in the fighting ..... however, takiing back the rhineland, can technically be seen as the starting event that lead to the breakout of ww2 in 1939. it was germany's first land grab after almost 20 years of isolationism and restrictionism placed upon them by the allies.

2007-05-15 10:42:36 · answer #3 · answered by ericthemadirishman 2 · 0 0

Because it's so difficult to spell "Versailles".

2007-05-15 10:37:46 · answer #4 · answered by open4one 7 · 0 0

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