A map of Central Europe, showing Germany's accretion of territory in the past 12 months her present boundaries being shown in heavy black line. The inner (broken) black line marks the limit of her south-eastern boundary after the Versailles Treaty. The shaded area without her Versailles borders shows the territories in which appreciable numbers of her nationals are domiciled —territories, therefore, which are liable to similar treatment to those of Czechoslovakia and Austria. The arrows mark other possible lines of advance to the East, which are alternative to that on which she would appear to have embarked.
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 32, Issue 150, 21 March 1939, Page 9
Word Count
97A map of Central Europe, showing Germany's accretion of territory in the past 12 months her present boundaries being shown in heavy black line. The inner (broken) black line marks the limit of her south-eastern boundary after the Versailles Treaty. The shaded area without her Versailles borders shows the territories in which appreciable numbers of her nationals are domiciled—territories, therefore, which are liable to similar treatment to those of Czechoslovakia and Austria. The arrows mark other possible lines of advance to the East, which are alternative to that on which she would appear to have embarked. Dominion, Volume 32, Issue 150, 21 March 1939, Page 9
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