Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
During World War I, the Imperial German army refrained from attacking the Netherlands, and thus relations between the two states were preserved. The 1914 Septemberprogramm authorized by German Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg proposed the creation of a Central European Economic Union, comprising a number of European countries, including Germany and the Netherlands, in which, as the ...
See Germany–Netherlands relations. Relations were established following the unification of Germany in 1871. During the First World War, the German army refrained from attacking the Netherlands, and thus relations between the two states were preserved. At war's end in 1918, the former Kaiser Wilhelm II fled to the Netherlands, where he lived ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... France–Germany relations; Germany–Netherlands relations; EU 3; Withdrawal from the ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; ... East Germany–Netherlands relations (1 C) Ecuador–Netherlands relations ...
Netherlands–West Germany relations (4 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Germany–Netherlands relations" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Exclusive economic zones (EEZs) of the North Sea. The North Sea coast of Germany is concave, but those of the Netherlands and Denmark are convex. If the delimitation had been determined by the equidistance rule ("drawing a line each point of which is equally distant from each shore"), Germany would have received a smaller portion of the resource-rich shelf relative to the two other states.
See Germany–Netherlands relations. Germany has an embassy in The Hague and a consulate-general in Amsterdam. Netherlands has an embassy in Berlin and four consulates-general in Düsseldorf, Hamburg, Frankfurt, and Munich. Both nations are members of the European Union and NATO. Greece: See Greece–Netherlands relations. Greece has an embassy ...
Almost all of this was returned to West Germany in 1963 after Germany paid the Netherlands 280 million German marks. [1] Many Germans living in the Netherlands were declared "enemy subjects" after World War II ended and put into an internment camp in an operation called Black Tulip. A total of 3,691 Germans were ultimately deported.