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  2. Timeline of collaboration between Nazi Germany and Vichy ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_collaboration...

    This policy included the Bousquet-Oberg accords of July 1942 that formalized the collaboration of the French police with the German police. This collaboration was manifested in particular by anti-Semitic measures taken by the Vichy government, and by its active participation in the genocide.

  3. Foreign relations of Vichy France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_relations_of_Vichy...

    The French State, popularly known as Vichy France, as led by Marshal Philippe Pétain after the Fall of France in 1940 before Nazi Germany, was quickly recognized by the Allies, as well as by the Soviet Union, until 30 June 1941 and Operation Barbarossa.

  4. Government of Vichy France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_of_Vichy_France

    The Government of Vichy France was the collaborationist ruling regime or government in Nazi-occupied France during the Second World War.Of contested legitimacy, it was headquartered in the town of Vichy in occupied France, but it initially took shape in Paris under Marshal Philippe Pétain as the successor to the French Third Republic in June 1940.

  5. Vichy France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vichy_France

    Vichy France (French: Régime de Vichy, lit. 'Vichy regime'; 10 July 1940 – 9 August 1944), officially the French State (État français), was a French rump state headed by Marshal Philippe Pétain during World War II, established after the French capitulation after the defeat against Germany.

  6. Wartime collaboration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wartime_collaboration

    British historian Simon Kitson has shown that French authorities did not wait until the Liberation to begin pursuing collaborationists. The Vichy government, itself heavily engaged in collaboration, arrested around 2,000 individuals on charges of passing information to the Germans. They did so to centralise collaboration, ensure that the state ...

  7. Liberation of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_of_France

    These elections were the first test for the validity of the provisional institutions that had emerged from the Resistance. The electoral system in force was the two-round majority system, except in Paris, where elections were held under the proportional system. This election was also marked by the participation of women for the first time in ...

  8. Travail, famille, patrie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travail,_famille,_patrie

    The nationalism of Pétain, who saw himself as maintaining the tradition of the victorious nationalism of 1918, did not stop his collaborating with the Nazi regime. Until he died, he kept a certain degree of Germanophobia of the sort expressed by Charles Maurras. He had no pro-German or anti-British record from before the war.

  9. Philippe Pétain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippe_Pétain

    There is a Petain Road in Singapore in the Little India neighbourhood. Pinardville , a traditionally French-Canadian neighborhood of Goffstown, New Hampshire , has a Petain Street dating from the 1920s, alongside parallel streets named for other World War I generals, John Pershing , Douglas Haig , Ferdinand Foch , and Joseph Joffre .