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  2. Armistice of 22 June 1940 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armistice_of_22_June_1940

    As one of Hitler's few concessions, the French Navy was to be disarmed but not surrendered, for Hitler realised that pushing France too far could result in France fighting on from the French colonial empire. An unoccupied region in the south, the Zone libre, was left relatively free to be governed by a rump French administration based in Vichy.

  3. Battle of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_France

    The Battle of France (French: bataille de France; 10 May – 25 June 1940), also known as the Western Campaign (German: Westfeldzug), the French Campaign (Frankreichfeldzug, campagne de France) and the Fall of France, during the Second World War was the German invasion of the Low Countries (Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands) and France.

  4. Timeline of the Battle of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Battle_of...

    General de Gaulle told the people of France on a broadcast from London on the BBC to resist the Germans. 22 June: France signed an armistice with Germany. 23 June: Adolf Hitler toured captured Paris. 24 June: The French officially surrendered at Compiegne, the site of the German World War I surrender.

  5. France during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/France_during_World_War_II

    Guard (Vichy France) Scuttling of the French fleet in Toulon. Service du travail obligatoire - the provision of French citizens as forced labour in Germany. Axis occupation of France: German occupation of France during World War II - 1940–1944 in the northern zones, and 1942–1944 in the southern zone. The Holocaust in France.

  6. We shall fight on the beaches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_shall_fight_on_the_beaches

    Winston Churchill took over as Prime Minister on 10 May 1940, eight months after the outbreak of World War II in Europe.He had done so as the head of a multiparty coalition government, which had replaced the previous government (led by Neville Chamberlain) as a result of dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war, demonstrated by the Norway debate on the Allied evacuation of Southern Norway.

  7. Historiography of the Battle of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historiography_of_the...

    The German force had a far greater number of officer casualties and were able to keep fighting, because other officers could take over. The contrasting methods of command flowed from the rival armies' theories of war, the French system being a management of men and equipment model and the German system relying on rapid decision and personal ...

  8. Liberation of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_of_France

    France's colonial empire at the start of World War II stretched from territories and possessions in Africa, the Middle East (Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon), to ports in India, Indochina, the Pacific islands, and territories in North and South America. France retained control of its colonial empire, and the terms of the armistice shifted the ...

  9. French Resistance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Resistance

    A number were Belgian, Dutch, and Hungarian immigrants to France; all went before the firing squads singing the French national anthem or shouting Vive la France!, a testament to how even the communists by 1942 saw themselves as fighting for France as much as for world revolution. [105] Torture of captured résistants was routine. [96]