Die Regionen, in denen die Deutschen im Laufe der Geschichte gelebt haben

    Von Battlefleet_Sol

    30 Kommentare

    1. that’s not what the map is supposed to show, because it doesn’t show extinct minorities

      Also I don’t think Schleswig is shown correctly, plus in general Hansa presence in Scandinavia is ignored

    2. Ornery-Print4882 on

      Eastern germans are a fascinating historical people group, despite becoming a sort of nazi mascot. It’s a shame what happened to them in the aftermath of ww2.

    3. Present_Student4891 on

      Where’s America? Germans r the #1 immigrant group in some states.

    4. As of 1989, Kazakhstan was home to 957,500 ethnic Germans, who constituted the third-largest ethnic group.

    5. mydadisbald_ on

      This is so very interesting to me as a german who went to school outside germany and has never learned this in school. Might anyone have a good documentary recommendation on this subject?

    6. Jaded-Natural80 on

      As someone who’s traveled in south western Ukraine quite a bit, I always thought they were a lot of people there that looked Germanic.

    7. Repulsive_Work_226 on

      not on the map but there were ethnic Germans in eastern Turkiye who came when Russians controlled the area. There is till one village who is German descent

    8. CreativeAdeptness477 on

      That’s remarkably disorganised and inefficient. Someone should do something about it, perhaps reuniting them all.

    9. New-Brain1891 on

      Map is kinda misleading as it implies all the areas marked in red were of german majority like the mainland. Most of these areas had germans yes but they were nowhere near close to being a majority or even a plurality for that matter

    Leave A Reply