Regionen, in denen die deutsche Bevölkerung außerhalb Europas lebte

Von DisastrousWealth7445

9 Kommentare

  1. Frediebirdskin on

    To ask the obvious question, not Togo, Cameroon or Tanzania? I mean, I wouldn’t be shocked if there wasn’t a particular extensive population, but surely there was some right?

  2. CharlotteKartoffeln on

    What’s the dark green bit? Nations bombed, invaded or forcibly allied to Germany between 1866 and 1945?

  3. Shot_Programmer_9898 on

    There are still people that speak lagunen-deutsch, or German of the Lake in the south of Chile.

  4. Were settlements south of the USA really that localized and conversely really that generalized in the US and Canada?

  5. almighty_gourd on

    German is still spoken in pockets in the US so there should be a few red dots in Amish country (Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana) and in the Texas Hill Country. Probably should have some red dots down in Argentina near Bariloche. I also question whether there should be that much red in northern Kazakhstan. Wikipedia says that no more than 9% of the population of the northern Kazakhstan is ethnically German.

  6. Informal-Antelope-79 on

    Missing Jerusalem. There was a crazy German cult that had a settlement in Jerusalem, until they were all arrested by the British for supporting the Nazis. The new majority Jewish government wasn’t a big fan of them either.

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