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Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich
literary title
Mius-Front
The Mius-Front was a heavily fortified German Nazi defensive line along the Mius River in the Donbas region of the Soviet Union and Ukraine during World War II.
Lancaster University Leipzig
German campus of Lancaster University
Siege of Trarbach
1734 siege
Gau Halle-Merseburg
administrative division of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945
Stadion
former noble family
West Prussia Government Region
1920-1939
Solms-Laubach
thumb|262px|Original coat of arms of the Counts of Solms-Laubach Solms-Laubach was a County of southern Hesse and eastern Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The House of Solms had its origins in Solms, Hesse.
Hanover–Minden railway
railway line in Germany
Kloster Lorch
former Benedictine abbey in Lorch, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Berlin–Lehrte railway
railway line in Germany
County of Wernigerode
countship
University of the German Federal Armed Forces
Hitler's private library
library
MEGAL pipeline
gas pipeline
Ostmesse
thumb|Postage stamp promoting the Ostmesse The Ostmesse, officially the Deutsche Ostmesse Königsberg (DOK), was a trade fair in Königsberg, Germany. It was established to aid in the recovery of East Prussia after its separation from Weimar Germany following World War I.
Kremmen Railway
railway line in Germany
Battle of Bengtskär
1941 battle
Voronezh–Kharkov Offensive
Hannover Hbf–Kassel Hbf railway
railway line in Germany
Bundesstraße 85
federal highway in Germany
Harz Railway
railway line
Köpenick's week of bloodshed
1933 violence in Germany
Gau Westfalen-Süd
German territorial division of the Nazi Party, 1930-1945
Circle of the Rhine
Bavarian administrative district (1816–1946)
Middle Elbe Biosphere Reserve
Biosphere Reserve in Saxony-Anhalt
Danube–Oder Canal
canal
Severinsbrücke
bridge in Cologne
Battle of Muranów Square
Bundesstraße 303
federal highway in Germany
Munich Hbf–Regensburg railway
double-track, electrified main line in Bavaria, running from Munich via Freising and Landshut to Regensburg
Watchtowers at the Inner German border
watchtowers
Vyazma Airborne Operation
1942 parachute landing
field railway
thumb|Heeresfeldbahn [[Brigadelok:de: 0-8-0T locomotive from WWI]]
Operation Seydlitz
German offensive and opposing Soviet defensive operation on the Eastern Front, July 1942
Mühldorf concentration camp
sub-camp complex of Dachau concentration camp (1944-1945)
Stolberg-Stolberg
thumb|Coat of arms thumb|Stolberg Castle Stolberg-Stolberg was a county of the Holy Roman Empire located in the southern Harz region. Its capital was the town of Stolberg, now in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. It was ruled by a branch of the House of Stolberg.
Pleissnerland
Pleissnerland, Pleissenland or the Imperial Territory of Pleissenland (; ) was a Reichsgut of the Holy Roman Empire, which meant that it was directly possessed by the respective elected King of the Romans or Emperor. It was named for the Pleiße River, and was located in what is now the border region between the German states of Thuringia and Saxony south of Leipzig, including the towns of Altenburg, Chemnitz, Zwickau and Leisnig. thumb|county of Pleissen ==History== The area east of the Sorbian March was conquered between 927 and 929 by King Henry I of Germany in the course of his campaign aga
Süderbergland
mountains in Germany
Mittelrhein
German wine region
County of Diez
countship
Nibelungenfestspiele Worms
theatre festival in Germany
Europipe II
gas pipeline
Stolberg-Rossla
thumb|262px|Rossla, among other Stolberg territories The County of Stolberg-Rossla () was a county of the Holy Roman Empire. Its capital was Rossla, now in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. The territory was owned and ruled by a branch of the House of Stolberg from 1341 until 1803, when the county became mediatised by the Electorate of Saxony.
Duborg Castle
castle in Flensburg, Schleswig
Wunstorf–Bremen railway
railway line
Limesfall
thumb|upright=1.3|The hoard of Neupotz is directly linked to the plundering that took place after the Limesfall; hence it was also called the "Alemannian booty" (Alamannenbeute). thumb|upright=1.3| time table The Limesfall is the name given to the abandonment of the Upper Germanic-Rhaetian Limes (built in 1st century) in the mid-3rd century AD by the Romans and the withdrawal of imperial troops from the provinces on the far side of the rivers Rhine and Danube to the line of those rivers. It is sometimes called the fall of the limes.
Bentheim-Tecklenburg-Rheda
thumb|Current Coat of arms of the Princes and Counts of Bentheim-Tecklenburg-Rheda Bentheim-Tecklenburg-Rheda was a historical county of the Holy Roman Empire, located in present northwestern North Rhine-Westphalia and southwestern Lower Saxony, Germany.
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf–Heidelberg Hbf railway
railway line in Germany
Stade Government Region
former district of Pussia and Lower Saxony, Germany
Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems
research institute in Dresden, Germany
Operation Archway
1945 SAS operation during WW2
Brunswick–Magdeburg railway
railway line
Neu-Ulm–Kempten railway
railway line
Protestant Church of Anhalt
one of the regional churches of the Protestant Church in Germany
Battle of Zahoriv Monastery
1943 battle
Allenstein District
district of Prussia
County of Dannenberg
state of the Holy Roman Empire (1153–1303)
Operation Mihailovic
conflict
Rheinburgenweg Trail