Liberated Greece

At the latest stage of the German occupation 1941-1944, a greatest part of the greek territory, except of the main cities and roads was under the control of the resistance. This area used to be called Liberated Greece. It was not a continuous territory. It mainly covered the mountainous backbone of Pindos but also some parts of Pelloponese and islands like Crete or Samos. The word Liberated does not mean that they were permanently free from the German army. It only means that germans had to organize real military expeditions to cover some of these areas for two or three days and then they had to withdraw under the pressure of the guerrillas. There were real bases of the partisan army and some kind of state authority which took its final form after the establishment of Political Committee of National Liberation (PEEA) on March 10th, 1944.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
worden
franck queudrue
philipp nikodemus frischlin
loyd blankenship
early buddhist schools
albert schffle
john bellingham
tai le
strange fruit
list of horse races
tamanghasset
wilhelm hauff
illizi
west derby
dot
two oceans marathon
kei apple
dennis waterman
baron howard de walden
gakushuin
charles edouard guillaume
thomas howard, 1st earl of suffolk
roja
molvania
micro channel plate
joost van den vondel
bridge of birds
james alward van fleet
tongic
treaty of madrid
niuean language
jim button
james howard, 3rd earl of suffolk
jean tiberi
tohoku university
xavire tiberi
green paper
joe hisaishi
antarctic peninsula
lafayette college
rustboro city
miami air international
cabinet of japan
weitek