Skip to main content

Home/ ww2causes/ Group items matching "poland" in title, tags, annotations or url

Group items matching
in title, tags, annotations or url

Sort By: Relevance | Date Filter: All | Bookmarks | Topics Simple Middle
agustinaben

Nazi Soviet Pact - 10 views

  •  
    American cartoon, 1939
  • ...6 more comments...
  •  
    Cartoon in which Nazi Germany is presented as the wolf of the Red Riding Hood, Soviet Russia is a smiling bear and Red Riding Hood is Poland, surprised by the couple.
  •  
    A cartoon from 1939, shows nazis and soviets as wolf and poland as red riding hood
  •  
    1939 cartoon,Poland got a surprise because Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia are like couple.
  •  
    a cartoon made by the capitalists trying to show the union that the Nazis and the Soviets had and poland is personified by a little, indefense and innocent girl.
  •  
    The cartoon's point of view is clearly from America as it is showing how Hitler (the wolf) is allied to Russia, represented as a bear which is a dangerouse animal but much more harmless thana hunger wolf, so it could attack Poland. What it represents was the Nazi-Soviet pact to take control over Poland. Lucia Paz and Victoria Gonzalez
  •  
    This cartoon was drawn by US cartoonist Herb Block in 1939. In this source you can see a small girl labelled "Poland", confronted by two predators witch represent Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. This source shows how Poland was vulnerable, weak and was going to be "eaten" by wolf and the bear (Germany and Russia) Baltasar Querio and Julia Molmenti
  •  
    This cartoon is clearly from the point of view of the allies. It conveys the situation of fear and shock from Poland who is set a trap (depicted as the red riding hood whilst the Soviets and the Nazis are drawn as the bear and the wolf). Posse and Helou
  •  
    this cartoon was made from the part of the allies showing the sorprise of Poland produced by the Nazi Germany and the USSR, it also represents the surprise of the allies of this new alliance which was the straw that broke the camel's back. Poland was trapped and surpised by this new alliance Mechi Anelo
nicoledons

nazi soviet pact - 0 views

shared by nicoledons on 06 May 14 - No Cached
  •  
    This cartoon by the British cartoonist David Low was published in the Evening Standard newspaper on 21 October 1939. Having destroyed Poland, Hitler and Stalin stroll down their now-shared frontier.
agustinaben

Nazi-Soviet Pact - 10 views

  •  
    "This cartoon by the British cartoonist David Low was published in the Evening Standard newspaper on 21 October 1939. Having destroyed Poland, Hitler and Stalin stroll down their now-shared frontier."
  • ...2 more comments...
  •  
    it is a critic from western countries saying that Stalin and Hitler made a peace pact only to prepare themselves and stabb each other from the back at the end
  •  
    This is a British cartoon in which again the Nazi-Soviet Pact was described as a fake friendship. The handkerchief represents the pact and how they stick together, also they were hugging, but however they were aiming each other with a gun secretly. They knew that even though they were allies, they were expecting the betrayed from the other. Lucia Paz and Victoria Gonzalez
  •  
    This British cartoon represents, the false alliance that Hitler and Stalin made in the Nazi-Soviet pact. The british people and other countries knew that Germany and the U.S.S.R, made this temporally alliance, not trusting each other. Diego Goldaracena and Juan Landolfo.
  •  
    This is a cartoon by David Low, publish in 1939 on a newspaper. It shows how Hitler and Stalin relation was fake. Although their feet are tied together in their back they are both holding a gun. This show how both counties were allies for convenience but didn't trusted each other. Blatasar Querio and Julia Molmenti
marilecour

Nazi Soviet Pact - 0 views

  •  
    HItler's next target was the strip of former German land in POland known as the Polish corridor. He had convinced himself that Britain and France would not risk war over this, but he was less sure about Stalin, the Russian leader.
nicoledons

germany-invades-poland-cartoon-002 - 0 views

shared by nicoledons on 06 May 14 - No Cached
  •  
    Cartoon published by the british cartoonist David Low in The Evening Starndards 20 September 1939
mateor

Nazi-Soviet pact - 2 views

  •  
    Germany and Soviet Russia joining to attack Poland
nicoledons

NAZI SOVIT PACT - 3 views

The British were busy all through early 1939 trying to negotiate an agreement with the Soviet Union. Even up to the stunning surprise of the Von Ribbentrop-Molotov pact, a success in the British ne...

started by nicoledons on 06 May 14 no follow-up yet
1 - 8 of 8
Showing 20 items per page