What was the turning point battle in western europe, and why was it important?

Major events and turning points of World War II

� Germany invaded Poland, setting off war in Europe. The Soviet Union also invaded Poland and the Baltic nations.
� Germany invaded France, capturing Paris.
� Germany bombed London and the Battle of Britain began.
� The United States gave Britain war supplies and old naval warships in return for military bases in Bermuda and the Caribbean.
� Japan bombed Pearl Harbor.
� After Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, Germany declared war on the United States.

Battle of Midway - The United States declared war on Japan and Germany.
� The United States was victorious over Japan in the Battle of Midway. This victory was the turning point of the war in the Pacific.

Battle of Stalingrad - 1942
� Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union defeated Germany at Stalingrad, marking the turning point of the war in Eastern Europe.
� American and Allied troops landed in Normandy, France, on D-Day to begin the liberation of Western Europe.

� The United States dropped two atomic bombs on Japan (Hiroshima and Nagasaki) in 1945, forcing Japan to surrender and ending World War II.


What was the turning point battle in western europe, and why was it important?

September 29-30 1939, German troops parade through Warsaw after the surrender of Poland
 

What was the turning point battle in western europe, and why was it important?

Battle of Midway

What was the turning point battle in western europe, and why was it important?

Battle of Stalingrad

-->  -->
1938 - Cover of a German anti-Semitic (anti-Jewish) children's book, "The Poisonous Mushroom".   Click on the picture to learn more about German anti-Semitism

Get an overview of the Nazis’ occupation of France and its advances into Western Europe during World War II.

Last Updated: May 2, 2022

  • Save

  • History

  • The Holocaust

Scholar Aliza Luft discusses the changes that took place in France when the Nazis invaded in 1940.

Scholar Aliza Luft discusses the changes that took place in France when the Nazis invaded in 1940.

Although Nazi plans to create a thousand-year Reich were centered on the conquest of “living space” to Germany’s east, Hitler knew that countries in western Europe might stand in his way. He was especially concerned about France, which bordered Germany and could force it to fight on western and eastern fronts simultaneously. Assuming that France would go to great lengths to prevent Germany from becoming too big and powerful, the Nazis decided that they must defeat the French before pushing farther eastward from Poland. 1

They had other reasons for this decision. Germany had a history of military conflict with France, and the Nazis detested the French political ideals of equality and liberty. Nazi leaders also resented the presence of soldiers from African colonies in the French military forces and saw them as a threat to European racial purity. 2

France and Britain responded to the invasion of Poland by declaring war on Germany on September 3, 1939. But they did not engage in a major battle with Germany until spring 1940, when the French, especially, found little success in halting the German advance in western Europe. Bolstered by a powerful air force and a new tactic, the Blitzkrieg (“lightning war”), in which ground forces broke through enemy lines with rapid and overwhelming force, Germany conquered much of western Europe in a few months. In April 1940, the Nazis invaded the neutral countries of Denmark and Norway in order to protect their supply of steel and other resources from Scandinavia. Then, in May, Germany invaded the Netherlands. By May 17, the Germans had overrun that nation and half of Belgium, and they were fighting their way to France. On June 14, the Germans captured Paris, and the French military was on the verge of defeat.

On June 22, France and Germany signed an armistice agreement in the same railroad car in the middle of France’s Compiègne Forest where the World War I armistice of November 11, 1918, had been signed. (In fact, at Hitler’s request, German soldiers brought the rail car from a local museum to the forest so that it could be used at the ceremony.) The armistice divided France into two zones. One zone, which included northern France and an area along the Atlantic Ocean, was occupied by the German military; the other zone, which included most of southern France, remained unoccupied. According to the terms of the armistice, a French government based in the southern town of Vichy and headed by Marshal Henri-Philippe Pétain, an 83-year-old French war hero, and Pierre Laval, a French politician, would govern France. While the Vichy government governed autonomously in the unoccupied zone, its power was subordinate to German military commanders in the occupied zone. The Nazis put in place a variety of arrangements to govern the other western European countries it defeated. Some, like the Netherlands, were governed by a Nazi-appointed civilian governor, while others, like Belgium, were governed by the German military.

After the conquest of France, Hitler turned his attention to Britain, which possessed a powerful navy and an empire spanning the globe. At first Germany offered peace. Recalling Hitler’s previous false promises of peace, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who had succeeded Neville Chamberlain two months earlier, did not accept Hitler’s offer. The Battle of Britain began in July 1940 with massive German air attacks designed to wipe out the British air force and expose its naval fleet. Every day for the next two months, hundreds of planes fought in the skies over Britain. Despite their best efforts, the Germans were unable to defeat the British, partly because the British did not fight alone. They had the support of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, as well as South Africa and other parts of their empire. In fact, if Britain had fallen to the Germans, the British government had made arrangements to continue the war from Canada. The British were also aided by refugees from German-occupied Europe. Poland, France, Norway, the Netherlands, and Czechoslovakia were among the occupied nations that set up governments-in-exile in Britain—each determined to carry on the struggle to the end.  

Connection Questions

  1. Why was it important to the Nazis’ plans for “race and space” for them to defeat western European nations, especially France?
  2. Why do you think Hitler insisted on signing the armistice agreement with France in the same railway car where the World War I armistice was signed?

Facing History and Ourselves, "The Battle for Western Europe," last updated May 2, 2022.

Most teachers are willing to tackle the difficult topics, but we need the tools.

— Gabriela Calderon-Espinal, Bay Shore, NY

What was the turning point of the war in Europe and why?

The tide of the war in Europe shifted with the Soviet victory at the Battle of Stalingrad (February 1943). More than one million Soviet troops and tens of thousands of civilians died in the defense of the city, but the destruction of two entire German armies marked the beginning of the end of the Third Reich.

What was the most important turning point of World War II in Europe?

The Battle of Stalingrad is often considered the turning point of WW2. In 1942, Hitler sent an army south in an attempt to capture the Soviet Russian city that had been renamed after the Soviet leader Josef Stalin.

What Battle was a turning point in Europe?

Then, late that summer, the Nazi leader attacked Stalingrad. That decision led to Germany's first major Eastern Front defeat and became the turning point of World War II.

What was the most significant turning point in ww1?

The battle of the Marne was a major turning point of World War I. By the end of August 1914, the whole Allied army on the Western Front had been forced into a general retreat back towards Paris. Meanwhile the two main German armies continued through France.