![]() ![]() The southern border with Switzerland and Austria is somewhat mountainous, although very little Alpine territory actually resides within prewar German borders Lake Constance (the Bodensee) forms part of this southern border with Switzerland and Austria. ![]() Foothills dominate the Czechoslovakian border. Much of the German interior is heavily forested, most prominent being the Black Forest region near the Alsatian border. The coastline consists mostly of flat, arable land and the East Frisian marshes, which together form part of the North European Plain. The border states of Rhineland and Moselland are demilitarised in 1936, and the German Reich cannot move forces into the area until it completes the Rhineland national focus, or if it gets involved in a war before doing the Rhineland national focus. Additionally, the exclave of East Prussia runs from the Baltic Sea to the north to Lithuania to the northeast and has Poland to the east, south, and west. Clockwise from the north, Germany borders Denmark, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, Switzerland, France, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Netherlands. In 1936, the German Reich is one of the largest countries in Europe, spanning parts of both Western and Central Europe from the Rhine to Silesia, and from the North and Baltic Seas to the Alps. ![]()
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