About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 90. Chapters: Pan-Arabism, Pan-Slavism, Irredentism, Pan-Germanism, Greater Germanic Reich, Basque Country, Italian irredentism, Albanian nationalism, Pan-Turkism, Greater Hungary, Paisos Catalans, Greater Albania, Greater Netherlands, Pan-Africanism, Megali Idea, Pan-Iranism, Basmachi movement, Pan-Celticism, Balkan Federation, United Macedonia, German question, Greater Somalia, Greater East Asia Conference, Iberian Federalism, Greater Romania, Pan-Asianism, Scandinavism, Pan-African colours, Turanism, Pan-nationalism, Pan-Americanism, Sudeten German Party, Bundu dia Kongo, List of examples of expansionism, Greater Finland, Paneuropean Union, Greater Bulgaria, Greater Indonesia, Greater Portugal, European Liberation Front, Fertile Crescent Plan, Panhispanism, Pan-Serbism, Arab Union. Excerpt: The Greater Germanic Reich (German: Grossgermanisches Reich), fully styled the Greater Germanic Reich of the German Nation (German: Grossgermanisches Reich Deutscher Nation) is the official state name of the political entity that Nazi Germany tried to establish in Europe during World War II. Albert Speer stated in his memoirs that Hitler also referred to the envisioned state as the Teutonic Reich of the German Nation, although it is unclear whether Speer was using the now seldom used "Teutonic" as an English synonym for "Germanic." This pan-Germanic empire was expected to assimilate practically all of Germanic Europe into an enormously expanded Reich. Territorially speaking, this encompassed the already-enlarged German Reich itself (consisting of pre-1938 Germany proper, Austria, Bohemia, Moravia, Alsace-Lorraine, Eupen-Malmedy, Memel, Lower Styria, Upper Carniola, Southern Carinthia and German-occupied Poland), the Netherlands, the Flemish part of Belgium, Luxembourg, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, at least the German-speaking parts of Sw.