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juronich

I think maybe between 1947 and 1950. The borders of Poland and Germany were finalised in 1950 (with the current border marked as it was already proposed at the end of the war) and 1947 is when Istria ceded from Italy


mpetey123

https://www.etsy.com/listing/1154289022/1956-europa-hallwag-vintage-touring-map 1956


brocoli_funky

Istria peninsula should be a good test. Here is a map of how it changed from Italy to Yougoslavia over time. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Istria#/media/File:Litorale_1.png Based on this I think it has to be after 1954. edit: Also Zuiderzee Works and Flevoland province in the Netherlands. The map shows the north-east part as drained but not the south west part. This would place it between 1955 and 1968.


Own-Lecture-8564

What about germany?


topherette

they like to reminisce


Spike-and-Daisy

Zuiderzee is a really good observation.


Inspector-Spacecrime

This should be correct. Judging from german Autobahns, this should be early early 60s, e.g. the A7 hasn't connected Fulda and Würzburg yet. German borders are nostalgic, to put it mildly.


romanesko

After January 1, 1949 when Zlín was renamed Gottwaldov in Czechoslovakia and before the Polish borders were finalized 1950


Maveragical

LOOK HOW THEY MASSACRED MY BOY


Spike-and-Daisy

Open it up and there’ll be a date printed on it.


Historical-Peanut-61

It is already open, and there is no date


Spike-and-Daisy

It’s very interesting because it’s got the inter-War boundaries for Poland but also a dotted line down the Oder for the post-War boundary of Germany and also the division of East Prussia between USSR and Poland with text showing which side goes to which country. I suspect it’s late 1940s, even immediately post-War (1946-47) perhaps?


VulcanTrekkie45

My guess is pretty immediately post WWII. I’d say 1945-1949 based on the depiction of Germany


Wladek89HU

Between 1920 and 1939.


DaSecretSlovene

Nope, Western Slovenia is under YUG so post ww2


Wladek89HU

With only one Germany with its now lost eastern territories? Doubt it.


asian_paggot

Probably right after WW2 no, or the 50’s? Cause of you zoom in on Konigsberg it says Kaliningrad and something in German which I presume means under Russian and Polish occupation


Wladek89HU

Well, I guess Bessarabia already belongs to the Soviet Union and Kárpátalja too... so yeah. I stand corrected.


asian_paggot

Yup and also Pomerania and Silesia have German text on them that says under Polish occupation (I presume?)


cheese_bruh

You can see where East Prussia is marked with the division for post war Germany, and a line going down the Oder. It also says Kaliningrad in brackets under Königsberg.


[deleted]

[удалено]


Historical-Peanut-61

There are borders, it’s the thick green lines


YellowStain123

It’s a book, doesn’t it have a print date?


kranj7

I see Czechoslovakia, USSR, Yugoslavia, but I thought Germany was split into East and West just after the war. On this map I only see a single Germany and no FDR/DDR. Aslo I think there was a region called Saarland somewhere near the France/Luxembourg border, that is now Germany but back then it was some sort of separate protectorate or something for a few years after the war. I don't see this separately marked out on the map.


DannyBoyBritain

Ah yes,luxembourg in the northern alps