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limitrophe states : ウィキペディア英語版
limitrophe states
Limitrophe states are territories situated on a border or frontier.〔http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/limitrophe〕 In a broad sense, it means border countries - any group of neighbors of a given nation which border each other thus forming a rim around that country. The English term derives from "''pays limitrophes''", a term in diplomatic French.
In ancient Rome, the term referred to provinces at the borders of the Roman Empire ((ラテン語:limitrophus)), which were obliged to provide billeting of the ''limitanei'' legions deployed on their territory, mostly in ''limes''.
In modern history, it was used to reference provinces which seceded from the Russian empire at the end of World War I, during the Civil War in Russia (1918–1922), thus forming a kind of belt separating the Soviet Russia from the Western powers.
== 1918–1939 ==
Before the Treaty of Versailles was signed on and even after it was not clear yet, which territories of Russian Empire, either occupied by German troops or engaged in the Civil War in Russia, may maintain their independence, which they started to proclaim from late 1917. Thus the very composition of the Limitrophe zone was uncertain and varied widely. Arguing that these nations were then "the cards to change hands in big political games", among them the Baltic peoples, Poles,
Lithuanians, Ukrainians, Belarusians and so on.
The usage of term "limitrophe states" continued after World War I. Treaties were signed through the beginning of World War II. The ''Small Soviet Encyclopedia'' (1929) defines the limitrophe states as "states formed from the outskirts of the former Tsarist Russia, mainly from the western provinces". It includes in their list Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, adding "and, partially, Poland and Finland".〔''Волин, Б.''. Лимитрофы. Малая Советская энциклопедия. М.: 1929, — т.4, стлб.641.〕 Nine years later the Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary (1938) also syntactically 'separates' Finland from the three Baltic States: ("Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia and Finland as well"). However, Poland is not mentioned in this list.〔Лимитроф. Толковый словарь русского языка. Под ред. проф. Д.Н.Ушакова. т. 2. — М.:ОГИЗ, 1938. — стлб.61.〕
The Directive "On the preparation of Wehrmacht for 1939-1940" signed on by Adolf Hitler said, in particular, that:

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