In the aftermath of the First World War, the Canadian Corps was involved in an epic march to the Rhineland to engage in garrison duties in the Cologne bridgehead, as part of the British Army. Yet, a narrative of the Canadian Corps' experience in the Rhineland is largely absent form the literature concerning the occupation of German territory. A comprehensive account and analysis of the Corps' activities, from November 1918 to January 1919, is not present in the Canadian martial and diplomatic texts concerning the First World War. To date, historians have left several questions unanswered concerning the Dominion's first experience occupying the home territory of a European enemy"--Abstract.
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