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History of Czechoslovakia (1918–1938)

The First Czechoslovak Republic emerged from the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in October 1918. The new state consisted mostly of territories inhabited by Czechs and Slovaks, but also included areas containing majority populations of other nationalities, particularly Germans (22.95 %), who accounted for more citizens than the state's second state nation of the Slovaks,[1] Hungarians (5.47 %) and Ruthenians (3.39 %). The new state comprised the total of Bohemia whose borders did not coincide with the language border between German and Czech. Despite initially developing effective representative institutions alongside a successful economy, the deteriorating international economic situation in the 1930s gave rise to growing ethnic tensions. The dispute between the Czech and German populations, fanned by the rise of Nazism in neighbouring Germany, resulted in the loss of territory under the terms of the Munich Agreement and subsequent events in the autumn of 1938, bringing about the end of the First Republic.

Independence edit

 
Masaryk returning from exile

Following the Pittsburgh Agreement of May 1918, the Czechoslovak declaration of independence, created in Washington,[2] was published by the Czechoslovak National Council, signed by Masaryk, Štefánik and Beneš on 18 October 1918 in Paris, and proclaimed on 28 October in Prague.

Initial authority within Czechoslovakia was assumed by the newly created National Assembly on 14 November 1918. Because territorial demarcations were uncertain and elections impossible, the provisional National Assembly was constituted on the basis of the 1911 elections to the Austrian parliament with the addition of 54 representatives from Slovakia. National minorities were not represented. Hungarians remained loyal to Hungary.

On 12 November 1918, the short-lived Republic of German Austria was declared, with the intent of unifying with Germany, relying on President Wilson's principle of self-determination. The state claimed all the German-speaking areas of the former Cisleithania, including those in Czechoslovakia.

The National Assembly of Czechoslovakia elected Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk as its first president, chose a provisional government headed by Karel Kramář, and drafted a provisional constitution.

The Paris Peace Conference convened in January 1919. The Czech delegation was led by Kramář and Beneš, premier and foreign minister respectively, of the Czechoslovak provisional government. The conference approved the establishment of the Czechoslovak Republic, to encompass the historic Bohemian Kingdom, Moravia and Silesia, as well as Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia. The inclusion of Ruthenia provided a common frontier with Romania, an important ally against Hungary. To address concerns of the British delegation that the incorporation of exclusively German-settled areas violates the principle of self-determination, the Czech delegation had presented to the conference a memorandum containing misrepresentations of the German-settled areas. No German or Austrian delegation was present the conference. Additionally, the memorandum proposed the Swiss Confederation as a model for the constitution of the new state, which however was not realized in the new state.[3]

In March 1919[4] there were reports that:

  • Austria and Czechoslovakia had broken off diplomatic relations.
  • Czechoslovakia's government in Prague alleged a conspiracy between Austria and Saxony to invade Czechoslovakia.

The dispute was over possession of the German-speaking parts of Bohemia and Moravia (later known as the Sudetenland); their German-speaking inhabitants had declared themselves to be part of Austria, and if that was prevented, demanded to be annexed by Saxony and the German Republics. Czechoslovakia wanted to hold onto this area because of its many valuable mines. Czechoslovakia sent Czech troops into the German area to stop disorders, and the Vienna press printed reports of Czech troops firing on and killing Germans in that area, including 15–20 in Kaaden, three in Eger, and two in Karlsbad. During this, on about 1 March, Josef Mayer, Austria's Minister of War (a native of Eger), went to go to Eger and was arrested at Gratzen after crossing the border, but was allowed to continue to Eger; two days later he went into Germany via Schärding, and by railway via Regensburg and Passau back to Vienna.

In January 1920 the Czechoslovak army, breaking prior agreements with Poland, crossed the demarcation line and by force of arms occupied the Trans-Olza region, where a 60% majority of the population was Polish, compared to 25% Czechs. After brief fights they made a truce on the power of which Czechoslovakia occupied areas to the west of Olza River. The Czech claim to Lusatia, which had been part of the Bohemian Kingdom until the Thirty Years' War, was rejected.

On 10 September 1919, Czechoslovakia signed the Minorities Treaty, placing its ethnic minorities under the protection of the League of Nations.

Statehood edit

The establishment of the Constitution of 1920 installed a parliamentary system and representative democracy with relatively few constituents for each representative. This allowed a great variety of political parties to emerge, with no clear front runner or leading political entity.

Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk was elected the country's first president in the 1920 election and his guidance helped to hold the country together. A coalition of five Czechoslovak parties, which became known as the "Pětka" (The Five), constituted the backbone of the government and maintained stability. Prime Minister Antonín Švehla led the Pětka for most of the 1920s and designed a pattern of coalition politics that survived until 1938. Masaryk was re-elected in 1925 and 1929, serving as President until 14 December 1935 when he resigned due to poor health. He was succeeded by Edvard Beneš.

 
Czechoslovakia in 1928

Beneš had served as Czechoslovak foreign minister from 1918 to 1935, and created the system of alliances that determined the republic's international stance until 1938. A democratic statesman of Western orientation, Beneš relied heavily on the League of Nations as guarantor of the post war status quo and the security of newly formed states. He negotiated the Little Entente (an alliance with Yugoslavia and Romania) in 1921 to counter Hungarian revanchism and Habsburg restoration.

The leaders of Czechoslovakia needed to find solutions for the multiplicity of cultures living within one country. From 1928 and 1940, Czechoslovakia was divided into the four "lands" (Czech: země, Slovak: krajiny); Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia. Although in 1927 assemblies were provided for Bohemia, Slovakia, and Ruthenia, their jurisdiction was limited to adjusting laws and regulations of the central government to local needs. National minorities were assured special protection; in districts where they constituted 20% of the population, members of minority groups were granted full freedom to use their language in everyday life, in schools, and in matters dealing with authorities. German parties also participated in the government starting in 1926, while Hungarian parties, supporting Hungarian irredentist claims, never joined the Czechoslovak government but were not openly hostile to it.

Growing conflict edit

Due to Czechoslovakia's centralized political structure, nationalism arose in the non-Czech nationalities, and several parties and movements were formed with the aim of broader political autonomy. The Slovak People's Party led by Andrej Hlinka is an example.

When German dictator Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, fear of German aggression became widespread in eastern Central Europe. Beneš ignored the possibility of a stronger Central European alliance system, remaining faithful to his Western policy. He did, however, seek the participation of the Soviet Union in an alliance to include France. (Beneš's earlier attitude towards the Soviet regime had been one of caution.) In 1935 the Soviet Union signed treaties with France and Czechoslovakia. In essence, the treaties provided that the Soviet Union would come to Czechoslovakia's aid, but only if French assistance came first. Hitler himself remarked to his foreign minister von Neurath and top military officials in 1937 that he intended to absorb Bohemia and Austria, with a vague sentence about the need to expel two million Czechs and the eventual elimination of the Czech nation.[5]

There was a large German minority in Czechoslovakia, mostly living in Sudetenland.

 
Linguistic map of interwar Czechoslovakia (c. 1930)

They demanded autonomy within Czechoslovakia, claiming they were oppressed by the national government. The political vehicle for this agitation was the newly founded Sudeten German Party (Sudetendeutsche Partei - SdP) led by Konrad Henlein, and financed with Nazi money.[citation needed] In the 1935 Parliamentary elections, the SdP had a surprise success, securing over 2/3 of the Sudeten German vote. This worsened diplomatic relations between Germany and Czechoslovakia. Hitler met with Henlein in Berlin on 28 March 1938, and ordered him to raise demands unacceptable to the Czechoslovak government. On 24 April, the SdP issued the Carlsbad Programme, demanding autonomy for the Sudetenland and the freedom to profess Nazi ideology. If these demands were granted, the Sudetenland could then align with Nazi Germany.

On 17 September 1938 Adolf Hitler ordered the establishment of Sudetendeutsches Freikorps, a paramilitary organization that took over the structure of Ordnersgruppe, an organization of ethnic-Germans in Czechoslovakia that had been dissolved by the Czechoslovak authorities the previous day due to its implication in large number of terrorist activities. The organization was sheltered, trained and equipped by German authorities and conducting cross border terrorist operations into Czechoslovak territory. Relying on the Convention for the Definition of Aggression, Czechoslovak president Edvard Beneš[6] and the government-in-exile[7] later regarded 17 September 1938 as the beginning of the undeclared German-Czechoslovak war. This understanding has been assumed also by the contemporary Czech Constitutional court.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mikulas Teich (1998). Bohemia in History. Cambridge University Press. p. 375.
  2. ^ Preclík, Vratislav (2019). Masaryk a legie (in Czech). Paris Karviná in association with the Masaryk Democratic Movement, Prague. pp. 101–102, 124–125, 128, 129, 132, 140–148, 184–190. ISBN 978-80-87173-47-3.
  3. ^ Wolfgang Hippmann. Vogelfrei und der Heimat beraubt. Die Vertreibung der Sudetendeutschen 1945 (in German). p. 11.
  4. ^ Daily Telegraph 15 March 1919, reprinted in Daily Telegraph 15 March 2019, p. 32
  5. ^ Prague in black: Nazi rule and Czech nationalism, pp. 108–109, Chad Carl Bryant, Harvard University Press 2007
  6. ^ President Beneš' declaration made on 16 December 1941
  7. ^ Note of the Czechoslovak government-in-exile dated 22 February 1944
  8. ^ Ruling No. II. ÚS 307/97 (in Czech), Brno: Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic, 1997 Stran interpretace "kdy země vede válku", obsažené v čl. I Úmluvy o naturalizaci mezi Československem a Spojenými státy, publikované pod č. 169/1929 Sb. za účelem zjištění, zda je splněna podmínka státního občanství dle restitučních předpisů, Ústavní soud vychází z již v roce 1933 vypracované definice agrese Společnosti národů, která byla převzata do londýnské Úmluvy o agresi (CONVENITION DE DEFINITION DE L'AGRESSION), uzavřené dne 4. 7. 1933 Československem, dle které není třeba válku vyhlašovat (čl. II bod 2) a dle které je třeba za útočníka považovat ten stát, který první poskytne podporu ozbrojeným tlupám, jež se utvoří na jeho území a jež vpadnou na území druhého státu (čl. II bod 5). V souladu s nótou londýnské vlády ze dne 22. 2. 1944, navazující na prohlášení prezidenta republiky ze dne 16. 12. 1941 dle § 64 odst. 1 bod 3 tehdejší Ústavy, a v souladu s citovaným čl. II bod 5 má Ústavní soud za to, že dnem, kdy nastal stav války, a to s Německem, je den 17. 9. 1938, neboť tento den na pokyn Hitlera došlo k utvoření "Sudetoněmeckého svobodného sboru" (Freikorps) z uprchnuvších vůdců Henleinovy strany a několik málo hodin poté už tito vpadli na československé území ozbrojeni německými zbraněmi.

Bibliography edit

  • Agnew, Hugh Lecaine. The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown (Stanford, CA, Hoover Institution Press: Stanford University, 2004).
  • Axworthy, Mark W.A. Axis Slovakia—Hitler's Slavic Wedge, 1938–1945, Bayside, N.Y. : Axis Europa Books, 2002, ISBN 1-891227-41-6
  • Evans, Robert John Weston; Cornwall, Mark: Czechoslovakia in a nationalist and fascist Europe : 1918–1948. Oxford University Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-19-726391-4.
  • Mueggenberg, Brent, The Czecho-Slovak Struggle for Independence, 1914-1920, Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2014
  • Zimmern, Alfred. "Czechoslovakia To-Day," International Affairs (July–August, 1938), 17#4 pp. 465–492 in JSTOR, just before Munich

Other languages edit

  • Bosl, Karl: Handbuch der Geschichte der böhmischen Länder (4 Bände). Anton Hiersemann Verlag Stuttgart, 1970
  • Franzel, Emil: Sudetendeutsche Geschichte. Adam Kraft Verlag Augsburg, 1958.
  • Frei, Bohumil: Tschechoslowakei. G.Alzog Verlag München, 1968.
  • Meixner, Rudolf: Geschichte der Sudetendeutschen. Helmut Preußler Verlag Nürnberg, 1988.
  • Zemko, Milan (ed.): Slovensko v Ceskoslovensku (1918–1939). Bratislava : VEDA, Vydavatel´stvo Slovenskej Akad. Vied, 2004. ISBN 80-224-0795-X.
  • Angyal, Béla (ed.): Dokumentumok az Országos Keresztényszocialista Párt történetéhez : 1919 – 1936. Dunaszerdahely [u.a.] : Lilium Aurum [u.a.], 2004, ISBN 80-8062-195-0.
  • Eva Broklová: Ceskoslovenská demokracie: politický systém CSR 1918 – 1938. Prague: Sociologické Nakladatelství, 1992. ISBN 80-901059-6-3.

history, czechoslovakia, 1918, 1938, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2012, learn, when, remove, this. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The First Czechoslovak Republic emerged from the collapse of the Austro Hungarian Empire in October 1918 The new state consisted mostly of territories inhabited by Czechs and Slovaks but also included areas containing majority populations of other nationalities particularly Germans 22 95 who accounted for more citizens than the state s second state nation of the Slovaks 1 Hungarians 5 47 and Ruthenians 3 39 The new state comprised the total of Bohemia whose borders did not coincide with the language border between German and Czech Despite initially developing effective representative institutions alongside a successful economy the deteriorating international economic situation in the 1930s gave rise to growing ethnic tensions The dispute between the Czech and German populations fanned by the rise of Nazism in neighbouring Germany resulted in the loss of territory under the terms of the Munich Agreement and subsequent events in the autumn of 1938 bringing about the end of the First Republic Contents 1 Independence 2 Statehood 3 Growing conflict 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Other languagesIndependence edit nbsp Masaryk returning from exileFollowing the Pittsburgh Agreement of May 1918 the Czechoslovak declaration of independence created in Washington 2 was published by the Czechoslovak National Council signed by Masaryk Stefanik and Benes on 18 October 1918 in Paris and proclaimed on 28 October in Prague Initial authority within Czechoslovakia was assumed by the newly created National Assembly on 14 November 1918 Because territorial demarcations were uncertain and elections impossible the provisional National Assembly was constituted on the basis of the 1911 elections to the Austrian parliament with the addition of 54 representatives from Slovakia National minorities were not represented Hungarians remained loyal to Hungary On 12 November 1918 the short lived Republic of German Austria was declared with the intent of unifying with Germany relying on President Wilson s principle of self determination The state claimed all the German speaking areas of the former Cisleithania including those in Czechoslovakia The National Assembly of Czechoslovakia elected Tomas Garrigue Masaryk as its first president chose a provisional government headed by Karel Kramar and drafted a provisional constitution The Paris Peace Conference convened in January 1919 The Czech delegation was led by Kramar and Benes premier and foreign minister respectively of the Czechoslovak provisional government The conference approved the establishment of the Czechoslovak Republic to encompass the historic Bohemian Kingdom Moravia and Silesia as well as Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia The inclusion of Ruthenia provided a common frontier with Romania an important ally against Hungary To address concerns of the British delegation that the incorporation of exclusively German settled areas violates the principle of self determination the Czech delegation had presented to the conference a memorandum containing misrepresentations of the German settled areas No German or Austrian delegation was present the conference Additionally the memorandum proposed the Swiss Confederation as a model for the constitution of the new state which however was not realized in the new state 3 In March 1919 4 there were reports that Austria and Czechoslovakia had broken off diplomatic relations Czechoslovakia s government in Prague alleged a conspiracy between Austria and Saxony to invade Czechoslovakia The dispute was over possession of the German speaking parts of Bohemia and Moravia later known as the Sudetenland their German speaking inhabitants had declared themselves to be part of Austria and if that was prevented demanded to be annexed by Saxony and the German Republics Czechoslovakia wanted to hold onto this area because of its many valuable mines Czechoslovakia sent Czech troops into the German area to stop disorders and the Vienna press printed reports of Czech troops firing on and killing Germans in that area including 15 20 in Kaaden three in Eger and two in Karlsbad During this on about 1 March Josef Mayer Austria s Minister of War a native of Eger went to go to Eger and was arrested at Gratzen after crossing the border but was allowed to continue to Eger two days later he went into Germany via Scharding and by railway via Regensburg and Passau back to Vienna In January 1920 the Czechoslovak army breaking prior agreements with Poland crossed the demarcation line and by force of arms occupied the Trans Olza region where a 60 majority of the population was Polish compared to 25 Czechs After brief fights they made a truce on the power of which Czechoslovakia occupied areas to the west of Olza River The Czech claim to Lusatia which had been part of the Bohemian Kingdom until the Thirty Years War was rejected On 10 September 1919 Czechoslovakia signed the Minorities Treaty placing its ethnic minorities under the protection of the League of Nations Statehood editThe establishment of the Constitution of 1920 installed a parliamentary system and representative democracy with relatively few constituents for each representative This allowed a great variety of political parties to emerge with no clear front runner or leading political entity Tomas Garrigue Masaryk was elected the country s first president in the 1920 election and his guidance helped to hold the country together A coalition of five Czechoslovak parties which became known as the Petka The Five constituted the backbone of the government and maintained stability Prime Minister Antonin Svehla led the Petka for most of the 1920s and designed a pattern of coalition politics that survived until 1938 Masaryk was re elected in 1925 and 1929 serving as President until 14 December 1935 when he resigned due to poor health He was succeeded by Edvard Benes nbsp Czechoslovakia in 1928Benes had served as Czechoslovak foreign minister from 1918 to 1935 and created the system of alliances that determined the republic s international stance until 1938 A democratic statesman of Western orientation Benes relied heavily on the League of Nations as guarantor of the post war status quo and the security of newly formed states He negotiated the Little Entente an alliance with Yugoslavia and Romania in 1921 to counter Hungarian revanchism and Habsburg restoration The leaders of Czechoslovakia needed to find solutions for the multiplicity of cultures living within one country From 1928 and 1940 Czechoslovakia was divided into the four lands Czech zeme Slovak krajiny Bohemia Moravia Silesia Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia Although in 1927 assemblies were provided for Bohemia Slovakia and Ruthenia their jurisdiction was limited to adjusting laws and regulations of the central government to local needs National minorities were assured special protection in districts where they constituted 20 of the population members of minority groups were granted full freedom to use their language in everyday life in schools and in matters dealing with authorities German parties also participated in the government starting in 1926 while Hungarian parties supporting Hungarian irredentist claims never joined the Czechoslovak government but were not openly hostile to it Growing conflict editDue to Czechoslovakia s centralized political structure nationalism arose in the non Czech nationalities and several parties and movements were formed with the aim of broader political autonomy The Slovak People s Party led by Andrej Hlinka is an example When German dictator Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 fear of German aggression became widespread in eastern Central Europe Benes ignored the possibility of a stronger Central European alliance system remaining faithful to his Western policy He did however seek the participation of the Soviet Union in an alliance to include France Benes s earlier attitude towards the Soviet regime had been one of caution In 1935 the Soviet Union signed treaties with France and Czechoslovakia In essence the treaties provided that the Soviet Union would come to Czechoslovakia s aid but only if French assistance came first Hitler himself remarked to his foreign minister von Neurath and top military officials in 1937 that he intended to absorb Bohemia and Austria with a vague sentence about the need to expel two million Czechs and the eventual elimination of the Czech nation 5 There was a large German minority in Czechoslovakia mostly living in Sudetenland nbsp Linguistic map of interwar Czechoslovakia c 1930 They demanded autonomy within Czechoslovakia claiming they were oppressed by the national government The political vehicle for this agitation was the newly founded Sudeten German Party Sudetendeutsche Partei SdP led by Konrad Henlein and financed with Nazi money citation needed In the 1935 Parliamentary elections the SdP had a surprise success securing over 2 3 of the Sudeten German vote This worsened diplomatic relations between Germany and Czechoslovakia Hitler met with Henlein in Berlin on 28 March 1938 and ordered him to raise demands unacceptable to the Czechoslovak government On 24 April the SdP issued the Carlsbad Programme demanding autonomy for the Sudetenland and the freedom to profess Nazi ideology If these demands were granted the Sudetenland could then align with Nazi Germany On 17 September 1938 Adolf Hitler ordered the establishment of Sudetendeutsches Freikorps a paramilitary organization that took over the structure of Ordnersgruppe an organization of ethnic Germans in Czechoslovakia that had been dissolved by the Czechoslovak authorities the previous day due to its implication in large number of terrorist activities The organization was sheltered trained and equipped by German authorities and conducting cross border terrorist operations into Czechoslovak territory Relying on the Convention for the Definition of Aggression Czechoslovak president Edvard Benes 6 and the government in exile 7 later regarded 17 September 1938 as the beginning of the undeclared German Czechoslovak war This understanding has been assumed also by the contemporary Czech Constitutional court 8 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Czechoslovak Republic 1918 1938 Germans in Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Poles in Czechoslovakia Ruthenians and Ukrainians in Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Slovaks in Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 Hungarians in Czechoslovakia Slovakia References edit Mikulas Teich 1998 Bohemia in History Cambridge University Press p 375 Preclik Vratislav 2019 Masaryk a legie in Czech Paris Karvina in association with the Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague pp 101 102 124 125 128 129 132 140 148 184 190 ISBN 978 80 87173 47 3 Wolfgang Hippmann Vogelfrei und der Heimat beraubt Die Vertreibung der Sudetendeutschen 1945 in German p 11 Daily Telegraph 15 March 1919 reprinted in Daily Telegraph 15 March 2019 p 32 Prague in black Nazi rule and Czech nationalism pp 108 109 Chad Carl Bryant Harvard University Press 2007 President Benes declaration made on 16 December 1941 Note of the Czechoslovak government in exile dated 22 February 1944 Ruling No II US 307 97 in Czech Brno Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic 1997 Stran interpretace kdy zeme vede valku obsazene v cl I Umluvy o naturalizaci mezi Ceskoslovenskem a Spojenymi staty publikovane pod c 169 1929 Sb za ucelem zjisteni zda je splnena podminka statniho obcanstvi dle restitucnich predpisu Ustavni soud vychazi z jiz v roce 1933 vypracovane definice agrese Spolecnosti narodu ktera byla prevzata do londynske Umluvy o agresi CONVENITION DE DEFINITION DE L AGRESSION uzavrene dne 4 7 1933 Ceskoslovenskem dle ktere neni treba valku vyhlasovat cl II bod 2 a dle ktere je treba za utocnika povazovat ten stat ktery prvni poskytne podporu ozbrojenym tlupam jez se utvori na jeho uzemi a jez vpadnou na uzemi druheho statu cl II bod 5 V souladu s notou londynske vlady ze dne 22 2 1944 navazujici na prohlaseni prezidenta republiky ze dne 16 12 1941 dle 64 odst 1 bod 3 tehdejsi Ustavy a v souladu s citovanym cl II bod 5 ma Ustavni soud za to ze dnem kdy nastal stav valky a to s Nemeckem je den 17 9 1938 nebot tento den na pokyn Hitlera doslo k utvoreni Sudetonemeckeho svobodneho sboru Freikorps z uprchnuvsich vudcu Henleinovy strany a nekolik malo hodin pote uz tito vpadli na ceskoslovenske uzemi ozbrojeni nemeckymi zbranemi Bibliography editAgnew Hugh Lecaine The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press Stanford University 2004 Axworthy Mark W A Axis Slovakia Hitler s Slavic Wedge 1938 1945 Bayside N Y Axis Europa Books 2002 ISBN 1 891227 41 6 Evans Robert John Weston Cornwall Mark Czechoslovakia in a nationalist and fascist Europe 1918 1948 Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 726391 4 Mueggenberg Brent The Czecho Slovak Struggle for Independence 1914 1920 Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company 2014 Zimmern Alfred Czechoslovakia To Day International Affairs July August 1938 17 4 pp 465 492 in JSTOR just before MunichOther languages edit Bosl Karl Handbuch der Geschichte der bohmischen Lander 4 Bande Anton Hiersemann Verlag Stuttgart 1970 Franzel Emil Sudetendeutsche Geschichte Adam Kraft Verlag Augsburg 1958 Frei Bohumil Tschechoslowakei G Alzog Verlag Munchen 1968 Meixner Rudolf Geschichte der Sudetendeutschen Helmut Preussler Verlag Nurnberg 1988 Zemko Milan ed Slovensko v Ceskoslovensku 1918 1939 Bratislava VEDA Vydavatel stvo Slovenskej Akad Vied 2004 ISBN 80 224 0795 X Angyal Bela ed Dokumentumok az Orszagos Keresztenyszocialista Part tortenetehez 1919 1936 Dunaszerdahely u a Lilium Aurum u a 2004 ISBN 80 8062 195 0 Eva Broklova Ceskoslovenska demokracie politicky system CSR 1918 1938 Prague Sociologicke Nakladatelstvi 1992 ISBN 80 901059 6 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Czechoslovakia 1918 1938 amp oldid 1199286163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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