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Polish–Czechoslovak War

The Czechoslovak-Polish War, also known mostly in Czech sources as the Seven-day war (Czech: Sedmidenní válka) was a military confrontation between Czechoslovakia and Poland over the territory of Cieszyn Silesia in early 1919.

Czechoslovakia-Poland War
Part of the Polish–Czechoslovak border conflicts

Map of the war
Date23–30 January 1919
Location
Result Inconclusive
Cieszyn Silesia divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland
Belligerents
 Czechoslovakia  Poland
Commanders and leaders
Josef Šnejdárek Franciszek Latinik
Strength
15,000[1]
  • 3,000–4,000 regular soldiers,[2] including:
    • 6 Infantry battalions
    • 2 Cavalry squadrons
    • 1 Artillery battery
    • 1 Armoured train
  • 4,000–6,500 volunteers, mostly local miners and students
  • Local gendarmerie
Casualties and losses
Total: 175–184
44–53 killed
124 injured
7 missing
Total: 2,336
92 killed
855 injured
576 POWs
813 missing

After a vain protest by the Czechoslovak government against action in breach of the Interim Agreement, they attacked the part of Cieszyn Silesia held by Polish forces to prevent elections to the Polish Sejm in the disputed territory and the local population's contributions to the Polish army.[3][4] The Czechoslovak army made rapid advancements, capturing most of Cieszyn Silesia by the end of January. The bulk of the Polish army was engaged in the Polish–Ukrainian War at the time, and the Polish forces faced a numerically superior and better equipped Czech Army in Cieszyn Silesia.[5] The attack was halted under pressure from the Entente. The result of the war was the new demarcation line, which expanded the territory controlled by Czechoslovakia. It led to the division of the region of Cieszyn Silesia in July 1920, and left a substantial Polish minority in Czechoslovakia in the region later called Trans-Olza. The division of Cieszyn Silesia did not satisfy Poland and led to the Polish annexation of Trans-Olza in 1938.

Background edit

During the final months of World War I, Polish and Czechoslovak diplomats met to hammer out a common border between the two new countries. By the time the armistice was declared, most of the border was worked out except for three small politically sensitive areas in Upper Silesia and Upper Hungary which were claimed by both countries.

Cieszyn Silesia or the Duchy of Teschen (Polish: Cieszyn and Czech: Těšín) was a small area in south-eastern Silesia. The Duchy was part of the historic Czech lands of Bohemian Crown - Crown of Saint Wenceslaus (born Václav).[6] Latin, German, Czech, Moravian and finally Polish served as an official language of the region, however throughout the ages many historical sources suggested the local population remained mostly Polish-speaking in the form of the Cieszyn Silesian dialect, regardless of the official language.[7] The last Austrian census of 1910 (determining nationality according to the main communication language (German: Umgangssprache) of the respondents) showed that it was predominantly Polish-speaking in three districts (Cieszyn (Teschen), Bielsko (Bielitz), and Fryštát (Freistadt)) and mainly Czech-speaking in the fourth district of Frýdek (Friedek).[8] Part of the population (the Ślązakowcy – named after the newspaper Ślązak, Schlonsaken) claimed a distinct, Silesian identity,[9] however never fully denying the old Polish roots of the local population or the status the local dialect as a dialect of the Polish language (which they used in their newspapers), but rather gradually becoming superior to the Polish culture in the Kingdom of Poland, thanks to becoming part of the German cultural sphere.[10]

The chief importance of Cieszyn Silesia was the rich coal basin around Karviná and the valuable Košice-Bohumín Railway line which linked the Czech lands with Slovakia. Furthermore, in north-western Cieszyn Silesia the railroad junction of Bohumín served as a crossroad for international transport and communications.[11][12] The leaders of Czechoslovakia had insisted most forcefully on the indivisibility of the former Austrian Crownlands of Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia and their unwillingness to compromise on Cieszyn Silesia was mostly due to their desire to keep the Sudetenland region in Czechoslovakia.[13] To allow Cieszyn Silesia to join Poland because it had a Polish majority would create a precedent for the German-speaking Sudetenland to join Germany, and it was largely for this reason the Czechoslovak government insisted that all of the former Duchy of Teschen was part of Czechoslovakia.[13] The Czech argument was that the Poles were not local but an incoming population, and that the indigenous population had been Czech, they claimed Poles were immigrants attracted to employment in coal mines throughout the 18th century.[14] Those claims were not corroborated by Austrian population censuses throughout the 19th century. The influx of Poles from Galicia was directed mainly to Ostrava and surroundings, which lie outside of Cieszyn Silesia. Moreover, the Polish national movement in the region was active since the Spring of Nations in 1848, whereas the influx of Galician Poles began in 1870s.[15]

On 5 November 1918, the Polish National Council and the Czechoslovak Committee concluded an agreement on the demarcation line for administrative and military purposes, and divided their respective spheres of influences at the municipal level, roughly along the ethnic lines. The Frýdek district and a small part of the Fryštát district was left on the Czech side, the remainder was accorded to the Poles.[12]

Forces edit

 
Czechoslovak legionaries from France in Cieszyn Silesia
 
Czechoslovak legionaries from Italy in northwest Slovakia leaving for Cieszyn Silesia

The Czechoslovak side was led by Josef Šnejdárek. Czechoslovak military forces had been formed from the three legionnaire battalions of the 21st Rifle Regiment from France, the 54th Infantry Battalion of Olomouc, the 93rd Infantry Battalion of Fryštát, a volunteer battalion from Bohumín and a volunteer battalion from Orlová. The operations of the Czechoslovak forces were joined by other local volunteers, formed in the National Guard approximately 5,000 men strong. From the north-west of Slovakia came the main force that was sent to support the 35th Regiment from Italy, led by the Italian Colonel Graselli and later reinforced with the Rifle Regiment from Italy. During the war the Czechoslovak army was reinforced by the newly formed 2nd Brigade with a strength of six battalions, with the support of two artillery batteries, and one cavalry squadron.

The Czechoslovak army was further strengthened by the 1st Battalion of the 28th Infantry Regiment, 1st Btn. of the 3rd Infantry Reg., 2nd Btn of the 93rd Infantry Reg. and 5 volunteer battalions.

Polish forces under the command of Franciszek Latinik were weaker than the Czechoslovak forces. At the end of World War I, Poland was fighting in border disputes with all its neighbors, and during the war with Czechoslovakia the main force was committed to the fighting in Eastern Galicia with the Ukrainians.[16] The Polish forces were composed of six infantry battalions, two cavalry squadrons and an artillery battery. Other forces included approximately 550 members of the gendarmerie and around 4,000 (Polish claim) to 6,500 (Czech claim) local Polish volunteers. Polish forces were reinforced during the war.

Battle edit

 
Corpses of Polish soldiers murdered by Czech legionnaires in Stonava on 26 January 1919[17]

On 23 January 1919 at 11:00 in Cieszyn Silesia Polish commander Franciszek Latinik and Czechoslovak officer Josef Šnejdárek met with a group of officers, consisting of British, French, Italian and U.S. representatives (at the request of the Czechoslovak party). The Polish side was given an ultimatum, that they evacuate the area to the Biała River in less than two hours. After the expiry of this period, the Czechoslovak army started its operations at 13:00 following its operational guidelines to seize Bohumín/Bogumin and Karviná/Karwina. From the east, at the same time, an attack was launched by the Italian legionnaire unit. The Czechoslovak army moved forward, and took Bohumín (at 16:00), Orlová/Orłowa and Karviná/Karwina. Cieszyn Silesia was taken over by Czechoslovak forces on 27 January 1919. Polish troops retreated to the Vistula river.

On 30 January 1919 Josef Šnejdárek received the order to cross the Vistula and secure the railway line between Bohumín and Jablunkov/Jabłonków. They crossed the river and the Polish troops retreated to Skoczów, where the front line was stalled. Further Czechoslovak reinforcements arrived, which gave Šnejdárek an advantage over the Polish units. The Czechoslovak army prepared for an attack on Skoczów assuming that it would lead to the collapse of the Polish defenses.

On 31 January 1919, because of the pressure from the Triple Entente representatives, the attack on Skoczów was cancelled, and the Czechoslovak army ceased fighting. The Czechoslovak army withdrew to the new Green Line, established by the International Commission Agreement on the basis of the Czechoslovak–Polish Treaty, concluded on 3 February 1919 in Paris.[18]

Conclusion edit

The disputed territory was placed under international control. The final division of Cieszyn Silesia came in July 1920 as a result of the Spa Conference. In conclusion, the railway line connecting the Czech lands with Slovakia and the territory to the south of it were assigned to Czechoslovakia, while the territory north of the railway line was assigned to Poland. Vast majority of the coal mines, as well as Třinec Iron and Steel Works were on the territory assigned to Czechoslovakia.

In precise terms, Poland was given one-third of the population (142,000 out of 435,000), less than half of the territory (1002 km2 out of 2222), and the town of Cieszyn. Czechoslovakia received the districts of Fryštát and Frýdek, most of the area of the district of Cieszyn, the railway station of Cieszyn, Karviná and coal mines, Třinec with ironworks, and the entire Bohumín-Jablunkov railway line. Some 140,000 Poles were left on the Czech side.[12]

War crimes edit

On 26 January, Czechoslovak forces killed 20 Polish POWs in the village Stonava, which has been documented on photos. According to some sources, they were bayonetted to death.[5][19] A monument has been erected in their memory in Stonava.

According to Polish claims an unspecified number of Polish POWs were also killed in the village of Bystřice and a number of civilians killed in Karviná.[20] Several thousand people were forced to flee to Poland, who returned in 1938 with the Polish annexation of Trans-Olza and in turn started taking revenge on the local Czech populace.[citation needed] There is a monument in Orlová, commemorating the Czech victims of the war.

References edit

  1. ^ Clodfelter, M. (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4th ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 344. ISBN 978-0786474707.
  2. ^ Halina Szotek, 2009, p. 26
  3. ^ "Před 93 lety se bojovalo o Těšínsko. Postup do Polska stoply mocnosti" (in Czech). Idnes.cz. 17 January 2012. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
  4. ^ Gawrecká, Marie (2004). Československé Slezsko mezi světovými válkami 1918–1938. Opava: Silesian University in Opava. p. 23. ISBN 80-7248-233-5. Czesi uderzyli na nas kilka dni przed 26 stycznia 1919, w którym to dniu miały się odbyć wybory do Sejmu w Warszawie. Nie chcieli bowiem między innemi dopuścić do przeprowadzenia tych wyborów, któreby były wykazały bez wszelkiej presyi i agitacyi, że Śląsk jest polskim.
  5. ^ a b "Sieben Tage Krieg: Als Tschechen und Polen 1919 aufeinander schossen" (in German). Czech Radio. 21 February 2009.
  6. ^ Leslie, R.F.: The History of Poland, Cambridge University Press, 1980, p. 4.
  7. ^ Greń, Zbigniew (2000). Śląsk Cieszyński. Dziedzictwo językowe (in Polish). Warsaw: Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie. Instytut Slawistyki Polskiej Akademii Nauk. p. 84. ISBN 83-86619-09-0.
  8. ^ Ludwig Patryn (ed): Die Ergebnisse der Volkszählung vom 31. Dezember 1910 in Schlesien, Troppau 1912.
  9. ^ Hannan, Kevin (1996). Borders of Language and Identity in Teschen Silesia. New York: Peter Lang. p. 47. ISBN 0-8204-3365-9.
  10. ^ Wnętrzak, Grzegorz (2014). Stosunki polityczne i narodowościowe na pograniczu Śląska Cieszyńskiego i Galicji zachodniej w latach 1897-1920 (in Polish). Toruń: Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek. pp. 311, 313, 327, 331. ISBN 978-83-7780-882-5.
  11. ^ Wandycz, Piotr S (January 1962). France and her Eastern Allies, 1919–1925: French-Czechoslovak-Polish Relations from the Paris Peace Conference in Locarno (1 January 1962 ed.). University of Minnesota Press; Minnesota Archive Editions edition. pp. 75, 158. ISBN 0-8166-5886-2.
  12. ^ a b c William Fiddian Reddaway. The Cambridge History of Poland, Vol 2. Cambridge University Press. 1971. pp. 513-514.
  13. ^ a b Heimann, Mary (2009). Czechoslovakia: The State that Failed. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 56.
  14. ^ Prazmowska, Anita: Poland a Modern History, I. B. Tauris and Co. Ltd., London, New York, ISBN 978 1 84885 273 0, 2010, p. 101.
  15. ^ Kaszper, Roman; Małysz, Bohdan, eds. (2009). "Jsou Poláci přistěhovalci? O haličských imigrantech a slezských starousedlících.". Poláci na Těšínsku (PDF) (in Czech). Český Těšín: Congress of Poles in the Czech Republic. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-80-87381-00-7.
  16. ^ "Ukraine after the Russian Revolution". mfa.gov.ua. 2009. Retrieved 23 May 2009. A Western Ukrainian People's Republic was also declared in Lviv on October 19, 1918. The ZUNR formally (and largely symbolically) joined the UNR
  17. ^ Nowak, Krzysztof (2015). "Polsko-czechosłowacki konflikt graniczny (1918-1920)". In Nowak, Krzysztof (ed.). Śląsk Cieszyński w latach 1918–1945 (in Polish). Cieszyn. p. 41. ISBN 978-83-926929-1-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. ^ Pogonowski, Iwo Cyprian (1988). Poland: A Historical Atlas (March 1989 ed.). Hippocrene Books; Revised edition. p. 321. ISBN 0-87052-282-5.
    3 February 1919 Signing in Paris of Polish-Czech border agreement on the basis of the 5 November 1918, ethnic division agreement.
    28 July 1920 Allied ambassadors decision partitioning Cieszyn, Silesia, and leaving in Czechoslovakia a quarter of a million Poles in the strategic Moravian Gate...(leading to Poland from the south-west)
  19. ^ "Dalekie Zaolzie". 2 October 2009.
  20. ^ Michał Wołłejko, Jak Czesi zrabowali Zaolzie. Zbrojna napaść na Śląsk Cieszyński 1919, „Uważam Rze" 9 December 2012, p. 38.

Further reading edit

polish, czechoslovak, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, 2012,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Polish Czechoslovak War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message The Czechoslovak Polish War also known mostly in Czech sources as the Seven day war Czech Sedmidenni valka was a military confrontation between Czechoslovakia and Poland over the territory of Cieszyn Silesia in early 1919 Czechoslovakia Poland WarPart of the Polish Czechoslovak border conflictsMap of the warDate23 30 January 1919LocationCieszyn SilesiaResultInconclusiveCieszyn Silesia divided between Czechoslovakia and PolandBelligerents Czechoslovakia PolandCommanders and leadersJosef SnejdarekFranciszek LatinikStrength15 000 1 3 000 4 000 regular soldiers 2 including 6 Infantry battalions 2 Cavalry squadrons 1 Artillery battery 1 Armoured train 4 000 6 500 volunteers mostly local miners and students Local gendarmerieCasualties and lossesTotal 175 18444 53 killed124 injured7 missingTotal 2 33692 killed855 injured576 POWs813 missing After a vain protest by the Czechoslovak government against action in breach of the Interim Agreement they attacked the part of Cieszyn Silesia held by Polish forces to prevent elections to the Polish Sejm in the disputed territory and the local population s contributions to the Polish army 3 4 The Czechoslovak army made rapid advancements capturing most of Cieszyn Silesia by the end of January The bulk of the Polish army was engaged in the Polish Ukrainian War at the time and the Polish forces faced a numerically superior and better equipped Czech Army in Cieszyn Silesia 5 The attack was halted under pressure from the Entente The result of the war was the new demarcation line which expanded the territory controlled by Czechoslovakia It led to the division of the region of Cieszyn Silesia in July 1920 and left a substantial Polish minority in Czechoslovakia in the region later called Trans Olza The division of Cieszyn Silesia did not satisfy Poland and led to the Polish annexation of Trans Olza in 1938 Contents 1 Background 2 Forces 3 Battle 4 Conclusion 5 War crimes 6 References 7 Further readingBackground editDuring the final months of World War I Polish and Czechoslovak diplomats met to hammer out a common border between the two new countries By the time the armistice was declared most of the border was worked out except for three small politically sensitive areas in Upper Silesia and Upper Hungary which were claimed by both countries Cieszyn Silesia or the Duchy of Teschen Polish Cieszyn and Czech Tesin was a small area in south eastern Silesia The Duchy was part of the historic Czech lands of Bohemian Crown Crown of Saint Wenceslaus born Vaclav 6 Latin German Czech Moravian and finally Polish served as an official language of the region however throughout the ages many historical sources suggested the local population remained mostly Polish speaking in the form of the Cieszyn Silesian dialect regardless of the official language 7 The last Austrian census of 1910 determining nationality according to the main communication language German Umgangssprache of the respondents showed that it was predominantly Polish speaking in three districts Cieszyn Teschen Bielsko Bielitz and Frystat Freistadt and mainly Czech speaking in the fourth district of Frydek Friedek 8 Part of the population the Slazakowcy named after the newspaper Slazak Schlonsaken claimed a distinct Silesian identity 9 however never fully denying the old Polish roots of the local population or the status the local dialect as a dialect of the Polish language which they used in their newspapers but rather gradually becoming superior to the Polish culture in the Kingdom of Poland thanks to becoming part of the German cultural sphere 10 The chief importance of Cieszyn Silesia was the rich coal basin around Karvina and the valuable Kosice Bohumin Railway line which linked the Czech lands with Slovakia Furthermore in north western Cieszyn Silesia the railroad junction of Bohumin served as a crossroad for international transport and communications 11 12 The leaders of Czechoslovakia had insisted most forcefully on the indivisibility of the former Austrian Crownlands of Bohemia Moravia and Silesia and their unwillingness to compromise on Cieszyn Silesia was mostly due to their desire to keep the Sudetenland region in Czechoslovakia 13 To allow Cieszyn Silesia to join Poland because it had a Polish majority would create a precedent for the German speaking Sudetenland to join Germany and it was largely for this reason the Czechoslovak government insisted that all of the former Duchy of Teschen was part of Czechoslovakia 13 The Czech argument was that the Poles were not local but an incoming population and that the indigenous population had been Czech they claimed Poles were immigrants attracted to employment in coal mines throughout the 18th century 14 Those claims were not corroborated by Austrian population censuses throughout the 19th century The influx of Poles from Galicia was directed mainly to Ostrava and surroundings which lie outside of Cieszyn Silesia Moreover the Polish national movement in the region was active since the Spring of Nations in 1848 whereas the influx of Galician Poles began in 1870s 15 On 5 November 1918 the Polish National Council and the Czechoslovak Committee concluded an agreement on the demarcation line for administrative and military purposes and divided their respective spheres of influences at the municipal level roughly along the ethnic lines The Frydek district and a small part of the Frystat district was left on the Czech side the remainder was accorded to the Poles 12 Forces edit nbsp Czechoslovak legionaries from France in Cieszyn Silesia nbsp Czechoslovak legionaries from Italy in northwest Slovakia leaving for Cieszyn Silesia The Czechoslovak side was led by Josef Snejdarek Czechoslovak military forces had been formed from the three legionnaire battalions of the 21st Rifle Regiment from France the 54th Infantry Battalion of Olomouc the 93rd Infantry Battalion of Frystat a volunteer battalion from Bohumin and a volunteer battalion from Orlova The operations of the Czechoslovak forces were joined by other local volunteers formed in the National Guard approximately 5 000 men strong From the north west of Slovakia came the main force that was sent to support the 35th Regiment from Italy led by the Italian Colonel Graselli and later reinforced with the Rifle Regiment from Italy During the war the Czechoslovak army was reinforced by the newly formed 2nd Brigade with a strength of six battalions with the support of two artillery batteries and one cavalry squadron The Czechoslovak army was further strengthened by the 1st Battalion of the 28th Infantry Regiment 1st Btn of the 3rd Infantry Reg 2nd Btn of the 93rd Infantry Reg and 5 volunteer battalions Polish forces under the command of Franciszek Latinik were weaker than the Czechoslovak forces At the end of World War I Poland was fighting in border disputes with all its neighbors and during the war with Czechoslovakia the main force was committed to the fighting in Eastern Galicia with the Ukrainians 16 The Polish forces were composed of six infantry battalions two cavalry squadrons and an artillery battery Other forces included approximately 550 members of the gendarmerie and around 4 000 Polish claim to 6 500 Czech claim local Polish volunteers Polish forces were reinforced during the war Battle editMain article Battle of Skoczow nbsp Corpses of Polish soldiers murdered by Czech legionnaires in Stonava on 26 January 1919 17 On 23 January 1919 at 11 00 in Cieszyn Silesia Polish commander Franciszek Latinik and Czechoslovak officer Josef Snejdarek met with a group of officers consisting of British French Italian and U S representatives at the request of the Czechoslovak party The Polish side was given an ultimatum that they evacuate the area to the Biala River in less than two hours After the expiry of this period the Czechoslovak army started its operations at 13 00 following its operational guidelines to seize Bohumin Bogumin and Karvina Karwina From the east at the same time an attack was launched by the Italian legionnaire unit The Czechoslovak army moved forward and took Bohumin at 16 00 Orlova Orlowa and Karvina Karwina Cieszyn Silesia was taken over by Czechoslovak forces on 27 January 1919 Polish troops retreated to the Vistula river On 30 January 1919 Josef Snejdarek received the order to cross the Vistula and secure the railway line between Bohumin and Jablunkov Jablonkow They crossed the river and the Polish troops retreated to Skoczow where the front line was stalled Further Czechoslovak reinforcements arrived which gave Snejdarek an advantage over the Polish units The Czechoslovak army prepared for an attack on Skoczow assuming that it would lead to the collapse of the Polish defenses On 31 January 1919 because of the pressure from the Triple Entente representatives the attack on Skoczow was cancelled and the Czechoslovak army ceased fighting The Czechoslovak army withdrew to the new Green Line established by the International Commission Agreement on the basis of the Czechoslovak Polish Treaty concluded on 3 February 1919 in Paris 18 Conclusion editThe disputed territory was placed under international control The final division of Cieszyn Silesia came in July 1920 as a result of the Spa Conference In conclusion the railway line connecting the Czech lands with Slovakia and the territory to the south of it were assigned to Czechoslovakia while the territory north of the railway line was assigned to Poland Vast majority of the coal mines as well as Trinec Iron and Steel Works were on the territory assigned to Czechoslovakia In precise terms Poland was given one third of the population 142 000 out of 435 000 less than half of the territory 1002 km2 out of 2222 and the town of Cieszyn Czechoslovakia received the districts of Frystat and Frydek most of the area of the district of Cieszyn the railway station of Cieszyn Karvina and coal mines Trinec with ironworks and the entire Bohumin Jablunkov railway line Some 140 000 Poles were left on the Czech side 12 War crimes editOn 26 January Czechoslovak forces killed 20 Polish POWs in the village Stonava which has been documented on photos According to some sources they were bayonetted to death 5 19 A monument has been erected in their memory in Stonava According to Polish claims an unspecified number of Polish POWs were also killed in the village of Bystrice and a number of civilians killed in Karvina 20 Several thousand people were forced to flee to Poland who returned in 1938 with the Polish annexation of Trans Olza and in turn started taking revenge on the local Czech populace citation needed There is a monument in Orlova commemorating the Czech victims of the war nbsp Skoczow battle nbsp The original form of the monument in Orlova commemorating the Czechoslovak victims nbsp The current form of the monument in Orlova commemorating the Czechoslovak victims nbsp Memorial to Polish Silesian legionnaires in Cieszyn nbsp Monument to the Polish victims in Zebrzydowice nbsp Grave of 20 Polish soldiers killed by Czech legionists on 26 January 1919 in StonavaReferences edit Clodfelter M 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 4th ed Jefferson North Carolina McFarland p 344 ISBN 978 0786474707 Halina Szotek 2009 p 26 Pred 93 lety se bojovalo o Tesinsko Postup do Polska stoply mocnosti in Czech Idnes cz 17 January 2012 Retrieved 26 August 2019 Gawrecka Marie 2004 Ceskoslovenske Slezsko mezi svetovymi valkami 1918 1938 Opava Silesian University in Opava p 23 ISBN 80 7248 233 5 Czesi uderzyli na nas kilka dni przed 26 stycznia 1919 w ktorym to dniu mialy sie odbyc wybory do Sejmu w Warszawie Nie chcieli bowiem miedzy innemi dopuscic do przeprowadzenia tych wyborow ktoreby byly wykazaly bez wszelkiej presyi i agitacyi ze Slask jest polskim a b Sieben Tage Krieg Als Tschechen und Polen 1919 aufeinander schossen in German Czech Radio 21 February 2009 Leslie R F The History of Poland Cambridge University Press 1980 p 4 Gren Zbigniew 2000 Slask Cieszynski Dziedzictwo jezykowe in Polish Warsaw Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie Instytut Slawistyki Polskiej Akademii Nauk p 84 ISBN 83 86619 09 0 Ludwig Patryn ed Die Ergebnisse der Volkszahlung vom 31 Dezember 1910 in Schlesien Troppau 1912 Hannan Kevin 1996 Borders of Language and Identity in Teschen Silesia New York Peter Lang p 47 ISBN 0 8204 3365 9 Wnetrzak Grzegorz 2014 Stosunki polityczne i narodowosciowe na pograniczu Slaska Cieszynskiego i Galicji zachodniej w latach 1897 1920 in Polish Torun Wydawnictwo Adam Marszalek pp 311 313 327 331 ISBN 978 83 7780 882 5 Wandycz Piotr S January 1962 France and her Eastern Allies 1919 1925 French Czechoslovak Polish Relations from the Paris Peace Conference in Locarno 1 January 1962 ed University of Minnesota Press Minnesota Archive Editions edition pp 75 158 ISBN 0 8166 5886 2 a b c William Fiddian Reddaway The Cambridge History of Poland Vol 2 Cambridge University Press 1971 pp 513 514 a b Heimann Mary 2009 Czechoslovakia The State that Failed New Haven Yale University Press p 56 Prazmowska Anita Poland a Modern History I B Tauris and Co Ltd London New York ISBN 978 1 84885 273 0 2010 p 101 Kaszper Roman Malysz Bohdan eds 2009 Jsou Polaci pristehovalci O halicskych imigrantech a slezskych starousedlicich Polaci na Tesinsku PDF in Czech Cesky Tesin Congress of Poles in the Czech Republic pp 14 15 ISBN 978 80 87381 00 7 Ukraine after the Russian Revolution mfa gov ua 2009 Retrieved 23 May 2009 A Western Ukrainian People s Republic was also declared in Lviv on October 19 1918 The ZUNR formally and largely symbolically joined the UNR Nowak Krzysztof 2015 Polsko czechoslowacki konflikt graniczny 1918 1920 In Nowak Krzysztof ed Slask Cieszynski w latach 1918 1945 in Polish Cieszyn p 41 ISBN 978 83 926929 1 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pogonowski Iwo Cyprian 1988 Poland A Historical Atlas March 1989 ed Hippocrene Books Revised edition p 321 ISBN 0 87052 282 5 3 February 1919 Signing in Paris of Polish Czech border agreement on the basis of the 5 November 1918 ethnic division agreement 28 July 1920 Allied ambassadors decision partitioning Cieszyn Silesia and leaving in Czechoslovakia a quarter of a million Poles in the strategic Moravian Gate leading to Poland from the south west Dalekie Zaolzie 2 October 2009 Michal Wollejko Jak Czesi zrabowali Zaolzie Zbrojna napasc na Slask Cieszynski 1919 Uwazam Rze 9 December 2012 p 38 Further reading editDavies Norman Polsko Dejiny naroda ve stredu Evropy Praha Prostor 2003 ISBN 80 7260 083 4 Gawrecki Dan Studie o Tesinsku 15 Politicke a narodnostni pomery v Tesinskem Slezsku 1918 1938 Cesky Tesin Muzeum Tesinska 1999 ISBN 978 80 902355 4 0 Collective of authors Stonawa pamieta 1919 1999 Interfon 1999 Tesin ISBN 83 87308 18 8 Matroszova Veronika Ceskoslovensti legionari rodaci a obcane okresu Karvina Prague Statni okresni archiv Karvina 2005 ISBN 80 86388 32 8 Zacek Rudolf 2004 Dejiny Slezska v datech in Czech Prague Libri ISBN 80 7277 172 8 Zahradnik Stanislaw Ryczkowski Marek 1992 Korzenie Zaolzia in Polish Warsaw Prague Trinec PAI press OCLC 177389723 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polish Czechoslovak War amp oldid 1199291103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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