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Trans-Olza

Trans-Olza[1] (Polish: Zaolzie, [zaˈɔlʑɛ] (listen); Czech: Záolží, Záolší; German: Olsa-Gebiet; Cieszyn Silesian: Zaolzi), also known as Trans-Olza Silesia (Polish: Śląsk Zaolziański), is a territory in the Czech Republic, which was disputed between Poland and Czechoslovakia during the Interwar Period. Its name comes from the Olza River.

The Trans-Olza region was created in 1920, when Cieszyn Silesia was divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland. Trans-Olza forms the eastern part of the Czech portion of Cieszyn Silesia. The division did not satisfy any side, and persisting conflict over the region led to its annexation by Poland in October 1938, following the Munich Agreement. After the invasion of Poland in 1939, the area became a part of Nazi Germany until 1945. After the war, the 1920 borders were restored.

Historically, the largest specified ethnic group inhabiting this area were Poles.[2] Under Austrian rule, Cieszyn Silesia was initially divided into three (Bielitz, Friedek and Teschen), and later into four districts (plus Freistadt). One of them, Frýdek, had a mostly Czech population, the other three were mostly inhabited by Poles.[3][4] During the 19th century the number of ethnic Germans grew. After declining at the end of the 19th century,[5] at the beginning of the 20th century and later from 1920 to 1938 the Czech population grew significantly to rival the Poles. Another significant ethnic group were the Jews, but almost the entire Jewish population was murdered during World War II by Nazi Germany.

In addition to the Polish, Czech and German national orientations there was another group of Silesians, who claimed to be of a distinct national identity. This group enjoyed popular support throughout the whole of Cieszyn Silesia although its strongest supporters were among the Protestants in the eastern part of the Cieszyn Silesia (now part of Poland) and not in Trans-Olza itself.[6]

Name and territory

The term Zaolzie (meaning "the trans-Olza", i.e. "lands beyond the Olza") is used predominantly in Poland and also commonly by the Polish minority living in the territory. The term Zaolzie was first used in 1930s by Polish writer Paweł Hulka-Laskowski.[7] In Czech it is mainly referred to as České Těšínsko/Českotěšínsko ("land around Český Těšín"), or as Těšínsko or Těšínské Slezsko (meaning Cieszyn Silesia). The Czech equivalent of Zaolzie (Zaolší or Zaolží) is rarely used. The term of Zaolzie is also used by some foreign scholars, e.g. American ethnolinguist Kevin Hannan.[8]

The term Zaolzie denotes the territory of the former districts of Český Těšín and Fryštát, in which the Polish population formed a majority according to the 1910 Austrian census.[9][10][11] It makes up the eastern part of the Czech portion of Cieszyn Silesia. However, Polish historian Józef Szymeczek notes that the term is often mistakenly used for the whole Czech part of Cieszyn Silesia.[9]

Since the 1960 reform of administrative divisions of Czechoslovakia, Zaolzie has consisted of Karviná District and the eastern part of Frýdek-Místek District.

History

After the Migration Period the area was settled by West Slavs, which were later organized into the Golensizi tribe. The tribe had a large and important gord situated in contemporary Chotěbuz. In the 880s or the early 890s the gord was raided and burned, most probably by an army of Svatopluk I of Moravia, and afterwards the area could have been subjugated by Great Moravia,[12] which is however questioned by historians like Zdeněk Klanica, Idzi Panic, Stanisław Szczur.[13]

 
Lands of the Bohemian Crown until 1742 when most of Silesia was ceded to Prussia

After the fall of Great Moravia in 907 the area could have been under the influence of Bohemian rulers. In the late 10th century Poland, ruled by Bolesław I Chrobry, began to contend for the region, which was crossed by important international routes. From 950 to 1060 it was under the rule of the Duchy of Bohemia,[14] and from 1060 it was part of Poland. The written history explicitly about the region begins on 23 April 1155 when Cieszyn/Těšín was first mentioned in a written document, a letter from Pope Adrian IV issued for Walter, Bishop of Wrocław, where it was listed amongst other centres of castellanies. The castellany was then a part of Duchy of Silesia. In 1172 it became a part of Duchy of Racibórz, and from 1202 of Duchy of Opole and Racibórz. In the first half of the 13th century the Moravian settlement organised by Arnold von Hückeswagen from Starý Jičín castle and later accelerated by Bruno von Schauenburg, Bishop of Olomouc, began to press close to Silesian settlements. This prompted signing of a special treaty between Duke Władysław of Opole and King Ottokar II of Bohemia on December 1261 which regulated a local border between their states along the Ostravice River.[15] In order to strengthen the border Władysław of Opole decided to found Orlová monastery in 1268.[16] In the continued process of feudal fragmentation of Poland the Castellany of Cieszyn was eventually transformed in 1290 into the Duchy of Cieszyn, which in 1327 became an autonomic fiefdom of the Bohemian crown.[17] Upon the death of Elizabeth Lucretia, its last ruler from the Polish Piast dynasty in 1653, it passed directly to the Czech kings from the Habsburg dynasty.[18] When most of Silesia was conquered by Prussian king Frederick the Great in 1742, the Cieszyn region was part of the small southern portion that was retained by the Habsburg monarchy (Austrian Silesia).

Up to the mid-19th century members of the local Slav population did not identify themselves as members of larger ethnolinguistic entities. In Cieszyn Silesia (as in all West Slavic borderlands) various territorial identities pre-dated ethnic and national identity. Consciousness of membership within a greater Polish or Czech nation spread slowly in Silesia.[19]

From 1848 to the end of the 19th century, local Polish and Czech people co-operated, united against the Germanizing tendencies of the Austrian Empire and later of Austria-Hungary.[20] At the end of the century, ethnic tensions arose as the area's economic significance grew. This growth caused a wave of immigration from Galicia. About 60,000 people arrived between 1880 and 1910.[21][22] The new immigrants were Polish and poor, about half of them being illiterate. They worked in coal mining and metallurgy. For these people the most important factor was material well-being; they cared little about the homeland from which they had fled. Almost all of them assimilated into the Czech population.[23] Many of them settled in Ostrava (west of the ethnic border), as heavy industry was spread through the whole western part of Cieszyn Silesia. Even today, ethnographers find that about 25,000 people in Ostrava (about 8% of the population) have Polish surnames.[24] The Czech population (living mainly in the northern part of the area: Bohumín, Orlová, etc.) declined numerically at the end of the 19th century,[5] assimilating with the prevalent Polish population. This process shifted with the industrial boom in the area.

Decision time (1918–1920)

 
Map of the plebiscite area of Cieszyn Silesia with various demarcation lines
 
Historical borders in the west of Cieszyn Silesia atop results of the 1910 census:
  Duchy of Teschen in the early 16th century
  over 90% Polish-speaking in 1910
  Border from 5 November 1918
  Border from 10 December 1938
  Border from 28 July 1920 to 31 October 1938 and from 9 May 1945

Cieszyn Silesia was claimed by both Poland and Czechoslovakia: the Polish Rada Narodowa Księstwa Cieszyńskiego made its claim in its declaration "Ludu śląski!" of 30 October 1918, and the Czech Zemský národní výbor pro Slezsko did so in its declaration of 1 November 1918.[25] On 31 October 1918, at the end of World War I and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, the majority of the area was taken over by local Polish authorities supported by armed forces.[26] An interim agreement from 2 November 1918 reflected the inability of the two national councils to come to final delimitation[25] and on 5 November 1918, the area was divided between Poland and Czechoslovakia by an agreement of the two councils.[27] In early 1919 both councils were absorbed by the newly created and independent central governments in Prague and Warsaw.

Following an announcement that elections to the Sejm (parliament) of Poland would be held in the entirety of Cieszyn Silesia,[28] the Czechoslovak government requested that the Poles cease their preparations as no elections were to be held in the disputed territory until a final agreement could be reached. When their demands were rejected by the Poles, the Czechs decided to resolve the issue by force and on 23 January 1919 invaded the area.[25][29][30]

The Czechoslovak offensive was halted after pressure from the Entente following the Battle of Skoczów, and a ceasefire was signed on 3 February. The new Czechoslovakia claimed the area partly on historic and ethnic grounds, but especially on economic grounds.[31] The area was important for the Czechs as the crucial railway line connecting Czech Silesia with Slovakia crossed the area (the Košice–Bohumín Railway, which was one of only two railroads that linked the Czech provinces to Slovakia at that time).[31] The area is also very rich in black coal. Many important coal mines, facilities and metallurgy factories are located there. The Polish side based its claim to the area on ethnic criteria: a majority (69.2%) of the area's population was Polish according to the last (1910) Austrian census.[10][32]

In this very tense atmosphere it was decided that a plebiscite would be held in the area asking people which country this territory should join. Plebiscite commissioners arrived there at the end of January 1920, and after analysing the situation declared a state of emergency in the territory on 19 May 1920. The situation in the area remained very tense, with mutual intimidation, acts of terror, beatings and even killings.[33] A plebiscite could not be held in this atmosphere. On 10 July both sides renounced the idea of a plebiscite and entrusted the Conference of Ambassadors with the decision.[34] Eventually, on 28 July 1920, by a decision of the Spa Conference, Czechoslovakia received 58.1% of the area of Cieszyn Silesia, containing 67.9% of the population.[34] It was this territory that became known from the Polish standpoint as Zaolzie – the Olza River marked the boundary between the Polish and Czechoslovak parts of the territory.

The most vocal support for union with Poland had come from within the territory awarded to Czechoslovakia, while some of the strongest opponents of Polish rule came from the territory awarded to Poland.[35]

View of Richard M. Watt

 
Leadership of the Civic Defence – Czech paramilitary organisation active in Cieszyn Silesia

Historian Richard M. Watt writes, "On 5 November 1918, the Poles and the Czechs in the region disarmed the Austrian garrison (...) The Poles took over the areas that appeared to be theirs, just as the Czechs had assumed administration of theirs. Nobody objected to this friendly arrangement (...) Then came second thoughts in Prague. It was observed that under the agreement of 5 November, the Poles controlled about a third of the duchy's coal mines. The Czechs realized that they had given away rather a lot (...) It was recognized that any takeover in Teschen would have to be accomplished in a manner acceptable by the victorious Allies (...), so the Czechs cooked up a tale that the Teschen area was becoming Bolshevik (...) The Czechs put together a substantial body of infantry – about 15,000 men – and on 23 January 1919, they invaded the Polish-held areas. To confuse the Poles, the Czechs recruited some Allied officers of Czech background and put these men in their respective wartime uniforms at the head of the invasion forces. After a little skirmishing, the tiny Polish defense force was nearly driven out."[36]

In 1919, the matter went to consideration in Paris before the World War I Allies. Watt claims the Poles based their claims on ethnographical reasons and the Czechs based their need on the Teschen coal, useful in order to influence the actions of Austria and Hungary, whose capitals were fuelled by coal from the duchy. The Allies finally decided that the Czechs should get 60 percent of the coal fields and the Poles were to get most of the people and the strategic rail line. Watt writes: "Czech envoy Edvard Beneš proposed a plebiscite. The Allies were shocked, arguing that the Czechs were bound to lose it. However, Beneš was insistent and a plebiscite was announced in September 1919. As it turned out, Beneš knew what he was doing. A plebiscite would take some time to set up, and a lot could happen in that time – particularly when a nation's affairs were conducted as cleverly as were Czechoslovakia's."[37]

 
Czech anti-Polish leaflet aimed at Cieszyn Silesians

Watt argues that Beneš strategically waited for Poland's moment of weakness, and moved in during the Polish-Soviet War crisis in July 1920. As Watt writes, "Over the dinner table, Beneš convinced the British and French that the plebiscite should not be held and that the Allies should simply impose their own decision in the Teschen matter. More than that, Beneš persuaded the French and the British to draw a frontier line that gave Czechoslovakia most of the territory of Teschen, the vital railroad and all the important coal fields. With this frontier, 139,000 Poles were to be left in Czech territory, whereas only 2,000 Czechs were left on the Polish side".[37]

"The next morning Beneš visited the Polish delegation at Spa. By giving the impression that the Czechs would accept a settlement favorable to the Poles without a plebiscite, Beneš got the Poles to sign an agreement that Poland would abide by any Allied decision regarding Teschen. The Poles, of course, had no way of knowing that Beneš had already persuaded the Allies to make a decision on Teschen. After a brief interval, to make it appear that due deliberation had taken place, the Allied Council of Ambassadors in Paris imposed its 'decision'. Only then did it dawn on the Poles that at Spa they had signed a blank check. To them, Beneš' stunning triumph was not diplomacy, it was a swindle (...) As Polish Prime Minister Wincenty Witos warned: 'The Polish nation has received a blow which will play an important role in our relations with the Czechoslovak Republic. The decision of the Council of Ambassadors has given the Czechs a piece of Polish land containing a population which is mostly Polish.... The decision has caused a rift between these two nations which are ordinarily politically and economically united' ( ...."[38]

View of Victor S. Mamatey

Another account of the situation in 1918–1919 is given by historian Victor S. Mamatey. He notes that when the French government recognised Czechoslovakia's right to the "boundaries of Bohemia, Moravia, and Austrian Silesia" in its note to Austria of 19 December, the Czechoslovak government acted under the impression it had French support for its claim to Cieszyn Silesia as part of Austrian Silesia. However, Paris believed it gave that assurance only against German-Austrian claims, not Polish ones. Paris, however, viewed both Czechoslovakia and Poland as potential allies against Germany and did not want to cool relations with either. Mamatey writes that the Poles "brought the matter before the peace conference that had opened in Paris on 18 January. On 29 January, the Council of Ten summoned Beneš and the Polish delegate Roman Dmowski to explain the dispute, and on 1 February obliged them to sign an agreement redividing the area pending its final disposition by the peace conference. Czechoslovakia thus failed to gain her objective in Teschen."[31]

With respect to the arbitration decision itself, Mamatey writes that "On 25 March, to expedite the work of the peace conference, the Council of Ten was divided into the Council of Four (The "Big Four") and the Council of Five (the foreign ministers). Early in April the two councils considered and approved the recommendations of the Czechoslovak commission without a change – with the exception of Teschen, which they referred to Poland and Czechoslovakia to settle in bilateral negotiations."[39] When the Polish-Czechoslovak negotiations failed, the Allied powers proposed plebiscites in the Cieszyn Silesia and also in the border districts of Orava and Spiš (now in Slovakia) to which the Poles had raised claims. In the end, however, no plebiscites were held due to the rising mutual hostilities of Czechs and Poles in Cieszyn Silesia. Instead, on 28 July 1920 the Spa Conference (also known as the Conference of Ambassadors) divided each of the three disputed areas between Poland and Czechoslovakia.

Part of Czechoslovakia (1920–1938)

 
Polish anti-Czech agitation leaflet

The local Polish population felt that Warsaw had betrayed them and they were not satisfied with the division of Cieszyn Silesia. About 12,000 to 14,000 Poles were forced[40] to leave to Poland.[41] It is not quite clear how many Poles were in Zaolzie in Czechoslovakia. Estimates (depending mainly whether the Silesians are included as Poles or not)[41] range from 110,000 to 140,000 people in 1921.[42] The 1921 and 1930 census numbers are not accurate since nationality depended on self-declaration and many Poles filled in Czech nationality mainly as a result of fear of the new authorities and as compensation for some benefits. Czechoslovak law guaranteed rights for national minorities but reality in Zaolzie was quite different.[43] Local Czech authorities made it more difficult for local Poles to obtain citizenship, while the process was expedited when the applicant pledged to declare Czech nationality and send his children to a Czech school.[44] Newly built Czech schools were often better supported and equipped, thus inducing some Poles to send their children there. Czech schools were built in ethnically almost entirely Polish municipalities.[45] This and other factors contributed to the cultural assimilation of Poles and also to significant emigration to Poland. After a few years, the heightened nationalism typical for the years around 1920 receded and local Poles increasingly co-operated with Czechs. Still, Czechization was supported by Prague, which did not follow certain laws related to language, legislative and organizational issues.[43] Polish deputies in the Czechoslovak National Assembly frequently tried to put those issues on agenda. One way or another, more and more local Poles thus assimilated into the Czech population.

Part of Poland (1938–1939)

 
Polish Army entering Český Těšín (Czeski Cieszyn) in 1938
 
"For 600 years we have been waiting for you (1335–1938)." Ethnic Polish band welcoming the annexation of Zaolzie by the Polish Republic in Karviná, October 1938.
 
Decree on the official language on the annexed territory
 
"Zaolzie is ours!" – Polish newspaper Ilustrowany Kuryer Codzienny on 3 October 1938.

Within the region originally demanded from Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany in 1938 was the important railway junction city of Bohumín (Polish: Bogumin). The Poles regarded the city as of crucial importance to the area and to Polish interests. On 28 September, Edvard Beneš composed a note to the Polish administration offering to reopen the debate surrounding the territorial demarcation in Těšínsko in the interest of mutual relations, but he delayed in sending it in hopes of good news from London and Paris, which came only in a limited form. Beneš then turned to the Soviet leadership in Moscow, which had begun a partial mobilisation in eastern Belarus and the Ukrainian SSR on 22 September and threatened Poland with the dissolution of the Soviet-Polish non-aggression pact.[46] The Czech government was offered 700 fighter planes if room for them could be found on the Czech airfields. On 28 September, all the military districts west of the Urals were ordered to stop releasing men for leave. On 29 September 330,000 reservists were up throughout the western USSR.[47]

Nevertheless, the Polish Foreign Minister, Colonel Józef Beck, believed that Warsaw should act rapidly to forestall the German occupation of the city. At noon on 30 September, Poland gave an ultimatum to the Czechoslovak government. It demanded the immediate evacuation of Czechoslovak troops and police and gave Prague time until noon the following day. At 11:45 a.m. on 1 October the Czechoslovak foreign ministry called the Polish ambassador in Prague and told him that Poland could have what it wanted. The Polish Army, commanded by General Władysław Bortnowski, annexed an area of 801.5 km2 with a population of 227,399 people. Administratively the annexed area was divided between two counties: Frysztat and Cieszyn County.[48] At the same time Slovakia lost to Hungary 10,390 km2 with 854,277 inhabitants.

The Germans were delighted with this outcome,[citation needed] and were happy to give up the sacrifice of a small provincial rail centre to Poland in exchange for the ensuing propaganda benefits. It spread the blame of the partition of the Republic of Czechoslovakia, made Poland a participant in the process and confused political expectations. Poland was accused of being an accomplice of Nazi Germany – a charge that Warsaw was hard-put to deny.[49]

The Polish side argued that Poles in Zaolzie deserved the same ethnic rights and freedom as the Sudeten Germans under the Munich Agreement. The vast local Polish population enthusiastically welcomed the change, seeing it as a liberation and a form of historical justice,[50] but they quickly changed their mood. The new Polish authorities appointed people from Poland to various key positions from which locals were fired.[51] The Polish language became the sole official language. Using Czech (or German) by Czechs (or Germans) in public was prohibited and Czechs and Germans were being forced to leave the annexed area or become subject to Polonization.[51] Rapid Polonization policies then followed in all parts of public and private life. Czech organizations were dismantled and their activity was prohibited.[51] The Roman Catholic parishes in the area belonged either to the Archdiocese of Breslau (Archbishop Bertram) or to the Archdiocese of Olomouc (Archbishop Leopold Prečan), respectively, both traditionally comprising cross-border diocesan territories in Czechoslovakia and Germany. When the Polish government demanded after its takeover that the parishes there be disentangled from these two archdioceses, the Holy See complied. Pope Pius XI, former nuncio to Poland, subjected the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie to an apostolic administration under Stanisław Adamski, Bishop of Katowice.[52]

Czechoslovak education in the Czech and German language ceased to exist.[53] About 35,000 Czechoslovaks emigrated to core Czechoslovakia (the later Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia) by choice or forcibly.[54] The behaviour of the new Polish authorities was different but similar in nature to that of the Czechoslovak ones before 1938. Two political factions appeared: socialists (the opposition) and rightists (loyal to the new Polish national authorities). Leftist politicians and sympathizers were discriminated against and often fired from work.[55] The Polish political system was artificially implemented in Zaolzie. The local Poles continued to feel like second-class citizens and a majority of them were dissatisfied with the situation after October 1938.[56] Zaolzie remained a part of Poland for only 11 months until the invasion of Poland started on 1 September 1939.

Reception

When Poland entered the Western camp in April 1939, General Gamelin reminded General Kasprzycki of the Polish role in the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia. According to historian Paul N. Hehn, Poland's annexation of Teschen may have contributed to the British and French reluctance to attack the Germans with greater forces in September 1939.[57]

Richard M. Watt describes the Polish capture of Teschen in these words:

Amid the general euphoria in Poland – the acquisition of Teschen was a very popular development – no one paid attention to the bitter comment of the Czechoslovak general who handed the region over to the incoming Poles. He predicted that it would not be long before the Poles would themselves be handing Teschen over to the Germans.[49]

Watt also writes that

the Polish 1938 ultimatum to Czechoslovakia and its acquisition of Teschen were gross tactical errors. Whatever justice there might have been to the Polish claim upon Teschen, its seizure in 1938 was an enormous mistake in terms of the damage done to Poland's reputation among the democratic powers of the world.[58]

Daladier, the French Prime Minister, told the US ambassador to France that "he hoped to live long enough to pay Poland for her cormorant attitude in the present crisis by proposing a new partition." The Soviet Union was so hostile to Poland over Munich that there was a real prospect that war between the two states might break out quite separate from the wider conflict over Czechoslovakia. The Soviet Prime Minister, Molotov, denounced the Poles as "Hitler's jackals".[59]

In his postwar memoirs, Winston Churchill compared Germany and Poland to vultures landing on the dying carcass of Czechoslovakia and lamented that "over a question so minor as Teschen, they [the Poles] sundered themselves from all those friends in France, Britain and the United States who had lifted them once again to a national, coherent life, and whom they were soon to need so sorely. ... It is a mystery and tragedy of European history that a people capable of every heroic virtue ... as individuals, should repeatedly show such inveterate faults in almost every aspect of their governmental life."[60]

In 2009 Polish president Lech Kaczyński declared during 70th anniversary of start of World War II, which was welcomed by the Czech and Slovak diplomatic delegations:[61][62]

Poland’s participation in the annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 was not only an error, but above all a sin. And we in Poland can admit this error rather than look for excuses. We need to draw conclusions from Munich and they apply to modern times: you can't give way to imperialism.

— Lech Kaczyński, Polish Radio

The Polish annexation is frequently brought up by Russian diplomacy as a counter-argument to Soviet-German cooperation.[63]

World War II

 
World War II memorial in Karviná

On 1 September 1939 Nazi Germany invaded Poland, starting World War II in Europe, and subsequently made Zaolzie part of the Military district of Upper Silesia. On 26 October 1939 Nazi Germany unilaterally annexed Zaolzie as part of Landkreis Teschen. During the war, strong Germanization was introduced by the authorities. The Jews were in the worst position, followed by the Poles.[64] Poles received lower food rations, they were supposed to pay extra taxes, they were not allowed to enter theatres, cinemas, etc.[64] Polish and Czech education ceased to exist, Polish organizations were dismantled and their activity was prohibited. Katowice's Bishop Adamski was deposed as apostolic administrator for the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie and on 23 December 1939 Cesare Orsenigo, nuncio to Germany, returned them to their original archdioceses of Breslau or Olomouc, respectively, with effect of 1 January 1940.[65]

The German authorities introduced terror into Zaolzie. The Nazis especially targeted the Polish intelligentsia, many of whom died during the war. Mass killings, executions, arrests, taking locals to forced labour and deportations to concentration camps all happened on a daily basis.[64] The most notorious war crime was a murder of 36 villagers in and around Żywocice on 6 August 1944.[66] This massacre is known as the Żywocice tragedy (Polish: Tragedia Żywocicka). The resistance movement, mostly composed of Poles, was fairly strong in Zaolzie. So-called Volksliste – a document in which a non-German citizen declared that he had some German ancestry by signing it; refusal to sign this document could lead to deportation to a concentration camp – were introduced. Local people who took them were later on enrolled in the Wehrmacht. Many local people with no German ancestry were also forced to take them. The World War II death toll in Zaolzie is estimated at about 6,000 people: about 2,500 Jews, 2,000 other citizens (80% of them being Poles)[67] and more than 1,000 locals who died in the Wehrmacht (those who took the Volksliste).[67] Also a few hundred Poles from Zaolzie were murdered by Soviets in the Katyn massacre.[68] Percentage-wise, Zaolzie suffered the worst human loss from the whole of Czechoslovakia – about 2.6% of the total population.[67]

Since 1945

 
Polish Gorals from Jablunkov during PZKO festival in Karviná, 2007

Immediately after World War II, Zaolzie was returned to Czechoslovakia within its 1920 borders, although local Poles had hoped it would again be given to Poland.[69] Most Czechoslovaks of German ethnicity were expelled, and the local Polish population again suffered discrimination, as many Czechs blamed them for the discrimination by the Polish authorities in 1938–1939.[70] Polish organizations were banned, and the Czechoslovak authorities carried out many arrests and dismissed many Poles from work.[71] The situation had somewhat improved when the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia took power in February 1948. Polish property deprived by the German occupants during the war was never returned.

As to the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie pertaining to the Archdiocese of Breslau Archbishop Bertram, then residing in the episcopal Jánský vrch castle in Czechoslovak Javorník, appointed František Onderek (1888–1962) as vicar general for the Czechoslovak portion of the Archdiocese of Breslau on 21 June 1945. In July 1946 Pope Pius XII elevated Onderek to Apostolic Administrator for the Czechoslovak portion of the Archdiocese of Breslau (colloquially: Apostolic Administration of Český Těšín; Czech: Apoštolská administratura českotěšínská), seated in Český Těšín, thus disentangling the parishes from Breslau's jurisdiction.[72] On 31 May 1978 Pope Paul VI merged the apostolic administration into the Archdiocese of Olomouc through his Apostolic constitution Olomoucensis et aliarum.[73]

Poland signed a treaty with Czechoslovakia in Warsaw on 13 June 1958 confirming the border as it existed on 1 January 1938. After the Communist takeover of power, the industrial boom continued and many immigrants arrived in the area (mostly from other parts of Czechoslovakia, mainly from Slovakia). The arrival of Slovaks significantly changed the ethnic structure of the area, as almost all the Slovak immigrants assimilated into the Czech majority in the course of time.[74] The number of self-declared Slovaks is rapidly declining. The last Slovak elementary school was closed in Karviná several years ago.[75] Since the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993, Zaolzie has been part of the independent Czech Republic. However, a significant Polish minority still remains there.

In the European Union

 
Czech and Polish bilingual signs in Zaolzie
 
Těšín Theatre has a professional Polish ensemble

The entry of both the Czech Republic and Poland to the European Union in May 2004, and especially the entry of the countries to the EU's passport-free Schengen zone in late 2007, reduced the significance of territorial disputes, ending systematic controls on the border between the countries. Signs prohibiting passage across the state border were removed, with people now allowed to cross the border freely at any point of their choosing.

The area now belongs mostly to the Cieszyn Silesia Euroregion with a few municipalities in the Euroregion Beskydy.[76][77]

Census data

Ethnic structure of Zaolzie based on census results:

Year Total Poles Czechs Germans Slovaks
1880[5] 94,370 71,239 16,425 6,672
1890[5] 107,675 86,674 13,580 7,388
1900[5] 143,220 115,392 14,093 13,476
1910[5] 179,145 123,923 32,821 22,312
1921[78] 177,176 68,034 88,556 18,260
1930[79] 216,255 76,230 120,639 17,182
1939[80] 213,867 51,499 44,579 38,408
1950[81] 219,811 59,005 155,146 4,388
1961[81] 281,183 58,876 205,785 13,233
1970[82] 350,825 56,075 263,047 26,806
1980[81] 366,559 51,586 281,584 28,719
1991[81] 368,355 43,479 263,941 706 26,629

Sources: Zahradnik 1992, 178–179. Siwek 1996, 31–38.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Erik Goldstein, Igor Lukes: The Munich Crisis, 1938: Prelude to World War II. 2012. p. 51.
  2. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 16–17.
  3. ^ Watt 1998, 161.
  4. ^ Piotr Stefan Wandycz. France and Her Eastern Allies, 1919-1925: French-Czechoslovak-Polish Relations from the Paris Peace Conference to Locarno. University of Minnesota Press. 1962. pp. 75, 79
  5. ^ a b c d e f The 1880, 1890, 1900 and 1910 Austrian censuses asked people about the language they use. (Siwek 1996, 31.)
  6. ^ Hannan 1996, 47.
  7. ^ Kożdoń, Witold; Szelong, Krzysztof (3 April 2020). "Jak to z "Zaolziem" było". Głos. p. 6.
  8. ^ Hannan 1999, 191–203.
  9. ^ a b Szymeczek 2008, 63.
  10. ^ a b Dariusz Miszewski. Aktywność polityczna mniejszości polskiej w Czechosłowacji w latach 1920-1938. Wyd. Adam Marszałek. 2002. p. 346.
  11. ^ Irena Bogoczová, Jana Raclavska. "Report about the national and language situation in the area around Czeski Cieszyn/Český Těšín in the Czech Republic". Czeski Cieszyn/Český Těšín Papers. Nr 7, EUR.AC research. November 2006. p. 2. (source: Zahradnik. "Struktura narodowościowa Zaolzia na podstawie spisów ludności 1880-1991". Třinec 1991).
  12. ^ Žáček 2004, 12–13.
  13. ^ Panic, Idzi (2012). Śląsk Cieszyński w czasach prehistorycznych [Cieszyn Silesia in prehistory] (in Polish). Cieszyn: Starostwo Powiatowe w Cieszynie. p. 291. ISBN 978-83-926929-6-6.
  14. ^ Žáček 2004, 14–20.
  15. ^ I. Panic, 2010, p. 50
  16. ^ I. Panic, 2010, p. 428
  17. ^ Panic 2002, 7.
  18. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 13.
  19. ^ Hannan 1996, 76–77.
  20. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 40.
  21. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 48.
  22. ^ Baron, Roman (August 2007). "Czesi i Polacy – zaczarowany krąg stereotypów". Zwrot: 32–34.
  23. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 51.
  24. ^ Siwek, Tadeusz (n.d.). "Statystyczni i niestatystyczni Polacy w Republice Czeskiej". Wspólnota Polska.
  25. ^ a b c Gawrecká 2004, 21.
  26. ^ Kovtun 2005, 51.
  27. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 52.
  28. ^ Gawrecká, 23, in particular the quotation of Dąbrowski: "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.".
  29. ^ Długajczyk 1993, 7.
  30. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 59.
  31. ^ a b c Mamatey 1973, 34.
  32. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 178–179.
  33. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 62–63.
  34. ^ a b Zahradnik 1992, 64.
  35. ^ Hannan 1996, 46.
  36. ^ Watt 1998, 161–162.
  37. ^ a b Watt 1998, 163.
  38. ^ Watt 1998, 164.
  39. ^ Mamatey 1973, 36.
  40. ^ Chlup, Danuta (2 September 2010). "Zaolziańskie dzieci na zdjęciu z Oświęcimia". Głos Ludu. pp. 4–5.
  41. ^ a b Gabal 1999, 120.
  42. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 72.
  43. ^ a b Zahradnik 1992, 76–79.
  44. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 76.
  45. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 75–76.
  46. ^ The Munich Crisis, 1938 by Igor Lukes and Erik Goldstein, page 61
  47. ^ Richard Overy (1997). Russia's War: A History of the Soviet Effort. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780141925127.
  48. ^ "Ustawa z dnia 27 października 1938 r. o podziale administracyjnym i tymczasowej organizacji administracji na obszarze Ziem Odzyskanych Śląska Cieszyńskiego". Dziennik Ustaw Śląskich (in Polish). Katowice. nr 18/1938, poz. 35. 31 October 1938. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
  49. ^ a b Watt 1998, 386.
  50. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 86.
  51. ^ a b c Gabal 1999, 123.
  52. ^ Jerzy Pietrzak, "Die politischen und kirchenrechtlichen Grundlagen der Einsetzung Apostolischer Administratoren in den Jahren 1939–1942 und 1945 im Vergleich", in: Katholische Kirche unter nationalsozialistischer und kommunistischer Diktatur: Deutschland und Polen 1939–1989, Hans-Jürgen Karp and Joachim Köhler (eds.), (=Forschungen und Quellen zur Kirchen- und Kulturgeschichte Ostdeutschlands; vol. 32), Cologne: Böhlau, 2001, pp. 157–174, here p. 160. ISBN 3-412-11800-1.
  53. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 87.
  54. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 89–90.
  55. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 88–89.
  56. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 96.
  57. ^ Paul N. Hehn (2005). A Low, Dishonest Decade: The Great Powers, Eastern Europe and the Economic Origins of World War II, 1930-1941. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 89. ISBN 9780826417619.
  58. ^ Watt 1998, 458.
  59. ^ Richard Overy, Andrew Wheatcroft (2009). The Road to War: The Origins of World War II. Vintage. pp. 11–12. ISBN 9781448112395.
  60. ^ Winston S. Churchill (2002). The Gathering Storm: The Second World War, Volume 1. RosettaBooks LCC. p. 290. ISBN 9780795308321.
  61. ^ "Radio Polonia - Czechs praise Kaczynski's apology for 1938 annexation". www2.polskieradio.pl. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  62. ^ Gniazdowski, Mateusz. "Środkowoeuropejskie rocznice - wyzwanie dla polskiej dyplomacji publicznej". Polski Przegląd Dyplomatyczny.
  63. ^ "BBC Monitoring – Essential Media Insight". monitoring.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  64. ^ a b c Zahradnik 1992, 99.
  65. ^ Jerzy Pietrzak, "Die politischen und kirchenrechtlichen Grundlagen der Einsetzung Apostolischer Administratoren in den Jahren 1939–1942 und 1945 im Vergleich", in: Katholische Kirche unter nationalsozialistischer und kommunistischer Diktatur: Deutschland und Polen 1939–1989, Hans-Jürgen Karp and Joachim Köhler (eds.), (=Forschungen und Quellen zur Kirchen- und Kulturgeschichte Ostdeutschlands; vol. 32), Cologne: Böhlau, 2001, pp. 157–174, here p. 162. ISBN 3-412-11800-1.
  66. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 102–103.
  67. ^ a b c Zahradnik 1992, 103.
  68. ^ Borák, Mečislav and Petra Všelichová (2007). Zločin jménem Katyň (documentary). Czech Republic: Česká televize.
  69. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 116.
  70. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 111.
  71. ^ Zahradnik 1992, 116–120.
  72. ^ Biographisches Handbuch der Tschechoslowakei, Heinrich Kuhn and Otto Böss (compil.), Munich: Lerche 1961, (Veröffentlichungen des Collegium Carolinum), p. 115.
  73. ^ Emil Valasek, "Veränderungen der Diözesangrenzen in der Tschechoslowakei seit 1918", in: Archiv für Kirchengeschichte von Böhmen – Mähren – Schlesien, vol. 6 (1982), pp. 289–296, here p. 292.
  74. ^ Hannan 1996, 163–164.
  75. ^ Photo of the school
  76. ^ "Euroregion TĚŠÍNSKÉ SLEZSKO. Seznam obcí tvořících euroregion v roce 2004" (in Czech).
  77. ^ "Euroregion Beskydy. Seznam obcí tvořících euroregion v roce 2004" (in Czech).
  78. ^ The 1921 Czechoslovak census asked people about their native language. (Siwek 1996, 32.)
  79. ^ People could declare a nationality other than that indicated by their native language. (Siwek 1996, 32.)
  80. ^ The German occupational census based nationality on self-declaration of citizens. The census was distorted by the occupational regime. (Siwek 1996, 32.)
  81. ^ a b c d The 1950, 1961, 1980 and 1991 Czechoslovak censuses based nationality on self-declaration of citizens. (Siwek 1996, 37–38.)
  82. ^ The 1970 Czechoslovak census asked people about their native language. (Siwek 1996, 37.)

References

Further reading

  • Kazimierz Badziak, Giennadij Matwiejew and Paweł Samuś (1997). "Powstanie" na Zaolziu w 1938 r.: Polska akcja specjalna w świetle dokumentów Oddziału II Sztabu Głównego WP. Warszawa: ADIUTOR. ISBN 83-86100-21-4.
  • Kaszper, Roman; Małysz, Bohdan, eds. (2009). Poláci na Těšínsku (PDF). Český Těšín: Kongres Poláků v České republice. ISBN 978-80-87381-00-7.

External links

  • (in English) Jarosław Jot-Drużycki: Poles living in Zaolzie identify themselves better with Czechs". European Foundation of Human Rights. 3 September 2014.
  • (in Polish) Documents and photographs about the situation in Zaolzie in 1938
  • (in Czech) Interview of professor Jerzy Tomaszewski by Aleksander Kaczorowski

Coordinates: 49°45′N 18°30′E / 49.750°N 18.500°E / 49.750; 18.500

trans, olza, village, eastern, poland, zaolzie, lublin, voivodeship, polish, zaolzie, zaˈɔlʑɛ, listen, czech, záolží, záolší, german, olsa, gebiet, cieszyn, silesian, zaolzi, also, known, silesia, polish, Śląsk, zaolziański, territory, czech, republic, which, . For the village in eastern Poland see Zaolzie Lublin Voivodeship Trans Olza 1 Polish Zaolzie zaˈɔlʑɛ listen Czech Zaolzi Zaolsi German Olsa Gebiet Cieszyn Silesian Zaolzi also known as Trans Olza Silesia Polish Slask Zaolzianski is a territory in the Czech Republic which was disputed between Poland and Czechoslovakia during the Interwar Period Its name comes from the Olza River The Trans Olza region was created in 1920 when Cieszyn Silesia was divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland Trans Olza forms the eastern part of the Czech portion of Cieszyn Silesia The division did not satisfy any side and persisting conflict over the region led to its annexation by Poland in October 1938 following the Munich Agreement After the invasion of Poland in 1939 the area became a part of Nazi Germany until 1945 After the war the 1920 borders were restored Historically the largest specified ethnic group inhabiting this area were Poles 2 Under Austrian rule Cieszyn Silesia was initially divided into three Bielitz Friedek and Teschen and later into four districts plus Freistadt One of them Frydek had a mostly Czech population the other three were mostly inhabited by Poles 3 4 During the 19th century the number of ethnic Germans grew After declining at the end of the 19th century 5 at the beginning of the 20th century and later from 1920 to 1938 the Czech population grew significantly to rival the Poles Another significant ethnic group were the Jews but almost the entire Jewish population was murdered during World War II by Nazi Germany In addition to the Polish Czech and German national orientations there was another group of Silesians who claimed to be of a distinct national identity This group enjoyed popular support throughout the whole of Cieszyn Silesia although its strongest supporters were among the Protestants in the eastern part of the Cieszyn Silesia now part of Poland and not in Trans Olza itself 6 Contents 1 Name and territory 2 History 2 1 Decision time 1918 1920 2 1 1 View of Richard M Watt 2 1 2 View of Victor S Mamatey 2 2 Part of Czechoslovakia 1920 1938 2 3 Part of Poland 1938 1939 2 3 1 Reception 2 4 World War II 2 5 Since 1945 2 6 In the European Union 3 Census data 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksName and territory EditThe term Zaolzie meaning the trans Olza i e lands beyond the Olza is used predominantly in Poland and also commonly by the Polish minority living in the territory The term Zaolzie was first used in 1930s by Polish writer Pawel Hulka Laskowski 7 In Czech it is mainly referred to as Ceske Tesinsko Ceskotesinsko land around Cesky Tesin or as Tesinsko or Tesinske Slezsko meaning Cieszyn Silesia The Czech equivalent of Zaolzie Zaolsi or Zaolzi is rarely used The term of Zaolzie is also used by some foreign scholars e g American ethnolinguist Kevin Hannan 8 The term Zaolzie denotes the territory of the former districts of Cesky Tesin and Frystat in which the Polish population formed a majority according to the 1910 Austrian census 9 10 11 It makes up the eastern part of the Czech portion of Cieszyn Silesia However Polish historian Jozef Szymeczek notes that the term is often mistakenly used for the whole Czech part of Cieszyn Silesia 9 Since the 1960 reform of administrative divisions of Czechoslovakia Zaolzie has consisted of Karvina District and the eastern part of Frydek Mistek District History EditAfter the Migration Period the area was settled by West Slavs which were later organized into the Golensizi tribe The tribe had a large and important gord situated in contemporary Chotebuz In the 880s or the early 890s the gord was raided and burned most probably by an army of Svatopluk I of Moravia and afterwards the area could have been subjugated by Great Moravia 12 which is however questioned by historians like Zdenek Klanica Idzi Panic Stanislaw Szczur 13 Lands of the Bohemian Crown until 1742 when most of Silesia was ceded to Prussia After the fall of Great Moravia in 907 the area could have been under the influence of Bohemian rulers In the late 10th century Poland ruled by Boleslaw I Chrobry began to contend for the region which was crossed by important international routes From 950 to 1060 it was under the rule of the Duchy of Bohemia 14 and from 1060 it was part of Poland The written history explicitly about the region begins on 23 April 1155 when Cieszyn Tesin was first mentioned in a written document a letter from Pope Adrian IV issued for Walter Bishop of Wroclaw where it was listed amongst other centres of castellanies The castellany was then a part of Duchy of Silesia In 1172 it became a part of Duchy of Raciborz and from 1202 of Duchy of Opole and Raciborz In the first half of the 13th century the Moravian settlement organised by Arnold von Huckeswagen from Stary Jicin castle and later accelerated by Bruno von Schauenburg Bishop of Olomouc began to press close to Silesian settlements This prompted signing of a special treaty between Duke Wladyslaw of Opole and King Ottokar II of Bohemia on December 1261 which regulated a local border between their states along the Ostravice River 15 In order to strengthen the border Wladyslaw of Opole decided to found Orlova monastery in 1268 16 In the continued process of feudal fragmentation of Poland the Castellany of Cieszyn was eventually transformed in 1290 into the Duchy of Cieszyn which in 1327 became an autonomic fiefdom of the Bohemian crown 17 Upon the death of Elizabeth Lucretia its last ruler from the Polish Piast dynasty in 1653 it passed directly to the Czech kings from the Habsburg dynasty 18 When most of Silesia was conquered by Prussian king Frederick the Great in 1742 the Cieszyn region was part of the small southern portion that was retained by the Habsburg monarchy Austrian Silesia Up to the mid 19th century members of the local Slav population did not identify themselves as members of larger ethnolinguistic entities In Cieszyn Silesia as in all West Slavic borderlands various territorial identities pre dated ethnic and national identity Consciousness of membership within a greater Polish or Czech nation spread slowly in Silesia 19 From 1848 to the end of the 19th century local Polish and Czech people co operated united against the Germanizing tendencies of the Austrian Empire and later of Austria Hungary 20 At the end of the century ethnic tensions arose as the area s economic significance grew This growth caused a wave of immigration from Galicia About 60 000 people arrived between 1880 and 1910 21 22 The new immigrants were Polish and poor about half of them being illiterate They worked in coal mining and metallurgy For these people the most important factor was material well being they cared little about the homeland from which they had fled Almost all of them assimilated into the Czech population 23 Many of them settled in Ostrava west of the ethnic border as heavy industry was spread through the whole western part of Cieszyn Silesia Even today ethnographers find that about 25 000 people in Ostrava about 8 of the population have Polish surnames 24 The Czech population living mainly in the northern part of the area Bohumin Orlova etc declined numerically at the end of the 19th century 5 assimilating with the prevalent Polish population This process shifted with the industrial boom in the area Decision time 1918 1920 Edit See also Polish Czechoslovak border conflicts Map of the plebiscite area of Cieszyn Silesia with various demarcation lines Historical borders in the west of Cieszyn Silesia atop results of the 1910 census Duchy of Teschen in the early 16th century over 90 Polish speaking in 1910 Border from 5 November 1918 Border from 10 December 1938 Border from 28 July 1920 to 31 October 1938 and from 9 May 1945 Cieszyn Silesia was claimed by both Poland and Czechoslovakia the Polish Rada Narodowa Ksiestwa Cieszynskiego made its claim in its declaration Ludu slaski of 30 October 1918 and the Czech Zemsky narodni vybor pro Slezsko did so in its declaration of 1 November 1918 25 On 31 October 1918 at the end of World War I and the dissolution of Austria Hungary the majority of the area was taken over by local Polish authorities supported by armed forces 26 An interim agreement from 2 November 1918 reflected the inability of the two national councils to come to final delimitation 25 and on 5 November 1918 the area was divided between Poland and Czechoslovakia by an agreement of the two councils 27 In early 1919 both councils were absorbed by the newly created and independent central governments in Prague and Warsaw Following an announcement that elections to the Sejm parliament of Poland would be held in the entirety of Cieszyn Silesia 28 the Czechoslovak government requested that the Poles cease their preparations as no elections were to be held in the disputed territory until a final agreement could be reached When their demands were rejected by the Poles the Czechs decided to resolve the issue by force and on 23 January 1919 invaded the area 25 29 30 The Czechoslovak offensive was halted after pressure from the Entente following the Battle of Skoczow and a ceasefire was signed on 3 February The new Czechoslovakia claimed the area partly on historic and ethnic grounds but especially on economic grounds 31 The area was important for the Czechs as the crucial railway line connecting Czech Silesia with Slovakia crossed the area the Kosice Bohumin Railway which was one of only two railroads that linked the Czech provinces to Slovakia at that time 31 The area is also very rich in black coal Many important coal mines facilities and metallurgy factories are located there The Polish side based its claim to the area on ethnic criteria a majority 69 2 of the area s population was Polish according to the last 1910 Austrian census 10 32 In this very tense atmosphere it was decided that a plebiscite would be held in the area asking people which country this territory should join Plebiscite commissioners arrived there at the end of January 1920 and after analysing the situation declared a state of emergency in the territory on 19 May 1920 The situation in the area remained very tense with mutual intimidation acts of terror beatings and even killings 33 A plebiscite could not be held in this atmosphere On 10 July both sides renounced the idea of a plebiscite and entrusted the Conference of Ambassadors with the decision 34 Eventually on 28 July 1920 by a decision of the Spa Conference Czechoslovakia received 58 1 of the area of Cieszyn Silesia containing 67 9 of the population 34 It was this territory that became known from the Polish standpoint as Zaolzie the Olza River marked the boundary between the Polish and Czechoslovak parts of the territory The most vocal support for union with Poland had come from within the territory awarded to Czechoslovakia while some of the strongest opponents of Polish rule came from the territory awarded to Poland 35 View of Richard M Watt Edit Leadership of the Civic Defence Czech paramilitary organisation active in Cieszyn Silesia Historian Richard M Watt writes On 5 November 1918 the Poles and the Czechs in the region disarmed the Austrian garrison The Poles took over the areas that appeared to be theirs just as the Czechs had assumed administration of theirs Nobody objected to this friendly arrangement Then came second thoughts in Prague It was observed that under the agreement of 5 November the Poles controlled about a third of the duchy s coal mines The Czechs realized that they had given away rather a lot It was recognized that any takeover in Teschen would have to be accomplished in a manner acceptable by the victorious Allies so the Czechs cooked up a tale that the Teschen area was becoming Bolshevik The Czechs put together a substantial body of infantry about 15 000 men and on 23 January 1919 they invaded the Polish held areas To confuse the Poles the Czechs recruited some Allied officers of Czech background and put these men in their respective wartime uniforms at the head of the invasion forces After a little skirmishing the tiny Polish defense force was nearly driven out 36 In 1919 the matter went to consideration in Paris before the World War I Allies Watt claims the Poles based their claims on ethnographical reasons and the Czechs based their need on the Teschen coal useful in order to influence the actions of Austria and Hungary whose capitals were fuelled by coal from the duchy The Allies finally decided that the Czechs should get 60 percent of the coal fields and the Poles were to get most of the people and the strategic rail line Watt writes Czech envoy Edvard Benes proposed a plebiscite The Allies were shocked arguing that the Czechs were bound to lose it However Benes was insistent and a plebiscite was announced in September 1919 As it turned out Benes knew what he was doing A plebiscite would take some time to set up and a lot could happen in that time particularly when a nation s affairs were conducted as cleverly as were Czechoslovakia s 37 Czech anti Polish leaflet aimed at Cieszyn Silesians Watt argues that Benes strategically waited for Poland s moment of weakness and moved in during the Polish Soviet War crisis in July 1920 As Watt writes Over the dinner table Benes convinced the British and French that the plebiscite should not be held and that the Allies should simply impose their own decision in the Teschen matter More than that Benes persuaded the French and the British to draw a frontier line that gave Czechoslovakia most of the territory of Teschen the vital railroad and all the important coal fields With this frontier 139 000 Poles were to be left in Czech territory whereas only 2 000 Czechs were left on the Polish side 37 The next morning Benes visited the Polish delegation at Spa By giving the impression that the Czechs would accept a settlement favorable to the Poles without a plebiscite Benes got the Poles to sign an agreement that Poland would abide by any Allied decision regarding Teschen The Poles of course had no way of knowing that Benes had already persuaded the Allies to make a decision on Teschen After a brief interval to make it appear that due deliberation had taken place the Allied Council of Ambassadors in Paris imposed its decision Only then did it dawn on the Poles that at Spa they had signed a blank check To them Benes stunning triumph was not diplomacy it was a swindle As Polish Prime Minister Wincenty Witos warned The Polish nation has received a blow which will play an important role in our relations with the Czechoslovak Republic The decision of the Council of Ambassadors has given the Czechs a piece of Polish land containing a population which is mostly Polish The decision has caused a rift between these two nations which are ordinarily politically and economically united 38 View of Victor S Mamatey Edit Another account of the situation in 1918 1919 is given by historian Victor S Mamatey He notes that when the French government recognised Czechoslovakia s right to the boundaries of Bohemia Moravia and Austrian Silesia in its note to Austria of 19 December the Czechoslovak government acted under the impression it had French support for its claim to Cieszyn Silesia as part of Austrian Silesia However Paris believed it gave that assurance only against German Austrian claims not Polish ones Paris however viewed both Czechoslovakia and Poland as potential allies against Germany and did not want to cool relations with either Mamatey writes that the Poles brought the matter before the peace conference that had opened in Paris on 18 January On 29 January the Council of Ten summoned Benes and the Polish delegate Roman Dmowski to explain the dispute and on 1 February obliged them to sign an agreement redividing the area pending its final disposition by the peace conference Czechoslovakia thus failed to gain her objective in Teschen 31 With respect to the arbitration decision itself Mamatey writes that On 25 March to expedite the work of the peace conference the Council of Ten was divided into the Council of Four The Big Four and the Council of Five the foreign ministers Early in April the two councils considered and approved the recommendations of the Czechoslovak commission without a change with the exception of Teschen which they referred to Poland and Czechoslovakia to settle in bilateral negotiations 39 When the Polish Czechoslovak negotiations failed the Allied powers proposed plebiscites in the Cieszyn Silesia and also in the border districts of Orava and Spis now in Slovakia to which the Poles had raised claims In the end however no plebiscites were held due to the rising mutual hostilities of Czechs and Poles in Cieszyn Silesia Instead on 28 July 1920 the Spa Conference also known as the Conference of Ambassadors divided each of the three disputed areas between Poland and Czechoslovakia Part of Czechoslovakia 1920 1938 Edit Polish anti Czech agitation leaflet The local Polish population felt that Warsaw had betrayed them and they were not satisfied with the division of Cieszyn Silesia About 12 000 to 14 000 Poles were forced 40 to leave to Poland 41 It is not quite clear how many Poles were in Zaolzie in Czechoslovakia Estimates depending mainly whether the Silesians are included as Poles or not 41 range from 110 000 to 140 000 people in 1921 42 The 1921 and 1930 census numbers are not accurate since nationality depended on self declaration and many Poles filled in Czech nationality mainly as a result of fear of the new authorities and as compensation for some benefits Czechoslovak law guaranteed rights for national minorities but reality in Zaolzie was quite different 43 Local Czech authorities made it more difficult for local Poles to obtain citizenship while the process was expedited when the applicant pledged to declare Czech nationality and send his children to a Czech school 44 Newly built Czech schools were often better supported and equipped thus inducing some Poles to send their children there Czech schools were built in ethnically almost entirely Polish municipalities 45 This and other factors contributed to the cultural assimilation of Poles and also to significant emigration to Poland After a few years the heightened nationalism typical for the years around 1920 receded and local Poles increasingly co operated with Czechs Still Czechization was supported by Prague which did not follow certain laws related to language legislative and organizational issues 43 Polish deputies in the Czechoslovak National Assembly frequently tried to put those issues on agenda One way or another more and more local Poles thus assimilated into the Czech population Part of Poland 1938 1939 Edit Polish Army entering Cesky Tesin Czeski Cieszyn in 1938 For 600 years we have been waiting for you 1335 1938 Ethnic Polish band welcoming the annexation of Zaolzie by the Polish Republic in Karvina October 1938 Decree on the official language on the annexed territory Zaolzie is ours Polish newspaper Ilustrowany Kuryer Codzienny on 3 October 1938 Within the region originally demanded from Czechoslovakia by Nazi Germany in 1938 was the important railway junction city of Bohumin Polish Bogumin The Poles regarded the city as of crucial importance to the area and to Polish interests On 28 September Edvard Benes composed a note to the Polish administration offering to reopen the debate surrounding the territorial demarcation in Tesinsko in the interest of mutual relations but he delayed in sending it in hopes of good news from London and Paris which came only in a limited form Benes then turned to the Soviet leadership in Moscow which had begun a partial mobilisation in eastern Belarus and the Ukrainian SSR on 22 September and threatened Poland with the dissolution of the Soviet Polish non aggression pact 46 The Czech government was offered 700 fighter planes if room for them could be found on the Czech airfields On 28 September all the military districts west of the Urals were ordered to stop releasing men for leave On 29 September 330 000 reservists were up throughout the western USSR 47 Nevertheless the Polish Foreign Minister Colonel Jozef Beck believed that Warsaw should act rapidly to forestall the German occupation of the city At noon on 30 September Poland gave an ultimatum to the Czechoslovak government It demanded the immediate evacuation of Czechoslovak troops and police and gave Prague time until noon the following day At 11 45 a m on 1 October the Czechoslovak foreign ministry called the Polish ambassador in Prague and told him that Poland could have what it wanted The Polish Army commanded by General Wladyslaw Bortnowski annexed an area of 801 5 km2 with a population of 227 399 people Administratively the annexed area was divided between two counties Frysztat and Cieszyn County 48 At the same time Slovakia lost to Hungary 10 390 km2 with 854 277 inhabitants The Germans were delighted with this outcome citation needed and were happy to give up the sacrifice of a small provincial rail centre to Poland in exchange for the ensuing propaganda benefits It spread the blame of the partition of the Republic of Czechoslovakia made Poland a participant in the process and confused political expectations Poland was accused of being an accomplice of Nazi Germany a charge that Warsaw was hard put to deny 49 The Polish side argued that Poles in Zaolzie deserved the same ethnic rights and freedom as the Sudeten Germans under the Munich Agreement The vast local Polish population enthusiastically welcomed the change seeing it as a liberation and a form of historical justice 50 but they quickly changed their mood The new Polish authorities appointed people from Poland to various key positions from which locals were fired 51 The Polish language became the sole official language Using Czech or German by Czechs or Germans in public was prohibited and Czechs and Germans were being forced to leave the annexed area or become subject to Polonization 51 Rapid Polonization policies then followed in all parts of public and private life Czech organizations were dismantled and their activity was prohibited 51 The Roman Catholic parishes in the area belonged either to the Archdiocese of Breslau Archbishop Bertram or to the Archdiocese of Olomouc Archbishop Leopold Precan respectively both traditionally comprising cross border diocesan territories in Czechoslovakia and Germany When the Polish government demanded after its takeover that the parishes there be disentangled from these two archdioceses the Holy See complied Pope Pius XI former nuncio to Poland subjected the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie to an apostolic administration under Stanislaw Adamski Bishop of Katowice 52 Czechoslovak education in the Czech and German language ceased to exist 53 About 35 000 Czechoslovaks emigrated to core Czechoslovakia the later Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia by choice or forcibly 54 The behaviour of the new Polish authorities was different but similar in nature to that of the Czechoslovak ones before 1938 Two political factions appeared socialists the opposition and rightists loyal to the new Polish national authorities Leftist politicians and sympathizers were discriminated against and often fired from work 55 The Polish political system was artificially implemented in Zaolzie The local Poles continued to feel like second class citizens and a majority of them were dissatisfied with the situation after October 1938 56 Zaolzie remained a part of Poland for only 11 months until the invasion of Poland started on 1 September 1939 Reception Edit When Poland entered the Western camp in April 1939 General Gamelin reminded General Kasprzycki of the Polish role in the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia According to historian Paul N Hehn Poland s annexation of Teschen may have contributed to the British and French reluctance to attack the Germans with greater forces in September 1939 57 Richard M Watt describes the Polish capture of Teschen in these words Amid the general euphoria in Poland the acquisition of Teschen was a very popular development no one paid attention to the bitter comment of the Czechoslovak general who handed the region over to the incoming Poles He predicted that it would not be long before the Poles would themselves be handing Teschen over to the Germans 49 Watt also writes that the Polish 1938 ultimatum to Czechoslovakia and its acquisition of Teschen were gross tactical errors Whatever justice there might have been to the Polish claim upon Teschen its seizure in 1938 was an enormous mistake in terms of the damage done to Poland s reputation among the democratic powers of the world 58 Daladier the French Prime Minister told the US ambassador to France that he hoped to live long enough to pay Poland for her cormorant attitude in the present crisis by proposing a new partition The Soviet Union was so hostile to Poland over Munich that there was a real prospect that war between the two states might break out quite separate from the wider conflict over Czechoslovakia The Soviet Prime Minister Molotov denounced the Poles as Hitler s jackals 59 In his postwar memoirs Winston Churchill compared Germany and Poland to vultures landing on the dying carcass of Czechoslovakia and lamented that over a question so minor as Teschen they the Poles sundered themselves from all those friends in France Britain and the United States who had lifted them once again to a national coherent life and whom they were soon to need so sorely It is a mystery and tragedy of European history that a people capable of every heroic virtue as individuals should repeatedly show such inveterate faults in almost every aspect of their governmental life 60 In 2009 Polish president Lech Kaczynski declared during 70th anniversary of start of World War II which was welcomed by the Czech and Slovak diplomatic delegations 61 62 Poland s participation in the annexation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 was not only an error but above all a sin And we in Poland can admit this error rather than look for excuses We need to draw conclusions from Munich and they apply to modern times you can t give way to imperialism Lech Kaczynski Polish Radio The Polish annexation is frequently brought up by Russian diplomacy as a counter argument to Soviet German cooperation 63 World War II Edit World War II memorial in Karvina On 1 September 1939 Nazi Germany invaded Poland starting World War II in Europe and subsequently made Zaolzie part of the Military district of Upper Silesia On 26 October 1939 Nazi Germany unilaterally annexed Zaolzie as part of Landkreis Teschen During the war strong Germanization was introduced by the authorities The Jews were in the worst position followed by the Poles 64 Poles received lower food rations they were supposed to pay extra taxes they were not allowed to enter theatres cinemas etc 64 Polish and Czech education ceased to exist Polish organizations were dismantled and their activity was prohibited Katowice s Bishop Adamski was deposed as apostolic administrator for the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie and on 23 December 1939 Cesare Orsenigo nuncio to Germany returned them to their original archdioceses of Breslau or Olomouc respectively with effect of 1 January 1940 65 The German authorities introduced terror into Zaolzie The Nazis especially targeted the Polish intelligentsia many of whom died during the war Mass killings executions arrests taking locals to forced labour and deportations to concentration camps all happened on a daily basis 64 The most notorious war crime was a murder of 36 villagers in and around Zywocice on 6 August 1944 66 This massacre is known as the Zywocice tragedy Polish Tragedia Zywocicka The resistance movement mostly composed of Poles was fairly strong in Zaolzie So called Volksliste a document in which a non German citizen declared that he had some German ancestry by signing it refusal to sign this document could lead to deportation to a concentration camp were introduced Local people who took them were later on enrolled in the Wehrmacht Many local people with no German ancestry were also forced to take them The World War II death toll in Zaolzie is estimated at about 6 000 people about 2 500 Jews 2 000 other citizens 80 of them being Poles 67 and more than 1 000 locals who died in the Wehrmacht those who took the Volksliste 67 Also a few hundred Poles from Zaolzie were murdered by Soviets in the Katyn massacre 68 Percentage wise Zaolzie suffered the worst human loss from the whole of Czechoslovakia about 2 6 of the total population 67 Since 1945 Edit Polish Gorals from Jablunkov during PZKO festival in Karvina 2007 Immediately after World War II Zaolzie was returned to Czechoslovakia within its 1920 borders although local Poles had hoped it would again be given to Poland 69 Most Czechoslovaks of German ethnicity were expelled and the local Polish population again suffered discrimination as many Czechs blamed them for the discrimination by the Polish authorities in 1938 1939 70 Polish organizations were banned and the Czechoslovak authorities carried out many arrests and dismissed many Poles from work 71 The situation had somewhat improved when the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia took power in February 1948 Polish property deprived by the German occupants during the war was never returned As to the Catholic parishes in Zaolzie pertaining to the Archdiocese of Breslau Archbishop Bertram then residing in the episcopal Jansky vrch castle in Czechoslovak Javornik appointed Frantisek Onderek 1888 1962 as vicar general for the Czechoslovak portion of the Archdiocese of Breslau on 21 June 1945 In July 1946 Pope Pius XII elevated Onderek to Apostolic Administrator for the Czechoslovak portion of the Archdiocese of Breslau colloquially Apostolic Administration of Cesky Tesin Czech Apostolska administratura ceskotesinska seated in Cesky Tesin thus disentangling the parishes from Breslau s jurisdiction 72 On 31 May 1978 Pope Paul VI merged the apostolic administration into the Archdiocese of Olomouc through his Apostolic constitution Olomoucensis et aliarum 73 Poland signed a treaty with Czechoslovakia in Warsaw on 13 June 1958 confirming the border as it existed on 1 January 1938 After the Communist takeover of power the industrial boom continued and many immigrants arrived in the area mostly from other parts of Czechoslovakia mainly from Slovakia The arrival of Slovaks significantly changed the ethnic structure of the area as almost all the Slovak immigrants assimilated into the Czech majority in the course of time 74 The number of self declared Slovaks is rapidly declining The last Slovak elementary school was closed in Karvina several years ago 75 Since the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in 1993 Zaolzie has been part of the independent Czech Republic However a significant Polish minority still remains there In the European Union Edit Czech and Polish bilingual signs in Zaolzie Tesin Theatre has a professional Polish ensemble The entry of both the Czech Republic and Poland to the European Union in May 2004 and especially the entry of the countries to the EU s passport free Schengen zone in late 2007 reduced the significance of territorial disputes ending systematic controls on the border between the countries Signs prohibiting passage across the state border were removed with people now allowed to cross the border freely at any point of their choosing The area now update belongs mostly to the Cieszyn Silesia Euroregion with a few municipalities in the Euroregion Beskydy 76 77 Census data EditEthnic structure of Zaolzie based on census results Year Total Poles Czechs Germans Slovaks1880 5 94 370 71 239 16 425 6 672 1890 5 107 675 86 674 13 580 7 388 1900 5 143 220 115 392 14 093 13 476 1910 5 179 145 123 923 32 821 22 312 1921 78 177 176 68 034 88 556 18 260 1930 79 216 255 76 230 120 639 17 182 1939 80 213 867 51 499 44 579 38 408 1950 81 219 811 59 005 155 146 4 3881961 81 281 183 58 876 205 785 13 2331970 82 350 825 56 075 263 047 26 8061980 81 366 559 51 586 281 584 28 7191991 81 368 355 43 479 263 941 706 26 629Sources Zahradnik 1992 178 179 Siwek 1996 31 38 See also EditHistory of Cieszyn and Tesin Polonia Karwina Independent Operational Group SilesiaFootnotes Edit Erik Goldstein Igor Lukes The Munich Crisis 1938 Prelude to World War II 2012 p 51 Zahradnik 1992 16 17 Watt 1998 161 Piotr Stefan Wandycz France and Her Eastern Allies 1919 1925 French Czechoslovak Polish Relations from the Paris Peace Conference to Locarno University of Minnesota Press 1962 pp 75 79 a b c d e f The 1880 1890 1900 and 1910 Austrian censuses asked people about the language they use Siwek 1996 31 Hannan 1996 47 Kozdon Witold Szelong Krzysztof 3 April 2020 Jak to z Zaolziem bylo Glos p 6 Hannan 1999 191 203 a b Szymeczek 2008 63 a b Dariusz Miszewski Aktywnosc polityczna mniejszosci polskiej w Czechoslowacji w latach 1920 1938 Wyd Adam Marszalek 2002 p 346 Irena Bogoczova Jana Raclavska Report about the national and language situation in the area around Czeski Cieszyn Cesky Tesin in the Czech Republic Czeski Cieszyn Cesky Tesin Papers Nr 7 EUR AC research November 2006 p 2 source Zahradnik Struktura narodowosciowa Zaolzia na podstawie spisow ludnosci 1880 1991 Trinec 1991 Zacek 2004 12 13 Panic Idzi 2012 Slask Cieszynski w czasach prehistorycznych Cieszyn Silesia in prehistory in Polish Cieszyn Starostwo Powiatowe w Cieszynie p 291 ISBN 978 83 926929 6 6 Zacek 2004 14 20 I Panic 2010 p 50 I Panic 2010 p 428 Panic 2002 7 Zahradnik 1992 13 Hannan 1996 76 77 Zahradnik 1992 40 Zahradnik 1992 48 Baron Roman August 2007 Czesi i Polacy zaczarowany krag stereotypow Zwrot 32 34 Zahradnik 1992 51 Siwek Tadeusz n d Statystyczni i niestatystyczni Polacy w Republice Czeskiej Wspolnota Polska a b c Gawrecka 2004 21 Kovtun 2005 51 Zahradnik 1992 52 Gawrecka 23 in particular the quotation of Dabrowski 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 Dlugajczyk 1993 7 Zahradnik 1992 59 a b c Mamatey 1973 34 Zahradnik 1992 178 179 Zahradnik 1992 62 63 a b Zahradnik 1992 64 Hannan 1996 46 Watt 1998 161 162 a b Watt 1998 163 Watt 1998 164 Mamatey 1973 36 Chlup Danuta 2 September 2010 Zaolzianskie dzieci na zdjeciu z Oswiecimia Glos Ludu pp 4 5 a b Gabal 1999 120 Zahradnik 1992 72 a b Zahradnik 1992 76 79 Zahradnik 1992 76 Zahradnik 1992 75 76 The Munich Crisis 1938 by Igor Lukes and Erik Goldstein page 61 Richard Overy 1997 Russia s War A History of the Soviet Effort Penguin Books ISBN 9780141925127 Ustawa z dnia 27 pazdziernika 1938 r o podziale administracyjnym i tymczasowej organizacji administracji na obszarze Ziem Odzyskanych Slaska Cieszynskiego Dziennik Ustaw Slaskich in Polish Katowice nr 18 1938 poz 35 31 October 1938 Retrieved 1 July 2014 a b Watt 1998 386 Zahradnik 1992 86 a b c Gabal 1999 123 Jerzy Pietrzak Die politischen und kirchenrechtlichen Grundlagen der Einsetzung Apostolischer Administratoren in den Jahren 1939 1942 und 1945 im Vergleich in Katholische Kirche unter nationalsozialistischer und kommunistischer Diktatur Deutschland und Polen 1939 1989 Hans Jurgen Karp and Joachim Kohler eds Forschungen und Quellen zur Kirchen und Kulturgeschichte Ostdeutschlands vol 32 Cologne Bohlau 2001 pp 157 174 here p 160 ISBN 3 412 11800 1 Zahradnik 1992 87 Zahradnik 1992 89 90 Zahradnik 1992 88 89 Zahradnik 1992 96 Paul N Hehn 2005 A Low Dishonest Decade The Great Powers Eastern Europe and the Economic Origins of World War II 1930 1941 Bloomsbury Academic p 89 ISBN 9780826417619 Watt 1998 458 Richard Overy Andrew Wheatcroft 2009 The Road to War The Origins of World War II Vintage pp 11 12 ISBN 9781448112395 Winston S Churchill 2002 The Gathering Storm The Second World War Volume 1 RosettaBooks LCC p 290 ISBN 9780795308321 Radio Polonia Czechs praise Kaczynski s apology for 1938 annexation www2 polskieradio pl Retrieved 11 May 2020 Gniazdowski Mateusz Srodkowoeuropejskie rocznice wyzwanie dla polskiej dyplomacji publicznej Polski Przeglad Dyplomatyczny BBC Monitoring Essential Media Insight monitoring bbc co uk Retrieved 11 May 2020 a b c Zahradnik 1992 99 Jerzy Pietrzak Die politischen und kirchenrechtlichen Grundlagen der Einsetzung Apostolischer Administratoren in den Jahren 1939 1942 und 1945 im Vergleich in Katholische Kirche unter nationalsozialistischer und kommunistischer Diktatur Deutschland und Polen 1939 1989 Hans Jurgen Karp and Joachim Kohler eds Forschungen und Quellen zur Kirchen und Kulturgeschichte Ostdeutschlands vol 32 Cologne Bohlau 2001 pp 157 174 here p 162 ISBN 3 412 11800 1 Zahradnik 1992 102 103 a b c Zahradnik 1992 103 Borak Mecislav and Petra Vselichova 2007 Zlocin jmenem Katyn documentary Czech Republic Ceska televize Zahradnik 1992 116 Zahradnik 1992 111 Zahradnik 1992 116 120 Biographisches Handbuch der Tschechoslowakei Heinrich Kuhn and Otto Boss compil Munich Lerche 1961 Veroffentlichungen des Collegium Carolinum p 115 Emil Valasek Veranderungen der Diozesangrenzen in der Tschechoslowakei seit 1918 in Archiv fur Kirchengeschichte von Bohmen Mahren Schlesien vol 6 1982 pp 289 296 here p 292 Hannan 1996 163 164 Photo of the school Euroregion TESINSKE SLEZSKO Seznam obci tvoricich euroregion v roce 2004 in Czech Euroregion Beskydy Seznam obci tvoricich euroregion v roce 2004 in Czech The 1921 Czechoslovak census asked people about their native language Siwek 1996 32 People could declare a nationality other than that indicated by their native language Siwek 1996 32 The German occupational census based nationality on self declaration of citizens The census was distorted by the occupational regime Siwek 1996 32 a b c d The 1950 1961 1980 and 1991 Czechoslovak censuses based nationality on self declaration of citizens Siwek 1996 37 38 The 1970 Czechoslovak census asked people about their native language Siwek 1996 37 References EditDlugajczyk Edward 1993 Tajny front na granicy cieszynskiej Wywiad i dywersja w latach 1919 1939 Katowice Slask ISBN 83 85831 03 7 Gabal Ivan collective 1999 Etnicke mensiny ve Stredni Evrope Prague G plus G supported by the Nadace rozvoje obcanske spolecnosti of the European Commission ISBN 80 86103 23 4 Gawrecka Marie 2004 Ceskoslovenske Slezsko mezi svetovymi valkami 1918 1938 Opava Silesian University in Ostrava ISBN 80 7248 233 5 Hannan Kevin 1996 Borders of Language and Identity in Teschen Silesia New York Peter Lang ISBN 0 8204 3365 9 Hannan Kevin 1999 Language and Ethnicity among Students in Teschen Silesia Nationalities Papers 27 2 191 203 doi 10 1080 009059999109028 S2CID 146983659 Jot Druzycki Jaroslaw 2015 Hospicjum Zaolzie Vendryne Wydawnictwo Beskidy OCLC 995384642 Kovtun Jiri 2005 Republika v nebezpecnem svete Era prezidenta Masaryka 1918 1933 Prague Torst published in co operation with Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic ISBN 80 7215 254 8 Mamatey Victor S Radomir Luza 1973 A history of the Czechoslovak Republic 1918 1948 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 05205 0 Panic Idzi 2002 Poczet Piastow i Piastowien cieszynskich in Polish Cieszyn Urzad Miejski ISBN 83 917095 4 X OCLC 55650394 Siwek Tadeusz 1996 Cesko polska etnicka hranice Ostrava Filozoficka fakulta Ostravske univerzity ISBN 80 7042 457 5 Szymeczek Jozef 2008 Polacy na Zaolziu In Janusz Spyra ed Slask Cieszynski Granice przynaleznosc tozsamosc Cieszyn Muzeum Slaska Cieszynskiego pp 63 72 ISBN 978 83 922005 4 3 Watt Richard M 1998 Bitter Glory Poland and its fate 1918 1939 New York Hippocrene Books p 511 ISBN 0 7818 0673 9 Zacek Rudolf 2004 Dejiny Slezska v datech Prague Libri ISBN 80 7277 172 8 Zahradnik Stanislaw Marek Ryczkowski 1992 Korzenie Zaolzia Warszawa Praga Trzyniec PAI press OCLC 177389723 Zaolzie Nowa Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN Vol VI Warszawa PWN 1997 ISBN 83 01 11969 1 Further reading EditKazimierz Badziak Giennadij Matwiejew and Pawel Samus 1997 Powstanie na Zaolziu w 1938 r Polska akcja specjalna w swietle dokumentow Oddzialu II Sztabu Glownego WP Warszawa ADIUTOR ISBN 83 86100 21 4 Kaszper Roman Malysz Bohdan eds 2009 Polaci na Tesinsku PDF Cesky Tesin Kongres Polaku v Ceske republice ISBN 978 80 87381 00 7 External links Edit in English Jaroslaw Jot Druzycki Poles living in Zaolzie identify themselves better with Czechs European Foundation of Human Rights 3 September 2014 in Polish Documents and photographs about the situation in Zaolzie in 1938 in Czech Interview of professor Jerzy Tomaszewski by Aleksander Kaczorowski Coordinates 49 45 N 18 30 E 49 750 N 18 500 E 49 750 18 500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trans Olza amp oldid 1138123470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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