Difference between revisions of "Czechoslovakia" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Infobox Former Country
 
{{Infobox Former Country
 
|native_name = Československo
 
|native_name = Československo
 
|conventional_long_name = Czechoslovakia
 
|conventional_long_name = Czechoslovakia
|common_name           = Czechoslovakia
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|common_name     = Czechoslovakia
 
|continent = Europe
 
|continent = Europe
 
|government_type = Republic
 
|government_type = Republic
|year_start = 1918
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|year_start = 1918
 
|event_start = Independence from Austria-Hungary
 
|event_start = Independence from Austria-Hungary
|date_start = 28 October
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|date_start = 28 October
|year_end   = 1992
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|year_end = 1992
|event_end   = Dissolution of Czechoslovakia
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|event_end = [[Dissolution of Czechoslovakia]]
|date_end   = 31 December  
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|date_end = 31 December  
|p1         = Austria-Hungary
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|p1     = Austria-Hungary
|flag_p1     = Austria-Hungary flag 1869-1918.svg
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|flag_p1   = Austria-Hungary flag 1869-1918.svg
|s1         = Czech Republic
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|s1     = Czech Republic
|flag_s1     = Flag of the Czech Republic (bordered).svg
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|flag_s1   = Flag of the Czech Republic (bordered).svg
|s2         = Slovakia
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|s2     = Slovakia
|flag_s2     = Flag of Slovakia (bordered).svg
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|flag_s2   = Flag of Slovakia (bordered).svg
|image_flag   = Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg
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|image_flag = Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg
|flag         = Flag of Czechoslovakia
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|flag     = Flag of Czechoslovakia
 
|flag_border = Flag of Czechoslovakia  
 
|flag_border = Flag of Czechoslovakia  
|image_coat   = 499px-CoA CSFRc svg.png
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|image_coat = 499px-CoA CSFRc svg.png
|symbol       = Coat of arms of Czechoslovakia
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|symbol   = Coat of arms of Czechoslovakia
|image_map   = LocationCzechoslovakia.png
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|image_map = LocationCzechoslovakia.png
|capital         = Prague
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|capital     = Prague
 
|latd=50|latm=05|latNS=N|longd=14|longm=28|longEW=E|  
 
|latd=50|latm=05|latNS=N|longd=14|longm=28|longEW=E|  
|national_motto   = [[Czech language|Czech]]: ''Pravda vítězí''<br/>("Truth prevails"; 1918-1989)<br/>[[Latin]]: ''Veritas Vincit''<br/>("Truth prevails"; 1989-1992)
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|national_motto = [[Czech language|Czech]]: ''Pravda vítězí''<br/>("Truth prevails"; 1918-1989)<br/>[[Latin]]: ''Veritas Vincit''<br/>("Truth prevails"; 1989-1992)
|national_anthem = ''[[Kde domov můj]]'' and ''[[Nad Tatrou sa blýska]]''
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|national_anthem = ''[[Kde domov můj]]'' and ''[[Nad Tatrou sa blýska]]''
 
|common_languages = [[Czech language|Czech]], [[Slovak language|Slovak]]
 
|common_languages = [[Czech language|Czech]], [[Slovak language|Slovak]]
|currency         = [[Czechoslovak crown]]  
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|currency     = [[Czechoslovak crown]]  
|leader1     = Tomáš Masaryk
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|leader1   = Tomáš Masaryk
|leader2     = Václav Havel
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|leader2   = Václav Havel
 
|year_leader1 = 1918-1935
 
|year_leader1 = 1918-1935
 
|year_leader2 = 1989-1992
 
|year_leader2 = 1989-1992
|leader       =  
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|leader   =  
 
|title_leader = [[List of Presidents of Czechoslovakia|President]]
 
|title_leader = [[List of Presidents of Czechoslovakia|President]]
|deputy1     = Karel Kramář
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|deputy1   = Karel Kramář
|deputy2     = Jan Stráský
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|deputy2   = Jan Stráský
 
|year_deputy1 = 1918-1919
 
|year_deputy1 = 1918-1919
 
|year_deputy2 = 1992
 
|year_deputy2 = 1992
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|stat_year1 = 1993
 
|stat_year1 = 1993
 
|stat_area1 = 127900
 
|stat_area1 = 127900
|stat_pop1 = 15600000
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|stat_pop1 = 15600000
 
}}
 
}}
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'''Czechoslovakia''' ([[Czech language|Czech]] and [[Slovak language|Slovak]] languages: ''Československo'') was a country in [[Central Europe]] that existed from October 28, 1918, when it declared independence from the [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]], until 1992. On January 1, 1993, [[Dissolution of Czechoslovakia|Czechoslovakia split]] into the '''[[Czech Republic]]''' and '''[[Slovakia]]'''. During the 74 years of its existence, it saw several changes in the political and economic climate. It consisted of two predominant ethnic Slavic groups&mdash;Czechs and Slovaks&mdash;with Slovakia's population half the Czech Republic's. During [[World War II]], Slovakia declared independence as an ally of the [[fascism|Nazi]] [[Germany]], while the Czech lands were handed over to [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] by the [[Allies]] in an act of appeasement. Czechoslovakia fell under the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] sphere of influence following liberation largely by the Soviet Union's Red Army. It rejected the [[Marshall Plan]], joined the [[Warsaw Pact]], nationalized private businesses and property, and introduced central economic planning. The [[Cold War]] period was interrupted by the economic and political reforms of the [[Prague Spring]] in 1968.
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{{toc}}
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In November 1989, Czechoslovakia joined the wave of anti-Communist uprisings throughout the [[Eastern bloc]] and embraced [[democracy]]. Addressing the Communist legacy, both in political and economic terms, was a painful process accompanied by escalated [[nationalism]] in Slovakia and its mounting sense of unfair economic treatment by the Czechs, which resulted in a peaceful split labeled the ''Velvet Divorce''.
  
'''Czechoslovakia''' ([[Czech language|Czech]] and [[Slovak language|Slovak]]: ''Československo'', or (increasingly after 1990) in Slovak ''Česko-Slovensko'') was a country in [[Central Europe]] that existed from October 1918, when it declared its independence from the [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]], until 1992 (with a [[government-in-exile]] during the [[World War II]] period). On January 1, 1993, Czechoslovakia [[dissolution of Czechoslovakia|peacefully split]] into the '''[[Czech Republic]] '''and''' [[Slovakia]]'''.
 
'''Transportation and communications, Education, Religion, Health, social welfare and housing, Mass Media, Sports and Culture.'''
 
 
== Basic Facts==
 
== Basic Facts==
  
 
'''Form of statehood''':
 
'''Form of statehood''':
 
* 1918&ndash;1938: [[democracy|democratic]] republic
 
* 1918&ndash;1938: [[democracy|democratic]] republic
* 1938&ndash;1939: after annexation of the Sudetenland region by [[Germany]] in 1938, Czechoslovakia turned into a state with loosened connections between its Czech, [[Slovakia|Slovak]] and Ruthenian parts. A large strip of southern Slovakia and Ruthenia was annexed by Hungary, and the Zaolzie region went under Poland's control
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* 1938&ndash;1939: after annexation of the Sudetenland region by [[Germany]] in 1938, Czechoslovakia turned into a state with loosened connections between its Czech, [[Slovakia|Slovak]] and Ruthenian parts. A large strip of southern Slovakia and Ruthenia was annexed by [[Hungary]], while the Zaolzie region fell under [[Poland]]'s control
* 1939&ndash;1945: split into the Protectorate of [[Bohemia]] and Moravia and [[Slovakia]] (1939-1945). ''De jure'' Czechoslovakia continued to exist, with the exiled government, recognized by the Western Allies, based in [[London]]. Following the German invasion of [[Russia]], the [[Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics|USSR]] recognized the exiled government as well.
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* 1939&ndash;1945: split into the Protectorate of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]] and the independent [[Slovakia]], although Czechoslovakia per se was never officially dissolved; its exiled government, recognized by the Western Allies, was based in [[London]].  
* 1945&ndash;1948: democracy, governed by a coalition government, with [[Communism|Communist]] ministers setting the course
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* 1945&ndash;1948: democracy, governed by a coalition government, with [[Communism|Communist]] ministers charting the course
 
* 1948&ndash;1989: Communist state with a centrally planned economy
 
* 1948&ndash;1989: Communist state with a centrally planned economy
** from 1960 on the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
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** 1960 on: the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
** 1969&ndash;1990: a federal republic consisting of the ''Czech Socialist Republic'' and the ''Slovak Socialist Republic''
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** 1969&ndash;1990: federal republic consisting of the ''Czech Socialist Republic'' and the ''Slovak Socialist Republic''
 
* 1990&ndash;1992: a federal democratic republic consisting of the ''Czech Republic'' and the ''Slovak Republic''
 
* 1990&ndash;1992: a federal democratic republic consisting of the ''Czech Republic'' and the ''Slovak Republic''
 
'''Neighbours''': West Germany and East Germany, [[Poland]], [[Soviet Union]], [[Ukraine]]), [[Hungary]], [[Romania]], and [[Austria]].
 
 
==Official Names==
 
* 1918&ndash;1920: '''Czecho-Slovak Republic''' or '''Czechoslovak Republic''' (abbreviated RČS); short form ''Czecho-Slovakia'' or ''Czechoslovakia''
 
* 1920&ndash;1938 and 1945&ndash;1960: '''Czechoslovak Republic''' (ČSR); short form ''Czechoslovakia''
 
* 1938&ndash;1939: '''Czecho-Slovak Republic'''; Czecho-Slovakia
 
* 1960&ndash;1990: '''Czechoslovak Socialist Republic''' (ČSSR); Czechoslovakia
 
* April 1990: Czechoslovak Federative Republic (Czech version) and Czecho-Slovak Federative Republic (Slovak version),
 
* afterwards: '''Czech and Slovak Federative Republic''' (ČSFR, with the short forms ''Československo'' in Czech and ''Česko-Slovensko'' in Slovak)
 
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
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{{readout||left|250px|Czechoslovakia was a country in Central Europe that existed from October 28, 1918, when it declared independence from the [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]], until January 1, 1993, when it split into the [[Czech Republic]] and [[Slovakia]]}}
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===Inception of Czechoslovakia===
  
[[Image:Czech and Slovak peoples in Austro-Hungarian Empire.gif|450px|thumb|right|Czechoslovak lands inside [[Austro-Hungarian Empire]], 1911
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Czechoslovakia came into existence in October 1918 as one of the successor states of [[Austria-Hungary]], whose Empire had been slowly losing ground to [[Nationalism|nationalist]] movements in the final years of [[World War I]]. It was comprised of the territories of the [[Czech Republic]], [[Slovakia]], and Carpathian Ruthenia and some of the most industrialized regions of the former Austria-Hungary. On October 28, 1918, Alois Rašín, Antonín Švehla, František Soukup, Jiří Stříbrný, and Vavro Šrobár, the "Men of October 28th," formed a provisional government, and two days later, Slovakia endorsed the marriage of the two countries, with [[Tomas Garrigue Masaryk]], who had crafted the blueprint for the constitution, elected president.
{{legend|#99cccc|Czechs}} {{legend|#b5bd8c|Slovaks}} {{legend|#dee78c|Ruthenians/Ukrainians}} {{legend|#cc9966|Poles}} {{legend|#f7b5b5|Austrians/Germans}} {{legend|#99cc99|Hungarians}}
 
{{legend|#ffcc99|Romanians}}]]
 
  
===Foundation===
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==World War II==
Czechoslovakia came into existence in October 1918 as one of the successor states of [[Austria-Hungary]] following the end of [[World War I]]. It comprised the present-day Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Carpathian Ruthenia and some of the most industrialized regions of the former Austria-Hungary. Until the outbreak of [[World War II]], it was a democratic republic, albeit  with ethnic tensions stemming from the dissatisfaction  of Germans and Slovaks, the second and third largest ethnic groups, respectively, with the political and economic dominance of the Czechs. Moreover, most ethnic Germans and Hungarians never accepted the creation of the new state. These ethnic groups, including Ruthenians and Poles, felt disadvantaged within Czechoslovakia, because the country's political elite introduced a centralized state and was reluctant to safeguard political autonomy for the ethnic groups. This policy, combined with an increasing Nazi propaganda, particularly in the industrialized German speaking Sudetenland, fueled the growing unrest among the Non-Czech population.<ref name ="pp">[http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2005/07/06/playing-the-blame-game.php Playing the blame game], ''[[Prague Post]]'', July 6th, 2005</ref>) and also some Slovaks,
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[[Image:Czechoslovakia01.png|thumb|275px|Czechoslovakia in 1928]]
[[Image:Czechoslovakia01.png|thumb|left|200px|Czechoslovakia in 1928]]
 
  
==World War II==
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===End of State===
===End of the State===
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Satisfaction among individual ethnic groups within the new state varied, as Germans, Slovaks, and Slovakia's ethnic Hungarians grew resentful of the political and economic dominance of the Czechs' reluctance to extend political autonomy to all constituents. This policy, combined with an increasing [[Nazism|Nazi]] propaganda, particularly in the industrialized German speaking [[Sudetenland]] (the German-border regions of Bohemia and Moravia), fueled the growing unrest in the years leading up to [[World War II]].<ref> Peter Josika, [http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2005/07/06/playing-the-blame-game.php Playing the Blame Game], ''Prague Post'' (July 6, 2005). Retrieved September 5, 2007. </ref> Czechoslovakia began losing ground to [[Adolf Hitler]]'s Germany with the [[Munich Agreement]], signed on September 29, 1938, by the representatives of Germany&mdash;Hitler, [[Great Britain]]&mdash;[[Neville Chamberlain]], [[Italy]]&mdash;[[Benito Mussolini]], and [[France]]&mdash;[[Édouard Daladier]], which deprived it of one-third of its territory, mainly the Sudetenland, the location of major border defenses. Within ten days, 1,200,000 were forced to leave their homes. President Edvard Beneš resigned on October 5, 1938, and [[Emil Hácha]] was appointed in his stead. Hitler thus defeated Czechoslovakia without taking up arms, while a strip of southern [[Slovakia]] was handed over to [[Hungary]] in November.
  
The Munich Agreement, which deprived Czechoslovakia of one-third of its territory, mainly the Sudetenland, was signed on September 29, 1938, by the representatives of Germany&mdash;Adolf Hitler, Great Britain&mdash;Neville Chamberlain, Italy&mdash;Benito Mussolini, and France&mdash;Édouard Daladier. The Sudetenland was crucial to Czechoslovakia as most of its elaborate and costly border defences were situated there and ethnic Germans formed a majority of its population. Many Sudeten Germans rejected affiliation with Czechoslovakia because their right to self-determination pledged by US president Wilson in his Fourteen Points of January 1918 had not been honored by the Czechoslovak government.
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On March 14, 1939, Hácha set out for [[Berlin]] to meet with Hitler. On the same day, Slovakia declared independence and became an ally of Nazi Germany, which provided Hitler with a pretext to occupy Bohemia and Moravia on grounds that Czechoslovakia had collapsed from within and his administration of it would forestall chaos in Central [[Europe]]. Hácha described the signing away of Czechoslovakia as follows: <blockquote>“It’s possible to withstand Hitler’s yelling, because a person who yells is not necessarily a devil. But Göring [Hitler’s right hand], with his jovial face, was there as well. He took me by the hand and softly reproached me, asking whether it is really necessary for the beautiful [[Prague]] to be leveled in a few hours… and I could tell that the devil, able to carry out his threat, was speaking to me.”<ref> ''idnes News'', [http://zpravy.idnes.cz/chcete-znicit-prahu-ptal-se-goring-hachy-f0x-/domaci.asp?c=A070315_093114_domaci_adb Chcete zničit Prahu? ptal se Göring Háchy], March 15, 2007. (Czech Language) Retrieved September 5, 2007. </ref></blockquote>
 
   
 
   
Hitler thus defeated Czechoslovakia without armed action and without Czechoslovakia’s participation in the deal. 1,200,000 Czechs and Slovaks living in the Sudetenland areas were forced to leave their homes within ten days. Czechoslovak President  Edvard Beneš resigned on October 5, 1938, and Emil Hácha, a highly respected independent and lawyer by training, was appointed president. On March 14, 1939,  Hácha set out for Berlin to meet with Adolf Hitler; the same day, Slovakia declared independence, which served Hitler well and provided him with a pretext to declare that Czechoslovakia had collapsed from within and thus occupation of Bohemia and Moravia would forestall a chaos in Central Europe.
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The following morning, [[Wehrmacht]] occupied what remained of Czechoslovakia. After Hitler personally inspected the Czech fortifications, he privately admitted that “We would have shed a lot of blood.
 
 
The Czechoslovak President described the signing away Czechoslovakia to Nazi Germany as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, for which he had been referred to as traitor of the nation, as follows: “You can withstand Hitler’s yelling, because you are not necessarily a devil for yelling. But Göring, with his jovial face, was there as well. He took me by the hand and softly reproached me, asking whether it is really necessary for the beautiful Prauge to be leveled in a few hours… and I could tell that the devil, who is capable of carrying out his threat, was speaking to me.” The Czechoslovak President was also asked the following by Göring: “You don’t want or can’t understand the Führer, who wishes that lives of thousands of Czech people are spared?” He had been subjected to enormous psychological pressure, in the course of which he collapsed. The next morning, Wehrmacht occupied what remained of Czechoslovakia. After Hitler personally inspected the Czech fortifications, he privately admitted that ‘We would have shed a lot of blood.[4] [Czechoslovakia’s factories thus began churning out products for the Third Reich.
 
 
 
===The World War II period===
 
 
 
 
 
MUNICH TREASON, HEYDRICH'S ASSASSINATION, DEPORTS OF JEWS, COLLABORATION WITH GESTAPO, PARATROOPERS, ENGLAND
 
 
 
Following the [[Nazi Germany|German]] annexation of [[Austria]] with the ''[[Anschluss]]'', Czechoslovakia's [[Sudetenland]] (the German-border regions of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]]) would be [[Adolf Hitler]]'s next demand. In accordance with the [[Munich Agreement]], [[Wehrmacht]] troops occupied the Sudetenland in October 1938. The greatly weakened Czechoslovak Republic was forced to grant major concessions to the non-Czechs, creating autonomous republics in Slovak and  [[Subcarpathian Ruthenia|Ruthenia]]. In November, the [[First Vienna Award]] gave [[Hungary]] territory in southern Slovakia. Finally Czechoslovakia ceased to exist in March 1939, when Hitler occupied the remainder of the [[Czech lands]] and (the remaining) Slovakia declared independence. During the [[World War II]] the Czech lands were designated the [[Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia]] and were ruled directly by the German state. The newly independent [[Slovak Republic (1939-1945)|Slovak Republic]] became an ally of Nazi Germany. Slovakia's troops fought on the Russian front until the summer of 1944, when the Slovak armed forces staged an uprising against their government. German forces crushed this uprising after several weeks of fighting.
 
 
 
[[Image:Czechoslovakia.png|thumb|right|200px|Czechoslovakia in 1969]]
 
 
 
During World War II a Czechoslovak government-in-exile was established in London by [[Edvard Beneš]], who was recognised as President of Czechoslovakia by the British and other Allied governments.  He returned to power as President when Czechoslovakia was liberated in 1945 and was re-elected in 1946.
 
 
 
 
 
Československo na přelomu let 1938/39 podlehlo německé agresi. Po vypuknutí druhé světové války se pod vedením československé zahraniční vlády začaly formovat československé zahraniční jednotky. Vstupovali do nich dobrovolně utečenci z Protektorátu, českoslovenští občané žíjící trvale v zahraničí aj. První jednotka se utvořila v Polsku, kde však pro nedokončený výcvik nezasáhla do bojů a byla internována Rusy. Ve Francii se utvořila 1. čs. divize, která měla 10 000 příslušníků, ale během rychlé porážky Francie se jen její dva pluky účastnily ústupových bojů a byla spěšně bez výzbroje evakuována do Británie......
 
 
 
Počátek války přivítal český domácí občanský odboj s nadějemi na brzké obnovení samostatnosti Československa. Vlna odporu, která se rozšířila v českém národě a kterou nezastrašilo ani preventivní zatýkání předpokládaných odpůrců nacismu v rámci akce Albrecht I. (1. září 1939), vyvrcholila masovými demonstracemi 28. října 1939. V Praze došlo k rozsáhlým srážkám demonstrantů s okupační mocí, při kterých byl zastřelen dělník Václav Sedláček a smrtelně raněn student medicíny Jan Opletal. Jeho pohřeb se stal příležitostí k dalším spontánním masový, demonstracím. Nacistická moc na ně reagovala terorem zaměřeným v prvé řadě proti studentům. 17. listopadu bylo v Praze popraveno bez soudu devět studentských funkcionářů, české vysoké školy byly uzavřeny a do koncentračního tábora bylo odvlečeno na 1200 vysokoškolských studentů. Masová vystoupení proti okupantům vzbudila pozornost a represe okupantů pobouření v celém demokratické světě.
 
Brutální teror ukázal, že další otevřené střety s okupační mocí nejsou možné. Občanský odboj se proto soustředil na vytváření dalších ilegálních organizací a jejich propojování do odbojových sítí. Cílem občanského odboje se stala obnova samostatného Československa. Vojenská odbojová organizace Obrana národa připravovala od začátku války masové ozbrojené vystoupení proti okupantům, národní povstání, ke kterému mělo podle plánů dojít v okamžiku, kdy se přiblíží porážka Německa. Teritoriálně organizovaná síť Obrna národa, podřízená ústřednímu velení v čele s generálem Josefem Bílým, počítala pro povstání s účastí asi 80 000 mužů. Sílily také ostatní odbojové organizace. Na jaře roku 1940 se občanské odbojové organizace spojily a vytvořily Ústřední vedení odboje domácího- ÚVOD, které tvořili zástupci Petičního výboru Věrni zůstaneme, Obrany národa a Politického ústředí. Občanský odboj přecházel postupně od organizační práce, vydávání a rozšiřování periodik a letáků k aktivním formám odboje. Vynikajících výsledků dosáhli na tiché frontě českoslovenští zpravodajci, kteří dodávali informace politického, hospodářského i vojenského charakteru do VB i SSSR.
 
Roku 1941 vyvrcholila aktivita českých odbojových organizací. Došlo k celé řadě stávek, vzrostl počet sabotáží, bylo přerušováno telefonní a telegrafní vedení, poškozována vojenská technika narušována železniční doprava.
 
S úkolem pacifikovat rozbouřenou situaci v protektorátu byl koncem září 1941 vyslán do Prahy jako zastupující říšský protektor obergruppenfürer ss a generál policie Reinhard Heydrich, šéf Hlavního úřadu říšské bezpečnosti, který zavedl politiku cukru a biče. Po jeho příchodu bylo vyhlášeno stanné právo, během jehož trvání bylo do ledna 1942 popraveno 500 lidí. Začalo také masové zatýkání, které vážně narušilo ilegální odbojové sítě, v říjnu 1941 byl rozbil i Ústřední národně revoluční výbor Československa. Na pomoc decimovanému domácímu odbojovému hnutí začaly být od poloviny roku 1941 vysílány do protektorátu parašutistické výsadky z VB. Měly za úkol obnovení přerušeného rádiového spojení mezi domácím a zahraničním odbojem, obnovu přetrhaných odbojových a zpravodajských sítí, v některých případech i sabotáž. Zvláštním úkolem byla pověřena skupina Anthropoid, jejíž členové Kubiš a Gabčík provedli 27. května 1942 v Praze atentát na Heydricha. Tento čin sice posílil prestiž Československa ve světě, smrt zastupujícího říšského protektora 4. června byla však úvodem k německým represáliím. Znovu bylo vyhlášeno stanné právo, kterému tentokrát padlo za oběť 1600 lidí. Dalších 3000 osob nacisté povraždili v koncentračních táborech.
 
Po rozbití ilegálních sítí v období heydrichiády se již občanskému odboji nepodařilo obnovit svou činnost v rozsahu let 1940-41. Počátkem roku 1943 bylo navíc definitivně rozbito Ústřední vedení odboje domácího a přes snahu řady občanských odbojových organizací se nepodařilo vytvořit nový centrální orgán. Přípravný revoluční národní výbor nedokázal v letech 1943-44 plně rozvinout svou činnost a ani odbojové organizaci Rada tří se nepodařilo sjednotit občanské odbojové skupiny.Velkým problémem zůstávalo rádiové spojení domácího odboje s československou v Londýně, přestože do protektorátu byla za tímto účelem vysazena celá řada parašutistických výsadků.
 
Příčinou oslabení odbojového hnutí byly především zásahy nacistického bezpečnostního aparátu, jehož nejvýznamnější složkou bylo gestapo, tajná státní policie. Němci měli k dispozici zkušený kvalifikovaný personál, vybavený moderními technickými prostředky. Rádiová zaměřovací služba pátrala po vysílačkách a často jejich odhalení využívala ke zpravodajským protihrám s Londýnem i Moskvou, při kterých se snažila oklamat protivníka a získat informace.
 
 
 
PŘIDEJTE SVŮJ REFERÁT
 
 
 
Druhý československý odboj, úloha tzv. Tří králů a odbojová role doc. Vladimíra Krajiny
 
 
 
Ve všech evropských okupovaných zemích z let 1939-45 začínal postupně vznikat odboj jako projev nevůle a odporu proti okupačním poměrům. Měl svou specifikaci podle jednotlivých zemích – Polsko, Jugoslávie, SSSR, Protektorát Čechy a Morava. Náš národ německou okupační vládu nikdy nepřijal.
 
Etapy národního odboje
 
 
 
Odboj měl u nás tři etapy:
 
 
 
  1. do příchodu Heydricha
 
  2. po 27.9.1941 – Heydrichův příchod
 
  3. po Heydrichově smrti.
 
 
 
Odboj se také podílel na konečném osvobození naší země. Jeho vrchol spadal do let 1939-41, kdy měl různé fáze a vynalézavé formy.
 
 
 
Druhý československý odboj je největší mravní hodnota, jež české země ve 20. století prožily. Sešel se na něj takřka celý národ. První a třetí odboj byly taky hrdinské, ale první nereprezentoval celý národ, ve třetím šlo mnoho Čechů s KSČ.
 
 
 
V první etapě (před příchodem Heydricha) vznikl na jaře 1940 ÚVOD, řada činitelů – Drtina, Feierabend – odešla do emigrace. Dva subjekty: „tři králové“ (mušketýři) a Krajina – ne vždy spolupracovali.
 
 
 
Tři mušketýři: pplk. Josef Balabán, pplk. Josef Mašín (velitel pluku v Ruzyni) – předváleční velitelé a legionáři a štábní kapitán Václav Morávek – člověk velmi vzdělaný. V průběhu r. 1940 a na jaře 1941 měli dva úkoly:
 
 
 
    * vykonávat sabotážní činnost na celém území protektorátu. Gestapo o nich vědělo, ale neznalo jejich jména a pobyty.
 
    * získávání zpráv o stavu protektorátu a okupační armády. Údaje měli předávat Krajinovi – měl šifrovací oddělení, předával je Benešovi do Londýna.
 
 
 
Oznámili tak přepadení Francie, SSSR a další věci. Dochází zde ke vzniku konfliktů mezi „třemi králi“ a Krajinou – Krajina si je upravoval pro odvysílání – oni nesouhlasili. Od přelomu let 1940/41 dostali nové, velmi nebezpečné zadání z Londýna. Měli navázat kontakt s předválečným československým agentem německé národnosti Paulem Thümelem (agent A54), s nímž naše rozvědka spolupracovala již před válkou, pobýval v Praze. Navázali kontakt – tím se jejich zprávy zkvalitnily, ale došlo k jejich většímu ohrožení, protože agentu A54 přišlo gestapo na stopu. V dubnu 1941 je zatčen Balabán a v květnu 1941 Mašín. Balabán je na podzim popraven, Mašín později za heydrichiády. Morávek celý r. 1941 přežil, s agentem A54 kontaktoval dál, zastřelil se v důsledku zrady 21.3.1942. Měl se tam setkat s odbojářem, ale místo něho přišlo gestapo. Zemřel po převozu do nemocnice.
 
 
 
Krajina: nakonec byl prezidentem Havlem v r. 1993 oceněn řádem Bílého lva. Jeho posláním bylo posílat depeše do Londýna, které byly velmi oceňovány. Poslal jich 30-50 tisíc. Žil v ilegalitě, naposled u rodiny Drašnerovy v Praze. Gestapo o něm také vědělo. Před heydrichiádou měl řadů kontaktů. Za heydrichiády byl pro něj pobyt v Praze velmi nebezpečný. 16.6.1942 odchází do severovýchodních Čech do oblasti Trosek, Kocanova – ukrýval se tam. Naposledy u řídícího učitele Hlaváčka ve Veselí. Přepažením třídy mu udělá malou místnůstku. Hledali ho tam a nenašli. Vytipovali si lidi, kde by se mohl skrývat. Hlaváček byl zatčen na počátku r. 1943, Krajina utekl, schoval se na faře v Trutnově. Nasadili na něj agenty, přivezli paní Krajinovou z koncentračního tábora.
 
 
 
V neděli 31.1.1943 ho na faře zatkli, požil cyankáli, které bylo prošlé, rozředili ho dvěma litry mléka. Odvezli ho k výslechu do Prahy – zúčastnil se ho i K.H.Frank. Bylo mu nabídnuto, aby se stal členem protektorátní vlády – odmítl. I s manželkou byl uvězněn v Terezíně. Na konci války převezen na Jenerálku u Prahy. 7.5.1945 je osvobozen. Komunisté proti němu využili jeho pobyt v Terezíně (nebyla mu prokázána kolaborace). Stal se generálním tajemníkem Národně socialistické strany. Po únoru 1948 ve 43 letech opustil republiku – nejprve do Londýna a poté do Kanady. Vrátil se k profesi botanika, biologa – některé ekosystémy jsou po něm pojmenovány.
 
 
 
===Communist Czechoslovakia ===
 
CHARTA 77, DISSIDENTS, HAVEL, DIENSTBIER
 
 
 
 
 
After World War II, pre-war Czechoslovakia was reestablished, The [[Beneš decrees]] concerned the expropriation of [[Pursuit of Nazi collaborators|wartime "traitors" and collaborators accused of treason]] but also all ethnic Germans (see [[Potsdam Agreement]]) and Hungarians. They also ordered the removal of [[citizenship]] for people of German and Hungarian [[ethnic origin]] who decided to acquire the German and Hungarian citizenship during the occupation. (These provisions were cancelled for the Hungarians, but not for the Germans, in 1948). This was then used to confiscate their property and [[Expulsion of Germans after World War II|expel around 90% of the ethnic German population]] of Czechoslovakia. The people who remained were [[Guilt#Collective guilt|collectively accused]] of supporting the Nazis (after the [[Munich Agreement]], in December 1938, 97.32% of adult Sudetengermans voted for [[NSDAP]] in elections). Almost every decree explicitly stated that the sanctions did not apply to anti-fascists although the term ''Anti-fascist'' was not explicitly defined<!-- typically it was up to decision of local municipalities —>. Some 250,000 Germans, many married to Czechs, some anti-fascists, but also people required for the post-war reconstruction of the country remained in Czechoslovakia. The Benes Decrees still cause controversy between [[nationalist]] groups in Czech Republic, Germany, Austria and Hungary. <ref>http://www.law.nyu.edu/eecr/vol11num1_2/special/rupnik.html</ref>.
 
 
 
[[Carpathian Ruthenia]] was occupied by (and in June 1945 formally ceded to) the Soviet Union. In  1946 parliamentary election the [[Communist Party of Czechoslovakia]] emerged as the winner in the Czech lands (the [[Democratic Party]] won in Slovakia). In February 1948 the Communists seized power. Although they would maintain the fiction of political pluralism through the existence of the [[National Front (Czechoslovakia)|National Front]], except for a short period in the late 1960s (the [[Prague Spring]]) the country was characterized by the absence of [[liberal democracy]].  While its economy remained more advanced than those of its neighbors in Eastern Europe, Czechoslovakia grew increasingly economically weak relative to Western Europe. In the religious sphere, [[atheism]] was officially promoted and taught. In 1969, Czechoslovakia was turned into a [[federation]] of the [[Czech Socialist Republic]] and [[Slovak Socialist Republic]]. Under the federation, social and economic inequities between the Czech and Slovak halves of the state were largely eliminated. A number of ministries, such as Education, were formally transferred to the two republics.  However, the centralized political control by the Communist Party severely limited the effects of federalization.
 
 
 
The 1970s saw the rise of the [[dissident]] movement in Czechoslovakia, represented (among others) by [[Václav Havel]].  The movement sought greater political participation and expression in the face of official disapproval, making itself felt by limits on work activities (up to a ban on any professional employment and refusal of higher education to the dissidents' children), police harassment and even prison time.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
===After 1989 ===
 
http://www.totalita.cz/1989/1989_11.php
 
 
 
ROLE OF STUDENTS IN REVOLUTION; ARTISTS, OBCANSKE FORUM, HAVEL
 
 
 
In 1989, the country became democratic again through the [[Velvet Revolution]]. In 1992 the growing nationalist tensions led to [[dissolution of Czechoslovakia]] into the [[Czech Republic]] and [[Slovakia]], as of January 1, 1993.
 
 
 
== Government ==
 
=== Heads of state ===
 
*List of Presidents of Czechoslovakia
 
*List of Prime Ministers of Czechoslovakia
 
 
 
=== International agreements and membership ===
 
After WWII, active participant in Council for Mutual Economic Assistance ([[Comecon]]), [[Warsaw Pact]], [[United Nations]] and its specialized agencies; signatory of [[conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe]]
 
 
 
=== Administrative divisions ===
 
''Main article: [[Administrative divisions of Czechoslovakia]]''
 
*1918&ndash;1923: different systems on former Austrian territory ([[Bohemia]], [[Moravia]], small part of [[Silesia]]) and on former Hungarian territory ([[Slovakia]] and [[Ruthenia]]): 3 lands [země] (also called district units [obvody]) Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia + 21 counties [župy] in today's Slovakia + 2? counties in today's Ruthenia; both lands and counties were divided in districts [okresy]
 
*1923&ndash;1927: like above, except that the above counties were replaced by 6 (grand) counties [(veľ)župy] in today's Slovakia and 1 (grand) county in today's Ruthenia, and the number and frontiers of the okresy were changed on these 2 territories
 
*1928&ndash;1938: 4 lands [in Czech: země / in Slovak: krajiny]: Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, Slovakia and Subcarpathian Ruthenia; divided in districts [okresy]
 
*late 1938&ndash;March 1939: like above, but Slovakia and Ruthenia were promoted to "autonomous lands"
 
*1945&ndash;1948: like 1928&ndash;1938, except that Ruthenia became part of the Soviet Union
 
*1949&ndash;1960: 19 regions [kraje]  divided in 270 districts [okresy]
 
* 1960&ndash;1992: 10 regions [kraje], [[Prague]], and (since 1970) [[Bratislava]]; divided in 109&ndash;114 districts ([[okres]]y]); the kraje were abolished temporarily in Slovakia in 1969&ndash;1970 and for many functions since 1991 in Czechoslovakia; in addition, the two republics Czech Socialist Republic and Slovak Socialist Republic were established in 1969 (without the word ''Socialist'' since 1990)
 
 
 
== Politics ==
 
GOTTWALD, HUSAK, DUBCEK
 
 
 
After WWII, monopoly on politics held by [[Communist Party of Czechoslovakia]]. [[Gustáv Husák]] elected first secretary of KSC in 1969 (changed to general secretary in 1971) and president of Czechoslovakia in 1975. Other parties and organizations existed but functioned in subordinate roles to KSC. All political parties, as well as numerous mass organizations, grouped under umbrella of the [[National Front (Czechoslovakia)|National Front]]. Human rights activists and religious activists severely repressed.
 
 
 
== Constitutional development ==
 
Czechoslovakia had the following constitutions throughout its history (1918 &ndash; 1992):
 
* Temporary Constitution of November 14 1918 [democratic], see: Czechoslovakia: 1918 - 1938
 
* The 1920 Constitution (The Constitutional Document of the Czechoslovak Republic) [democratic, in force till 1948, several amendments], see: Czechoslovakia: 1918 - 1938
 
* The Communist 1948 Ninth-of-May Constitution
 
* The Communist 1960 Constitution of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic  with major amendments in 1968 (Constitutional Law of Federation), 1971, 1975, 1978, and in 1989 (at which point the leading role of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia was abolished). It was amended several more times during 1990-1992 (e. g. 1990, name change to Czecho-Slovakia, 1991 incorporation of the human rights charter)
 
 
 
==Economy==
 
After WWII, economy centrally planned with command links controlled by communist party, similar to [[Soviet Union]]. Large metallurgical industry but dependent on imports for iron and nonferrous ores.
 
 
 
*Industry: Extractive and manufacturing industries dominated sector. Major branches included machinery, chemicals, food processing, metallurgy, and textiles. Industry wasteful of energy, materials, and labor and slow to upgrade technology, but country source of high-quality machinery and arms for other communist countries.
 
*Agriculture: Minor sector but supplied bulk of food needs. Dependent on large imports of grains (mainly for livestock feed) in years of adverse weather. Meat production constrained by shortage of feed, but high per capita consumption of meat.
 
*Foreign Trade: Exports estimated at US$17.8 billion in 1985, of which 55 % machinery, 14 % fuels and materials, 16 % manufactured consumer goods. Imports at estimated US$17.9 billion in 1985, of which 41 % fuels and materials, 33 % machinery, 12 % agricultural and forestry products other. In 1986, about 80 % of foreign trade with communist countries.
 
*Exchange Rate: Official, or commercial, rate Kcs 5.4 per US$1 in 1987; tourist, or noncommercial, rate Kcs 10.5 per US$1. Neither rate reflected purchasing power. The exchange rate on the [[black market]] was around Kcs 30 per US$1, and this rate became the official one once the currency became convertible in the early 1990s.
 
*Fiscal Year: Calendar year.
 
*Fiscal Policy: State almost exclusive owner of means of production. Revenues from state enterprises primary source of revenues followed by turnover tax. Large budget expenditures on social programs, subsidies, and investments. Budget usually balanced or small surplus.
 
 
 
After WWII, country energy short, relying on imported crude oil and natural gas from Soviet Union, domestic brown coal, and nuclear and hydroelectric energy. Energy constraints a major factor in 1980s.
 
 
 
== Population and ethnic groups ==
 
Czechoslovakia's '''ethnic composition''' in 1987 offered a stark contrast to that of the First Republic (see History). The [[Sudeten Germans]] that made up the majority of the population in border regions were forcibly expelled after World War II, and [[Carpatho-Ukraine]] (poor and overwhelmingly Ukrainian and Hungarian) had been ceded to the [[Soviet Union]] following [[World War II]]. [[Czechs]] and [[Slovaks]], about two-thirds of the First Republic's population in 1930, represented about 94 % of the population by 1950.
 
 
 
The aspirations of ethnic minorities had been the pivot of the First Republic's politics. This was no longer the case in the 1980s. Nevertheless, ethnicity continued to be a pervasive issue and an integral part of Czechoslovak life. Although the country's ethnic composition had been simplified, the division between Czechs and Slovaks remained; each group had a distinct history and divergent aspirations.
 
  
From 1950 through 1983, the Slovak share of the total population increased steadily. The Czech population as a portion of the total declined by about 4 %, while the Slovak population increased by slightly more than that. The actual numbers did not imperil a Czech majority; in 1983 there were still more than two Czechs for every Slovak. In the mid-1980s, the respective fertility rates were fairly close, but the Slovak fertility rate was declining more slowly.
+
Slovakia's troops fought on the Russian front until the summer of 1944, when the Slovak armed forces staged an anti-government uprising that was quickly crushed by Germany.
  
== From creation to dissolution — overview ==
+
===Resistance Movement===
{{Cs-timeline}}
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On October 28, 1939, the 21st anniversary of the establishment of the country, Czechoslovakia, emboldened by hopes for an early restoration of the independence, was swept by massive demonstrations. Nazi Germany retaliated by spontaneous executions of student leaders and the closure of universities, which sent the resistance movement underground. Czechoslovak units composed of recruits from the ranks of exiled Czechoslovak citizens were created in [[Poland]], [[France]], and [[Great Britain]], coordinated by the London-based exiled government. On the home turf, the resistance movement continued chiefly through massive demonstrations, which reached an apex in 1941. However, widespread arrests severely disrupted the underground networks and cut off radio networks between domestic and foreign components of the resistance movement, which were then reestablished by paratroopers dispatched into the Protectorate.
  
 +
===Operation Anthropoid===
 +
[[Image:Peace park memorial.jpg|right|thumb|275px|"Joy of Life" statue gifted to the Nagasaki Peace Park by Czechoslovakia in 1980.]]
 +
The Czechoslovak-British Operation Anthropoid was the code name for the assassination plot of the top Nazi leader [[Reinhard Heydrich]], the chief of RSHA, an organization that included the [[Gestapo]] (Secret Police), SD (Security Agency) and Kripo (Criminal Police). Heydrich was the mastermind of the purge of Hitler's opponents as well as the [[genocide]] of [[Jews]]. Due to his reputation as the liquidator of resistance movements in [[Europe]], he was sent to [[Prague]] in September 1941 to make order as the Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. The Protectorate was of strategic importance to Hitler’s plans, and Heydrich, dubbed the "Butcher of Prague," "The Blond Beast" or "The Hangman," wasted no time, handing out death sentences the day after his arrival.
  
 +
With the fighting spirit in the Protectorate at a lull, the exiled military officials began planning an operation that would stir up the nation’s consciousness&mdash;six Czech and one Slovak paratroopers were chosen for the assassination of Heydrich, and two of them&mdash;Czech Josef Valčík and Slovak Josef Gabčik, executed it. Heydrich died of complications following surgery. The Gestapo tracked the paratroopers’ contacts and eventually discovered the assassins' hideaway in a Prague church. Three of them died in a shootout while trying to buy time for the others who were attempting to dig an escape route; the remaining four used their last bullets to take their lives.
  
 +
Heydrich’s successor [[Karl Herrmann Frank]] had 10,000 Czechs executed as a warning, and two villages that assisted the paratroopers were leveled, with the adults murdered and young children sent to German families for re-education. The combined actions of the Gestapo and its confidantes virtually paralyzed the Czech resistance movement; on the other hand, the assassination bolstered Czechoslovakia’s prestige in the world and was crucial to the country’s securing of demands for an independent republic following the end of [[WWII]].
  
 +
===End of War===
 +
Toward the end of the war, partisan movement was gaining momentum, and once the Allies were on the winning side, the political orientation of Czechoslovakia was high on the agenda of the two most influential exiled centers&mdash;the government in [[London]] and the [[communism|communist]] officials in [[Moscow]]. Both endorsed the agreement on friendship, mutual assistance and postwar cooperation with the [[Soviet Union]] as a means to stem German expansion on one hand and the Soviet Union’s mingling into Czechoslovakia's internal affairs on the other.
  
 +
==Communist Czechoslovakia==
  
 +
===Retaliation===
 +
After [[World War II]], Czechoslovakia was reestablished. Carpathian Ruthenia was occupied by, and in June 1945, formally ceded to the [[Soviet Union]], while Sudetenland Germans were expelled in an act of retaliation coined by the Beneš Decrees, which continue to fuel controversy between nationalist groups in the [[Czech Republic]], [[Germany]], [[Austria]], and [[Hungary]].<ref> Jacques Rupnik, [http://www.law.nyu.edu/eecr/vol11num1_2/special/rupnik.html The Other Central Europe], ''East European Constitutional Review'' (Winter/Spring 2002). Retrieved September 5, 2007. </ref> In total approximately 90 percent of the ethnic German population of Czechoslovakia was forced to leave. Wartime traitors and collaborators accused of [[treason]] along with ethnic Germans and Hungarians were expropriated.
  
 +
=== Communist Takeover===
 +
The Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia was facilitated by the fact that most of the country had been liberated by the [[Red Army]], as well as the overall social and economic downturn in [[Europe]]. In the 1946 parliamentary election, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia emerged as the winner in the Czech lands while the Democratic Party won in Slovakia. In 1947, the Soviet Union and, consequently, its satellites, including Czechoslovakia, turned down the [[Marshall Plan]], authored by [[U.S.]] Secretary of State [[George Marshall]] to address the economic needs of war-torn Europe.
 +
[[Image:Czechoslovakia.png|thumb|left|275px|Czechoslovakia in 1969]]
 +
In February 1948, the Communists seized power and sealed the country’s fate for the next 41 years. Terror reminiscent of Hitler’s Germany followed, with execution of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience, forced collectivization of [[agriculture]], [[censorship]], and land grabs. Economy was controlled by five-year plans and the industry was overhauled in compliance with Soviet wishes to focus on heavy industry, in which Czechoslovakia had been traditionally weak. The economy retained momentum vis-à-vis its [[Eastern Europe]]an neighbors but grew increasingly weak vis-à-vis [[Western Europe]].
  
 +
In the early 1960s, Czechoslovakia came very close to extricating itself from the Eastern bloc, when the reformer [[Alexander Dubcek]] was appointed to the key post of First Secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party. Economic reforms were put in place that gradually grew into the reform of the overall political system, referred to as the [[Prague Spring]]. However, this glimmer of hope was crushed under the tanks of the [[Warsaw Pact]] armies in August 1968. Soviet tanks rolled into Czechoslovakia on the night of 20–21 August 1968.<ref>[http://www.upi.com/Audio/Year_in_Review/Events-of-1968/N.-Korea-Seize-U.S.-Ship/12303153093431-9/#title "Russia Invades Czechoslovakia: 1968 Year in Review,"] UPI.com (1968). Retrieved November 23, 2011.</ref> The General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party [[Leonid Brezhnev]] viewed this intervention as vital to the preservation of the Soviet, socialist system and vowed to intervene in any state that sought to replace [[Marxism]]-[[Leninism]] with [[capitalism]].<ref>John Lewis Gaddis, ''The Cold War: A New History'' (New York, NY: The Penguin Press, 2006), 150.</ref> In the week after the invasion there was a spontaneous campaign of [[civil resistance]] against the occupation. This resistance involved a wide range of acts of non-cooperation and defiance: this was followed by a period in which the Czechoslovak Communist Party leadership, having been forced in Moscow to make concessions to the Soviet Union, gradually put the brakes on their earlier liberal policies.<ref>Philip Windsor and Adam Roberts, ''Czechoslovakia 1968: Reform, Repression and Resistance'' (London: Chatto & Windus, 1969), 97-143.</ref> In April 1969 Dubcek was finally dismissed from the First Secretaryship of the Czechoslovak Communist Party.
  
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The period of ‘normalization’ followed&mdash;the reforms were repealed, which, compounded by apolitical, military, and union purges thrust the country back into 1950s. The dissident movement, epitomized by the future Czech President [[Václav Havel]], worked underground to counter the regime. Finally, the economic crisis in the 1980s facilitated the shift toward [[democracy]].
  
 +
==Velvet Revolution==
 +
[[Mikhail Gorbachev|Mikhail Gorbachev’s]] address to the [[United Nations]] General Assembly in [[New York]], in which he endorsed the rights for all nations to decide their own course, was among the first signs of the worldwide crumbling of the Communist empire. However, Communist authorities in [[Prague]] brutally dispersed ad hoc anti-regime demonstrations on November 17, 1989, in commemoration of the 1939 Nazi attack against university dormitories. This set in motion the [[Velvet Revolution]], and the student-led protests in the metropolis soon spilled over to other parts of the country.
  
 +
As Communist governments in neighboring countries were being toppled, borders with [[Western Europe]] were opened, and in December, President Gustáv Husák appointed the first government composed of largely non-Communists and resigned. [[Alexander Dubcek]], who played a crucial role in the [[Prague Spring]], became the voice of the federal parliament and [[Vaclav Havel]] the President. In June 1990, the first democratic elections since 1946 were held.
  
 +
==Toward Velvet Divorce==
 +
Discussion of the proposal to drop the country’s [[socialism|socialist]] attribute introduced in 1960 revealed a serious Czecho-Slovak conflict, with many Slovak deputies calling for the reinstatement of the original name, "Czecho-Slovakia," adopted by the [[Treaty of Versailles]] in 1918. The country was eventually renamed the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic in April 1990, but voices for Slovakia’s independence were mounting, and the fiercely [[nationalism|nationalistic]] Slovak National Party, whose key agenda was independence, was founded around this time. Even prior to that, Slovakia's creation of the Foreign Relations Ministry in 1990 had signaled intensified independence efforts.
  
 +
The June 1990 elections uncovered the growing rift between the two countries when [[Slovakia]] openly challenged President Havel's intervening in Slovak internal affairs. While the conservatives won a sweeping victory in the [[Czech Republic]], Slovakia elected liberals. The cabinets of both countries were no longer largely composed of former dissidents, and although the federal government operated on the principle of symmetric power-sharing, disagreements between the republics escalated into Slovakia’s declaration of a sovereign state in July 1992, whereby its laws overrode the federal laws. Negotiations on the dissolution of the federal state took place for the remainder of the year, which was materialized on January 1, 1993, when two independent states&mdash;Slovakia and the Czech Republic&mdash;appeared on the map of [[Europe]].
  
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== See also ==
 +
* [[Alexander Dubcek]]
 +
* [[Czech Republic]]
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* [[Prague Spring]]
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* [[Slovakia]]
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* [[Vaclav Havel]]
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* [[Velvet Revolution]]
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* [[Dissolution of Czechoslovakia]]
  
== References ==
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== Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
[http://www.czech.cz/en/basic-facts/history/all-about-czech-history/the-first-czechoslovak-republic/ Czechoslovak Republic ]
 
  
 +
==References==
 +
*Gaddis, John Lewis. ''The Cold War: A New History''. New York, NY: The Penguin Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0143038276
 +
*Heimann, Mary. ''Czechoslovakia: The State That Failed''. Yale University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0300172423
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*Windsor, Philip, and Adam Roberts. ''Czechoslovakia 1968: Reform, Repression and Resistance''. London: Chatto & Windus, 1969. {{ASIN|B01K1756RS}}
  
{{commonscat|Czechoslovakia}}
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==External Links==
 +
All links retrieved January 12, 2024.
  
== External links ==
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===Czech Language===
* [http://www.vyznamenani.net/main.htm Orders and Medals of Czechoslovakia including Order of the White Lion] (''in English and Czech'')
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* Gazdik, Jan. March 15, 2007. [http://zpravy.idnes.cz/chcete-znicit-prahu-ptal-se-goring-hachy-f0x-/domaci.asp?c=A070315_093114_domaci_adb ”Do You Want to Destroy Prague? Goring Asked Hacha”] ''iDnes News''
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* [http://hartmann.valka.cz/udalostiww2/czwestcp/index.htm “Czechoslovak Resistance Movement in the West”] ''Wars''
 +
* Mikulecky, Tomas. [http://referaty.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=5986 “Emergence of Czechoslovakia”] ''Resources for Students''
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* [http://www.maturita.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=4702 “Second Czechoslovak Resistance Movement”] ''Resources for Students''
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* [http://dejepis.info/?t=190 “Second Czechoslovak Resistance Movement, the Role of the ''Three Kings'' and the Resistance Movement Role of Vladimir Krajina”] ''History''.
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* [http://referaty.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=2721 ”Life in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia”] ''Resources for Students''
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* [http://referaty.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=5271 “Assassination of Reynhard Heidrich”] ''Resources for Students''
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* [http://www.totalita.cz/1989/1989_11.php “Velvet Revolution or Eleven Days that Rocked Czechoslovakia”] ''Totalitarianism''
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* [http://www.totalita.cz/1989/1989_ms.php “International Events of 1989”] ''Totalitarianism''
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* [http://referaty.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=7664 “Political Processes in the Czech Socialist Republic 1948-1989”] ''Resources for Students''
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* [http://www.totalita.cz/1989/1989_1117_dem_01.php “Timeline of November 17 Demonstrations”] ''Totalitarianism''
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* [http://referaty.cz/referaty/referat.asp?id=4961 “Charter 77”] ''Resources for Students''
  
[[Category:Nations and places]]
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{{credit|Czechoslovakia|104011362|Munich_Agreement|154918103|Velvet_Revolution|153508749}}
[[Category:Former countries in Europe]]
 
  
{{credit|104011362}}
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[[Category:Geography]]
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[[Category:Former Countries]]

Latest revision as of 07:31, 12 January 2024

Československo
Czechoslovakia
Austria-Hungary flag 1869-1918.svg
1918 – 1992 Flag of the Czech Republic (bordered).svg
 
Flag of Slovakia (bordered).svg
Flag Coat of arms
Flag Coat of arms
Motto
Czech: Pravda vítězí
("Truth prevails"; 1918-1989)
Latin: Veritas Vincit
("Truth prevails"; 1989-1992)
Anthem
Kde domov můj and Nad Tatrou sa blýska
Location of Czechoslovakia
Capital Prague
Language(s) Czech, Slovak
Government
President
 - 1918-1935 Tomáš Masaryk
 - 1989-1992 Václav Havel
Prime Minister
 - 1918-1919 Karel Kramář
 - 1992 Jan Stráský
History
 - Independence from Austria-Hungary 28 October
 - Dissolution of Czechoslovakia 31 December
Area
 - 1993 127,900 km² (49,382 sq mi)
Population
 - 1993 est. 15,600,000 
     Density 122 /km²  (315.9 /sq mi)
Currency Czechoslovak crown

Czechoslovakia (Czech and Slovak languages: Československo) was a country in Central Europe that existed from October 28, 1918, when it declared independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, until 1992. On January 1, 1993, Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. During the 74 years of its existence, it saw several changes in the political and economic climate. It consisted of two predominant ethnic Slavic groups—Czechs and Slovaks—with Slovakia's population half the Czech Republic's. During World War II, Slovakia declared independence as an ally of the Nazi Germany, while the Czech lands were handed over to Hitler by the Allies in an act of appeasement. Czechoslovakia fell under the Soviet sphere of influence following liberation largely by the Soviet Union's Red Army. It rejected the Marshall Plan, joined the Warsaw Pact, nationalized private businesses and property, and introduced central economic planning. The Cold War period was interrupted by the economic and political reforms of the Prague Spring in 1968.

In November 1989, Czechoslovakia joined the wave of anti-Communist uprisings throughout the Eastern bloc and embraced democracy. Addressing the Communist legacy, both in political and economic terms, was a painful process accompanied by escalated nationalism in Slovakia and its mounting sense of unfair economic treatment by the Czechs, which resulted in a peaceful split labeled the Velvet Divorce.

Basic Facts

Form of statehood:

  • 1918–1938: democratic republic
  • 1938–1939: after annexation of the Sudetenland region by Germany in 1938, Czechoslovakia turned into a state with loosened connections between its Czech, Slovak and Ruthenian parts. A large strip of southern Slovakia and Ruthenia was annexed by Hungary, while the Zaolzie region fell under Poland's control
  • 1939–1945: split into the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and the independent Slovakia, although Czechoslovakia per se was never officially dissolved; its exiled government, recognized by the Western Allies, was based in London.
  • 1945–1948: democracy, governed by a coalition government, with Communist ministers charting the course
  • 1948–1989: Communist state with a centrally planned economy
    • 1960 on: the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
    • 1969–1990: federal republic consisting of the Czech Socialist Republic and the Slovak Socialist Republic
  • 1990–1992: a federal democratic republic consisting of the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic

History

Did you know?
Czechoslovakia was a country in Central Europe that existed from October 28, 1918, when it declared independence from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, until January 1, 1993, when it split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia

Inception of Czechoslovakia

Czechoslovakia came into existence in October 1918 as one of the successor states of Austria-Hungary, whose Empire had been slowly losing ground to nationalist movements in the final years of World War I. It was comprised of the territories of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Carpathian Ruthenia and some of the most industrialized regions of the former Austria-Hungary. On October 28, 1918, Alois Rašín, Antonín Švehla, František Soukup, Jiří Stříbrný, and Vavro Šrobár, the "Men of October 28th," formed a provisional government, and two days later, Slovakia endorsed the marriage of the two countries, with Tomas Garrigue Masaryk, who had crafted the blueprint for the constitution, elected president.

World War II

Czechoslovakia in 1928

End of State

Satisfaction among individual ethnic groups within the new state varied, as Germans, Slovaks, and Slovakia's ethnic Hungarians grew resentful of the political and economic dominance of the Czechs' reluctance to extend political autonomy to all constituents. This policy, combined with an increasing Nazi propaganda, particularly in the industrialized German speaking Sudetenland (the German-border regions of Bohemia and Moravia), fueled the growing unrest in the years leading up to World War II.[1] Czechoslovakia began losing ground to Adolf Hitler's Germany with the Munich Agreement, signed on September 29, 1938, by the representatives of Germany—Hitler, Great BritainNeville Chamberlain, ItalyBenito Mussolini, and France—Édouard Daladier, which deprived it of one-third of its territory, mainly the Sudetenland, the location of major border defenses. Within ten days, 1,200,000 were forced to leave their homes. President Edvard Beneš resigned on October 5, 1938, and Emil Hácha was appointed in his stead. Hitler thus defeated Czechoslovakia without taking up arms, while a strip of southern Slovakia was handed over to Hungary in November.

On March 14, 1939, Hácha set out for Berlin to meet with Hitler. On the same day, Slovakia declared independence and became an ally of Nazi Germany, which provided Hitler with a pretext to occupy Bohemia and Moravia on grounds that Czechoslovakia had collapsed from within and his administration of it would forestall chaos in Central Europe. Hácha described the signing away of Czechoslovakia as follows:

“It’s possible to withstand Hitler’s yelling, because a person who yells is not necessarily a devil. But Göring [Hitler’s right hand], with his jovial face, was there as well. He took me by the hand and softly reproached me, asking whether it is really necessary for the beautiful Prague to be leveled in a few hours… and I could tell that the devil, able to carry out his threat, was speaking to me.”[2]

The following morning, Wehrmacht occupied what remained of Czechoslovakia. After Hitler personally inspected the Czech fortifications, he privately admitted that “We would have shed a lot of blood.”

Slovakia's troops fought on the Russian front until the summer of 1944, when the Slovak armed forces staged an anti-government uprising that was quickly crushed by Germany.

Resistance Movement

On October 28, 1939, the 21st anniversary of the establishment of the country, Czechoslovakia, emboldened by hopes for an early restoration of the independence, was swept by massive demonstrations. Nazi Germany retaliated by spontaneous executions of student leaders and the closure of universities, which sent the resistance movement underground. Czechoslovak units composed of recruits from the ranks of exiled Czechoslovak citizens were created in Poland, France, and Great Britain, coordinated by the London-based exiled government. On the home turf, the resistance movement continued chiefly through massive demonstrations, which reached an apex in 1941. However, widespread arrests severely disrupted the underground networks and cut off radio networks between domestic and foreign components of the resistance movement, which were then reestablished by paratroopers dispatched into the Protectorate.

Operation Anthropoid

"Joy of Life" statue gifted to the Nagasaki Peace Park by Czechoslovakia in 1980.

The Czechoslovak-British Operation Anthropoid was the code name for the assassination plot of the top Nazi leader Reinhard Heydrich, the chief of RSHA, an organization that included the Gestapo (Secret Police), SD (Security Agency) and Kripo (Criminal Police). Heydrich was the mastermind of the purge of Hitler's opponents as well as the genocide of Jews. Due to his reputation as the liquidator of resistance movements in Europe, he was sent to Prague in September 1941 to make order as the Protector of Bohemia and Moravia. The Protectorate was of strategic importance to Hitler’s plans, and Heydrich, dubbed the "Butcher of Prague," "The Blond Beast" or "The Hangman," wasted no time, handing out death sentences the day after his arrival.

With the fighting spirit in the Protectorate at a lull, the exiled military officials began planning an operation that would stir up the nation’s consciousness—six Czech and one Slovak paratroopers were chosen for the assassination of Heydrich, and two of them—Czech Josef Valčík and Slovak Josef Gabčik, executed it. Heydrich died of complications following surgery. The Gestapo tracked the paratroopers’ contacts and eventually discovered the assassins' hideaway in a Prague church. Three of them died in a shootout while trying to buy time for the others who were attempting to dig an escape route; the remaining four used their last bullets to take their lives.

Heydrich’s successor Karl Herrmann Frank had 10,000 Czechs executed as a warning, and two villages that assisted the paratroopers were leveled, with the adults murdered and young children sent to German families for re-education. The combined actions of the Gestapo and its confidantes virtually paralyzed the Czech resistance movement; on the other hand, the assassination bolstered Czechoslovakia’s prestige in the world and was crucial to the country’s securing of demands for an independent republic following the end of WWII.

End of War

Toward the end of the war, partisan movement was gaining momentum, and once the Allies were on the winning side, the political orientation of Czechoslovakia was high on the agenda of the two most influential exiled centers—the government in London and the communist officials in Moscow. Both endorsed the agreement on friendship, mutual assistance and postwar cooperation with the Soviet Union as a means to stem German expansion on one hand and the Soviet Union’s mingling into Czechoslovakia's internal affairs on the other.

Communist Czechoslovakia

Retaliation

After World War II, Czechoslovakia was reestablished. Carpathian Ruthenia was occupied by, and in June 1945, formally ceded to the Soviet Union, while Sudetenland Germans were expelled in an act of retaliation coined by the Beneš Decrees, which continue to fuel controversy between nationalist groups in the Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, and Hungary.[3] In total approximately 90 percent of the ethnic German population of Czechoslovakia was forced to leave. Wartime traitors and collaborators accused of treason along with ethnic Germans and Hungarians were expropriated.

Communist Takeover

The Communist takeover of Czechoslovakia was facilitated by the fact that most of the country had been liberated by the Red Army, as well as the overall social and economic downturn in Europe. In the 1946 parliamentary election, the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia emerged as the winner in the Czech lands while the Democratic Party won in Slovakia. In 1947, the Soviet Union and, consequently, its satellites, including Czechoslovakia, turned down the Marshall Plan, authored by U.S. Secretary of State George Marshall to address the economic needs of war-torn Europe.

Czechoslovakia in 1969

In February 1948, the Communists seized power and sealed the country’s fate for the next 41 years. Terror reminiscent of Hitler’s Germany followed, with execution of political prisoners and prisoners of conscience, forced collectivization of agriculture, censorship, and land grabs. Economy was controlled by five-year plans and the industry was overhauled in compliance with Soviet wishes to focus on heavy industry, in which Czechoslovakia had been traditionally weak. The economy retained momentum vis-à-vis its Eastern European neighbors but grew increasingly weak vis-à-vis Western Europe.

In the early 1960s, Czechoslovakia came very close to extricating itself from the Eastern bloc, when the reformer Alexander Dubcek was appointed to the key post of First Secretary of the Czechoslovak Communist Party. Economic reforms were put in place that gradually grew into the reform of the overall political system, referred to as the Prague Spring. However, this glimmer of hope was crushed under the tanks of the Warsaw Pact armies in August 1968. Soviet tanks rolled into Czechoslovakia on the night of 20–21 August 1968.[4] The General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party Leonid Brezhnev viewed this intervention as vital to the preservation of the Soviet, socialist system and vowed to intervene in any state that sought to replace Marxism-Leninism with capitalism.[5] In the week after the invasion there was a spontaneous campaign of civil resistance against the occupation. This resistance involved a wide range of acts of non-cooperation and defiance: this was followed by a period in which the Czechoslovak Communist Party leadership, having been forced in Moscow to make concessions to the Soviet Union, gradually put the brakes on their earlier liberal policies.[6] In April 1969 Dubcek was finally dismissed from the First Secretaryship of the Czechoslovak Communist Party.

The period of ‘normalization’ followed—the reforms were repealed, which, compounded by apolitical, military, and union purges thrust the country back into 1950s. The dissident movement, epitomized by the future Czech President Václav Havel, worked underground to counter the regime. Finally, the economic crisis in the 1980s facilitated the shift toward democracy.

Velvet Revolution

Mikhail Gorbachev’s address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York, in which he endorsed the rights for all nations to decide their own course, was among the first signs of the worldwide crumbling of the Communist empire. However, Communist authorities in Prague brutally dispersed ad hoc anti-regime demonstrations on November 17, 1989, in commemoration of the 1939 Nazi attack against university dormitories. This set in motion the Velvet Revolution, and the student-led protests in the metropolis soon spilled over to other parts of the country.

As Communist governments in neighboring countries were being toppled, borders with Western Europe were opened, and in December, President Gustáv Husák appointed the first government composed of largely non-Communists and resigned. Alexander Dubcek, who played a crucial role in the Prague Spring, became the voice of the federal parliament and Vaclav Havel the President. In June 1990, the first democratic elections since 1946 were held.

Toward Velvet Divorce

Discussion of the proposal to drop the country’s socialist attribute introduced in 1960 revealed a serious Czecho-Slovak conflict, with many Slovak deputies calling for the reinstatement of the original name, "Czecho-Slovakia," adopted by the Treaty of Versailles in 1918. The country was eventually renamed the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic in April 1990, but voices for Slovakia’s independence were mounting, and the fiercely nationalistic Slovak National Party, whose key agenda was independence, was founded around this time. Even prior to that, Slovakia's creation of the Foreign Relations Ministry in 1990 had signaled intensified independence efforts.

The June 1990 elections uncovered the growing rift between the two countries when Slovakia openly challenged President Havel's intervening in Slovak internal affairs. While the conservatives won a sweeping victory in the Czech Republic, Slovakia elected liberals. The cabinets of both countries were no longer largely composed of former dissidents, and although the federal government operated on the principle of symmetric power-sharing, disagreements between the republics escalated into Slovakia’s declaration of a sovereign state in July 1992, whereby its laws overrode the federal laws. Negotiations on the dissolution of the federal state took place for the remainder of the year, which was materialized on January 1, 1993, when two independent states—Slovakia and the Czech Republic—appeared on the map of Europe.

See also

Notes

  1. Peter Josika, Playing the Blame Game, Prague Post (July 6, 2005). Retrieved September 5, 2007.
  2. idnes News, Chcete zničit Prahu? ptal se Göring Háchy, March 15, 2007. (Czech Language) Retrieved September 5, 2007.
  3. Jacques Rupnik, The Other Central Europe, East European Constitutional Review (Winter/Spring 2002). Retrieved September 5, 2007.
  4. "Russia Invades Czechoslovakia: 1968 Year in Review," UPI.com (1968). Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  5. John Lewis Gaddis, The Cold War: A New History (New York, NY: The Penguin Press, 2006), 150.
  6. Philip Windsor and Adam Roberts, Czechoslovakia 1968: Reform, Repression and Resistance (London: Chatto & Windus, 1969), 97-143.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Gaddis, John Lewis. The Cold War: A New History. New York, NY: The Penguin Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0143038276
  • Heimann, Mary. Czechoslovakia: The State That Failed. Yale University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0300172423
  • Windsor, Philip, and Adam Roberts. Czechoslovakia 1968: Reform, Repression and Resistance. London: Chatto & Windus, 1969. ASIN B01K1756RS

External Links

All links retrieved January 12, 2024.

Czech Language

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