Origins of Czechoslovakia
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This article is part of the series: History of Czechoslovakia |
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Origins (Pre-1918) |
First Republic (1918–1938) |
Second Republic and World War II (1938–1945) |
Third Republic (1945–1948) |
Communist Era (1948–1989) |
Velvet Revolution and Democracy (1989–1992) |
Dissolution of Czechoslovakia January 1, 1993 |
The creation of Czechoslovakia in 1918 was the culmination of the long struggle of the Czechs against their Austrian rulers and of the Slovaks against Hungarisation and their Hungarian rulers.
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[edit] Early history
Although the Czechs and Slovaks have similar languages, they have a different mentality and different historical experiences. The ancestors of the Czechs and Slovaks were maybe (see Samo) united in the so-called Samo‘s empire for some 30 years in the 7th century. The ancestors of the Slovaks and Moravians were then again united in Great Moravia between 833 and 907. The Czechs were only part of Great Moravia for some 7 years and split from it at the first opportunity in 895. Furthermore, in the 2nd half of the 10th century, the Czechs maybe conquered western Slovakia for some 30 years. This was the last time the two nations were united, because while the Hungarians had conquered Slovakia by the 11th century, the Czechs had their own state from around 900 to the 15th century, called the Bohemian Kingdom. Despite their separate strands of development, both Czechs and Slovaks struggled against a powerful neighboring nation (Germans for the Czechs, Hungarians for the Slovaks). For details see History of the Czech Republic and History of Slovakia. Contacts between the Czechs and Slovaks arose in the late 14th century, when the Slovaks started to study at the University of Prague, and in the 15th century with the campaigns of the Czech Hussite armies to Slovakia, and in the 17th century when Czech protestants fled to Slovakia. Also, the written Czech language was used by some educated Slovaks from the 15th century to the 18th century, besides Slovak and Latin (see History of the Slovak language). Formally, the Czechs and Slovaks were also “united“ in 1436 –1439, 1453-1457, 1490-1918, when Hungary (incl. Slovakia) and Bohemia and other Central European states were ruled by the same kings (since 1526 by the Habsburgs).
[edit] Late 19th century and early 20th century
At the end of the 19th century, the situation of the Czechs and Slovaks was very different, due to the different stages of development of their overlords – the Austrians in Bohemia and the Hungarians in Slovakia – within Austria-Hungary. The only common feature was the fact that Bohemia was the most industrialized part of Austria and Slovakia that of Hungary – however at a different level:
- In Bohemia, a vigorous industrial revolution transformed a peasant nation into a differentiated society that included industrial workers, a middle class, and intellectuals. Under the influence of the Enlightenment and romanticism, the Czechs experienced a remarkable revival of Czech culture and national consciousness (nationals revival : late 18th century – around 1850). By the mid-nineteenth century, the Czechs were making political demands, including the reconstitution of an autonomous Bohemian Kingdom. Because of Austria's parliamentary system, the Czechs were able to make significant cultural and political gains, but these were vigorously opposed by Bohemia's Germans, who feared losing their privileged position. On the eve of World War I, the Czech leader Tomáš Masaryk began propagating the Czechoslovak idea, i.e., the reunion of Czechs and Slovaks into one political entity.
- The Slovaks, on the other hand, had no forum for political expression within Hungary, and national revival (late 18th century – around 1850) came more hesitantly to the Slovaks than to the Czechs. Slovakia was not industrialized until the end of the nineteenth century; therefore, the Slovaks remained primarily a rural people led by a small group of intellectuals. After the creation of the dual monarchy Austria-Hungary in 1867, a strong Hungarisation started in Hungary (see History of the Slovak language) and the Slovak national revival was severely repressed, so that on the eve of World War I, the Slovaks were struggling to preserve their newly found national identity (see below).
At the turn of the century, the idea of a "Czecho-Slovak" entity began to be advocated by some Czech and Slovak leaders. In the 1890s, contacts between Czech and Slovak intellectuals intensified. The Czech leader Masaryk was a keen advocate of Czech-Slovak cooperation. Some of his students formed the Czechoslovak Union and in 1898 published the journal Hlas (The Voice). In Slovakia, some young Slovak intellectuals began to challenge the old Slovak National Party. But although the Czech and Slovak national movements began drawing closer together, their ultimate goals remained unclear. At least until World War I, the Czech and Slovak national movements struggled for autonomy within Austria and Hungary, respectively. Only during the war did the idea of an independent Czecho-Slovakia emerge.
[edit] World War I (1914 – 1918)
At the outbreak of World War I, the Czechs and Slovaks showed little enthusiasm for fighting for their respective enemies, the Germans and the Hungarians, against fellow Slavs, the Russians and the Serbs. Large numbers of Czechs and Slovaks defected on the Russian front and formed the Czechoslovak Legion. Masaryk went to western Europe and began propagating the idea that the Austro-Hungarian Empire should be dismembered and that Czechoslovakia should be an independent state. In 1916, together with Edvard Beneš and Milan Rastislav Štefánik (a Slovak astronomer and war hero), Masaryk created the Czechoslovak National Council. Masaryk in the United States, Štefánik in France, and Beneš in France and Britain worked tirelessly to gain Allied recognition. When secret talks between the Allies and Austrian emperor Charles I (1916-18) collapsed, the Allies recognized, in the summer of 1918, the Czechoslovak National Council as the supreme organ of a future Czechoslovak government.
In early October 1918, Germany and Austria proposed peace negotiations. On October 18, while in the United States, Masaryk issued a declaration of Czechoslovak independence. Masaryk insisted that the new Czechoslovak state include the historic Bohemian Kingdom, containing the German-populated Sudetenland. On October 21, however, German deputies from the Sudetenland joined other German and Austrian deputies in the Austrian parliament in declaring an independent German-Austrian state. Following the abdication of Emperor Charles on November 11, Czech troops occupied the Sudetenland.
Hungary withdrew from the Habsburg empire on November 1. The new liberal-democratic government of Hungary under Count Michael Karolyi attempted to retain Slovakia. With Allied approval, the Czechs occupied Slovakia, and the Hungarians were forced to withdraw. The Czechs and Allies agreed on the Danube and Ipeľ rivers as the boundary between Hungary and Slovakia; a large Hungarian minority, occupying the fertile plain of the Danube, would be included in the new state.
[edit] From creation to dissolution – Overview
Czechoslovakia (or Czecho-Slovakia) | 1918 - 1939; 1945 - 1992 |
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Austria-Hungary (Bohemia, Moravia, a part of Silesia, northern parts of the Kingdom of Hungary (Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia) |
Czechoslovak Republic (ČSR) |
Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (ČSSR) |
Czech and Slovak Federal Republic (ČSFR) |
Czech Republic |
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Czecho-Slovak Republic (ČSR) incl. autonomous Slovakia and Transcarpathian Ukraine (1938-1939) |
WWII Slovak Republic |
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part of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic |
Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine |
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Communist era |
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[edit] References
This article contains material from the Library of Congress Country Studies, which are United States government publications in the public domain.