Czech and Slovak Federal Republic Česká a Slovenská Federativní/Federatívna Republika |
|||||
|
|||||
|
|||||
Motto Czech/Slovak: Pravda vítězí/víťazí Latin: Veritas Vincit ("Truth prevails"; 1990–1992) |
|||||
Anthem Kde domov můj and Nad Tatrou sa blýska |
|||||
Capital | Prague | ||||
Language(s) | Czech, Slovak | ||||
Government | Federal Republic | ||||
President | |||||
- 1989–1992 | Václav Havel | ||||
- 1992 | Jan Stráský (acting) | ||||
Prime Minister | |||||
- 1989–1992 | Marián Čalfa | ||||
- 1992 | Jan Stráský | ||||
History | |||||
- post-Velvet Revolution constitution change | 23 April 1990 | ||||
- dissolution of Czechoslovakia | 31 December 1992 | ||||
Area | |||||
- 1992 | 127,900 km2 (49,382 sq mi) | ||||
Population | |||||
- 1992 est. | 15,600,000 | ||||
Density | 122 /km2 (315.9 /sq mi) | ||||
Currency | Czechoslovak koruna |
Czech and Slovak Federal Republic (Czech/Slovak: Česká a Slovenská Federativní/Federatívna Republika, ČSFR) was the official name of Czechoslovakia from April 1990 until 31 December 1992, when the country was dissolved into the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic.
Since 1960, Czechoslovakia's official name had been Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (Československá socialistická republika, ČSSR). In the aftermath of the Velvet Revolution, newly-elected President Vaclav Havel announced that "Socialist" would be dropped from the country's official name.
While a return to the pre-1960 form Československá republika (Czechoslovak Republic) seemed obvious, Slovak politicians objected that the traditional name subsumed Slovakia's equal stature too much. The first compromise was Constitutional Law 81/1990, which acknowledged the state's nature explicitly as Československá federativní republika (Czechoslovak Federal Republic) in Czech and was passed on 29 March 1990 (coming into force on the same day) only after an agreement on the Slovak form as Česko-slovenská federatívna republika, to be explicitly codified by a future law on state symbols. This was met with general disapproval and another round of haggling, dubbed "the hyphen war" (pomlčková válka / vojna) after Slovaks' wish to insert a hyphen into the name à la Czecho-Slovakia, refused by aggrieved Czechs as too reminiscent of such practice during the "Second Republic" mutilated by the Munich Agreement and slipping toward fascism and final dismemberment. The resultant compromise after much behind-the-scenes negotiation was the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic (Constitutional Law 101/1990, passed on 20 April and in force since its declaration on 23 April; unlike the previous one, it also explicitly listed both Czech and Slovak version and stated they were equal).
The name breaks the rules of Czech and Slovak orthography which do not use capitalization for proper names' second and further words (see above), nor adjectives derived from them. Thus the correct form would be "Česká a slovenská federat... republika" but "Česká a Slovenská f. r." was adopted to imply a conjunction of two national republics, each having "federal" in its name.
Few people were happy with the name, however it came into use quickly. Czecho-Slovak tensions, of which this was an early sign, soon became manifest in matters of greater immediate importance which made the country's name a comparatively minor issue and at the same time even more impossible to change, so it stayed until the final dissolution of Czechoslovakia.
Timeline | Origins pre-1918 |
The First Republic 1918–1938 |
World War II 1938–1945 |
1945–1948 | Coup d'état 1948–1989 |
Velvet Revolution 1989–1992 |
Dissolution 1993– |
|||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia |
Crown lands of the Austrian Empire |
First Czechoslovak Republic (ČSR, 1918–1938) Full boundaries and government established by the 1920 constitution |
Sudetenland annexed by Nazi Germany (1938–1945) |
Third Czechoslovak Republic (ČSR, 1945–1948) |
Czechoslovak Republic (ČSR, 1948–1960) Declared a people's democracy (without a formal name change) under the Ninth-of-May Constitution following the 1948 coup |
Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (ČSSR, 1960–1989) |
Czech and Slovak Federal Republic (ČSFR, 1990–1992) |
Czech Republic Czechia (since 1993) |
||
Second Czechoslovak Republic (ČSR, 1938–1939) Including the autonomous regions of Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia |
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (1939–1945) |
After the Prague Spring, consisted of: Czech Socialist Republic (ČSR, 1969–1992) Slovak Socialist Republic (SSR, 1969–1992) Socialist dropped from names in 1990 |
||||||||
Slovakia | Territory of the Kingdom of Hungary |
Slovak Republic (1939–1945) |
Slovak Republic Slovakia (since 1993) |
|||||||
Southern Slovakia and Carpatho-Ukraine Annexed by: Hungary (1939–1945) |
||||||||||
Carpathian Ruthenia | Zakarpattia Oblast of the Ukrainian SSR (1944/1946–1991) |
Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine (since 1991) |
||||||||
see: Austria-Hungary | Czechoslovak government-in-exile |