词条 | First Czechoslovak Republic | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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|conventional_long_name = Czechoslovak Republic |native_name = Československá republika |common_name = Czechoslovakia |p1 = Austria-Hungary |flag_p1 = Flag of Austria-Hungary 1869-1918.svg |p2 = German Empire |flag_p2 = Flag of the German Empire.svg |s1 = Second Czechoslovak Republic |flag_s1 = Flag of the Czech Republic.svg |s2 = Reichsgau Sudetenland |flag_s2 = Flag of German Reich (1935–1945).svg |s3 = Kingdom of Hungary (1920–1946){{!}}Kingdom of Hungary |flag_s3 = Flag of Hungary 1940.svg |s4 = Second Polish Republic |flag_s4 = Flag_of_Poland_(1928-1980).svg |image_flag = Flag of Czechoslovakia.svg |flag = Flag of Czechoslovakia |flag_type = Flag (since 1920) |image_coat = Greater coat of arms of Czechoslovakia (1918-1938 and 1945-1961).svg |coa_size = 130px |symbol_type = Greater coat of arms |national_motto = Pravda vítězí / Pravda víťazí "Truth prevails" |national_anthem = {{vunblist |{{native phrase|cs|Kde domov můj|nolink=yes}} |{{raise|0.35em|{{small|Where is my home}}}}|{{center|}} }} "{{lang|sk|Nad Tatrou sa blýska}}" |image_map = Czechoslovak Republic (1938).svg |image_map_caption = Czechoslovak Republic in 1937. |capital = Prague |common_languages = Czech{{·}}Slovaka |government_type = Parliamentary republic |title_leader = President |leader1 = Tomáš Masaryk |year_leader1 = 1918–1935 |leader2 = Edvard Beneš |year_leader2 = 1935–1938 |title_deputy = Prime Minister |deputy1 = Karel Kramář (first) |year_deputy1 = 1918–1919 |deputy2 = Milan Hodža (last) |year_deputy2 = 1935–1938 |legislature = National Assembly |house1 = Senate |house2 = Chamber of Deputies |era = Interwar period |year_start = 1918 |event_start = Independence declared |date_start = 28 October |event1 = Constitution adopted |date_event1 = 29 February 1920 |year_end = 1938 |event_end = Munich Agreement |date_end = 30 September |stat_year1 = 1938 |stat_area1 = 140800 |stat_pop1 = 14,800,000 |currency = Czechoslovak koruna |today = {{plainlist}}
|footnotes = a. German, Hungarian, Polish, Romani, Ruthenian, and Yiddish had regional status. }} The First Czechoslovak Republic ({{lang-cs|První československá republika}}, {{lang-sk|Prvá česko-slovenská republika}}, often called "{{lang-cs|První Republika}} (The first Republic) by Czechs and Slovaks) was the Czechoslovak state that existed from 1918 to 1938. The state was commonly called Czechoslovakia (Czech and {{lang-sk|Československo}}). It was composed of Bohemia, Moravia, Czech Silesia, Slovakia and Subcarpathian Ruthenia. After 1933, Czechoslovakia remained the only functioning democracy in Central Europe. Under pressure from its Sudeten German minority, supported by neighbouring Nazi Germany, Czechoslovakia was forced to cede its Sudetenland region to Germany on 1 October 1938 as part of the Munich Agreement. It also ceded southern parts of Slovakia and Subcarpathian Ruthenia to Hungary and the Zaolzie region in Silesia to Poland. This, in effect, ended the First Czechoslovak Republic. It was replaced by the Second Czechoslovak Republic, which lasted less than half a year before Germany occupied the rest of Czechoslovakia in March 1939. History{{Main|History of Czechoslovakia (1918–1938)}}The independence of Czechoslovakia was proclaimed on 28 October 1918 by the Czechoslovak National Council in Prague. Several ethnic groups and territories with different historical, political, and economic traditions were obliged be blended into a new state structure. The origin of the First Republic lies in Point 10 of Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points: "The peoples of Austria-Hungary, whose place among the nations we wish to see safeguarded and assured, should be accorded the freest opportunity to autonomous development." The full boundaries of the country and the organization of its government was finally established in the Czechoslovak Constitution of 1920. Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk had been recognized by World War I Allies as the leader of the Provisional Czechoslovak Government, and in 1920 he was elected the country's first president. He was re-elected in 1925 and 1929, serving as President until 14 December 1935 when he resigned due to poor health. He was succeeded by Edvard Beneš. Following the Anschluss of Nazi Germany and Austria in March 1938, the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler's next target for annexation was Czechoslovakia. His pretext was the privations suffered by ethnic German populations living in Czechoslovakia's northern and western border regions, known collectively as the Sudetenland. Their incorporation into Nazi Germany would leave the rest of Czechoslovakia powerless to resist subsequent occupation.[1] Politics{{See also|Elections in the First Czechoslovak Republic}}To a large extent, Czechoslovak democracy was held together by the country's first president, Tomáš Masaryk. As the principal founding father of the republic, Masaryk was regarded similar to the way George Washington is regarded in the United States. Such universal respect enabled Masaryk to overcome seemingly irresolvable political problems. Masaryk is still regarded as the symbol of Czechoslovak democracy. The Constitution of 1920 approved the provisional constitution of 1918 in its basic features. The Czechoslovak state was conceived as a parliamentary democracy, guided primarily by the National Assembly, consisting of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies, whose members were to be elected on the basis of universal suffrage. The National Assembly was responsible for legislative initiative and was given supervisory control over the executive and judiciary as well. Every seven years it elected the president and confirmed the cabinet appointed by him. Executive power was to be shared by the president and the cabinet; the latter, responsible to the National Assembly, was to prevail. The reality differed somewhat from this ideal, however, during the strong presidencies of Masaryk and his successor, Beneš. The constitution of 1920 provided for the central government to have a high degree of control over local government. From 1928 and 1940, Czechoslovakia was divided into the four "lands" ({{lang-cs|"země"}}, {{lang-sk|"krajiny"}}); Bohemia, Moravia-Silesia, Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia. Although in 1927 assemblies were provided for Bohemia, Slovakia, and Ruthenia, their jurisdiction was limited to adjusting laws and regulations of the central government to local needs. The central government appointed one third of the members of these assemblies. The constitution identified the "Czechoslovak nation" as the creator and principal constituent of the Czechoslovak state and established Czech and Slovak as official languages. The concept of the Czechoslovak nation was necessary in order to justify the establishment of Czechoslovakia towards the world, because otherwise the statistical majority of the Czechs as compared to Germans would have been rather weak, and there would have been more Germans in the state than Slovaks. National minorities were assured special protection; in districts where they constituted 20% of the population, members of minority groups were granted full freedom to use their language in everyday life, in schools, and in matters dealing with authorities. The operation of the new Czechoslovak government was distinguished by stability. Largely responsible for this were the well-organized political parties that emerged as the real centers of power. Excluding the period from March 1926 to November 1929, when the coalition did not hold, a coalition of five Czechoslovak parties constituted the backbone of the government: Republican Party of Agricultural and Smallholder People, Czechoslovak Social Democratic Party, Czechoslovak National Social Party, Czechoslovak People's Party, and Czechoslovak National Democratic Party. The leaders of these parties became known as the "Pětka" (pron. pyetka) (The Five). The Pětka was headed by Antonín Švehla, who held the office of prime minister for most of the 1920s and designed a pattern of coalition politics that survived until 1938. The coalition's policy was expressed in the slogan "We have agreed that we will agree." German parties also participated in the government in the beginning of 1926. Hungarian parties, influenced by irredentist propaganda from Hungary, never joined the Czechoslovak government but were not openly hostile:
Foreign policyEdvard Beneš, Czechoslovak foreign minister from 1918 to 1935, created the system of alliances that determined the republic's international stance until 1938. A democratic statesman of Western orientation, Beneš relied heavily on the League of Nations as guarantor of the post war status quo and the security of newly formed states. He negotiated the Little Entente (an alliance with Yugoslavia and Romania) in 1921 to counter Hungarian revanchism and Habsburg restoration. He concluded a separate alliance with France. Beneš's Western policy received a serious blow as early as 1925. The Locarno Pact, which paved the way for Germany's admission to the League of Nations, guaranteed Germany's western border. French troops were thus left immobilized on the Rhine, making French assistance to Czechoslovakia difficult. In addition, the treaty stipulated that Germany's eastern frontier would remain subject to negotiation. When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, fear of German aggression became widespread in eastern Central Europe. Beneš ignored the possibility of a stronger Central European alliance system, remaining faithful to his Western policy. He did, however, seek the participation of the Soviet Union in an alliance to include France. (Beneš's earlier attitude towards the Soviet regime had been one of caution.) In 1935, the Soviet Union signed treaties with France and Czechoslovakia. In essence, the treaties provided that the Soviet Union would come to Czechoslovakia's aid only if French assistance came first. In 1935, when Beneš succeeded Masaryk as president, the prime minister Milan Hodža took over the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Hodža's efforts to strengthen alliances in Central Europe came too late. In February 1936, the foreign ministry came under the direction of Kamil Krofta, an adherent of Beneš's line. EconomyThe new nation had a population of over 13.5 million. It had inherited 70 to 80% of all the industry of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, including the porcelain and glass industries and the sugar refineries; more than 40% of all its distilleries and breweries; the Škoda Works of Pilsen (Plzeň), which produced armaments, locomotives, automobiles, and machinery; and the chemical industry of northern Bohemia. Seventeen percent of all Hungarian industry that had developed in Slovakia during the late 19th century also fell to the republic. Czechoslovakia was one of the world's 10 most industrialized states. {{Citation needed|date=December 2014}} The Czech lands were far more industrialized than Slovakia. In Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia, 39% of the population was employed in industry and 31% in agriculture and forestry. Most light and heavy industry was located in the Sudetenland and was owned by Germans and controlled by German-owned banks.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} Czechs controlled only 20 to 30% of all industry.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} In Slovakia, 17.1% of the population was employed in industry, and 60.4% worked in agriculture and forestry.{{Citation needed|date=December 2011}} Only 5% of all industry in Slovakia was in Slovak hands. Carpathian Ruthenia was essentially without industry. In the agricultural sector, a program of reform introduced soon after the establishment of the republic was intended to rectify the unequal distribution of land. One-third of all agricultural land and forests belonged to a few aristocratic landowners—mostly Germans (or Germanized Czechs – e.g. Kinsky, Czernin or Kaunitz) and Hungarians—and the Roman Catholic Church. Half of all holdings were under 20,000 m². The Land Control Act of April 1919 called for the expropriation of all estates exceeding 1.5 square kilometres of arable land or 2.5 square kilometres of land in general (5 square kilometres to be the absolute maximum). Redistribution was to proceed on a gradual basis; owners would continue in possession in the interim, and compensation was offered. Ethnic groups1921 ethnonational census[2]
National disputes arose due to the fact that the more numerous Czechs dominated the central government and other national institutions, all of which had their seats in the Bohemian capital Prague. The Slovak middle class had been extremely small in 1919 because Hungarians, Germans and Jews had previously filled most administrative, professional and commercial positions in, and as a result, the Czechs had to be posted to the more backward Slovakia to take up the administrative and professional posts. The position of the Jewish community, especially in Slovakia was ambiguous and, increasingly, a significant part looked towards Zionism.[4] Furthermore, most of Czechoslovakia's industry was as well located in Bohemia and Moravia, while most of Slovakia's economy came from agriculture. In Carpatho-Ukraine, the situation was even worse, with basically no industry at all. Due to Czechoslovakia's centralized political structure, nationalism arose in the non-Czech nationalities, and several parties and movements were formed with the aim of broader political autonomy, like the Sudeten German Party led by Konrad Henlein and the Hlinka's Slovak People's Party led by Andrej Hlinka. The German minority living in Sudetenland demanded autonomy from the Czech government, claiming they were suppressed and repressed. In the 1935 Parliamentary elections, the newly founded Sudeten German Party, led by Konrad Henlein and mostly financed by Nazi German money, received over two-thirds of the Sudeten German vote. As a consequence, diplomatic relations between the Germans and the Czechs deteriorated further. Administrative divisions
See also
References1. ^{{cite book|title=World War II: A Political, Social, and Military History|author=Spencer Tucker, Priscilla Mary Roberts|year=2005|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=1-57607-999-6}} 2. ^Slovenský náučný slovník, I. zväzok, Bratislava-Český Těšín, 1932. 3. ^The 1921 and 1930 census numbers are not accurate since nationality depended on self-declaration and many Poles declared Czech nationality mainly as a result of fear of the new authorities and as compensation for some benefits. Cf. {{cite book |last=Zahradnik |first=Stanisław |author2=Marek Ryczkowski |title=Korzenie Zaolzia |publisher=PAI-press |year=1992 |location=Warszawa - Praga - Trzyniec |pages= |doi= |oclc=177389723}} 4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.slovak-jewish-heritage.org/history-of-jews-in-slovakia.html |title=Slovakia Synagogues, Jewish Cemeteries, Jewish Museum Bratislava |publisher=Slovak Jewish Heritage |accessdate=2014-02-16}} Bibliography{{Commons category|Czechoslovak Republic (1918–1938)}}
14 : History of Czechoslovakia|Former polities of the interwar period|Former republics|States succeeding Austria-Hungary|1910s in Czechoslovakia|1920s in Czechoslovakia|1930s in Czechoslovakia|States and territories established in 1918|States and territories disestablished in 1938|1918 establishments in Czechoslovakia|1938 disestablishments in Czechoslovakia|1918 establishments in Europe|1938 disestablishments in Europe|Political history of Czechoslovakia |
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