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  1. Czechoslovakia was legally created by Law on the Creation of Independent Czechoslovak State (No. 11/1918 Coll.) in Prague on 28 October 1918 [6] in Smetana Hall of the Municipal House, a physical setting strongly associated with nationalist feeling.

  2. Slovakia became autonomous in the fall of 1938, and by mid-1939, Slovakia had become independent, with the First Slovak Republic set up as a satellite state of Nazi Germany and the far-right Slovak People's Party in power .

  3. Sep 17, 2024 · Under the leadership of Masaryk, who served as president from 1918 to 1935, Czechoslovakia became a stable parliamentary democracy and the most industrially advanced country in eastern Europe. But after the rise to power of Adolf Hitler in Germany in 1933, the significant German minority in the Sudetenland of western Czechoslovakia began to ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • When did Czechoslovakia become independent?1
    • When did Czechoslovakia become independent?2
    • When did Czechoslovakia become independent?3
    • When did Czechoslovakia become independent?4
    • When did Czechoslovakia become independent?5
  4. Jun 18, 2020 · Czechoslovakia was led under strict communist rule for the next 10 years. The Warsaw Pact was signed in 1955, and this treaty established a mutual defense organization that included Czechoslovakia, Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, East Germany, and Romania.

  5. In October 1915, in a public lecture at King’s College, London, he called for the establishment of small states in east-central Europe, based on the principles of nationality and democracy and directed against German plans for European hegemony.

  6. Czechoslovak history, history of the region comprising the historical lands of Bohemia, Moravia, and Slovakia from prehistoric times through their federation, under the name Czechoslovakia, during 191892.

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  8. The Czechoslovak Declaration of Independence or the Washington Declaration (Czech: Washingtonská deklarace; Slovak: Washingtonská deklarácia; German: Washingtoner Erklärung; Hungarian: Washingtoni Nyilatkozat) was drafted in Washington, D.C., and published by Czechoslovakia's Paris-based Provisional Government on 18 October 1918. [1]