Resttschechei
Resttschechei or Rest-Tschechei (English: the rump Czech state[1][2][3]) was the Nazi[4] designation used for the remaining Czech parts of Czechoslovakia that were de facto annexed by Nazi Germany on 15/16 March 1939 as the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia with its military occupation. This occurred after an ultimatum was presented to Czecho-Slovak president Emil Hacha during his March visit to Hitler in Berlin, threatenening that its rejection would mean the downright enslavement of the autonomous Czech population.
Czechoslovakia had already lost significant territories in 1938 and 1939, which were either ceded to other countries or broke off:
- The Sudetenland, which after the intervention in the Munich Conference (10 October 1938) by the United Kingdom, France, and Italy, was peacefully annexed by Nazi Germany on 21 November.
- Carpathian Ruthenia was annexed by Hungary in 1938 after German consent.
- Parts of Czech Silesia around Zaolzie were taken by Poland in 1938.
- Slovakia declared its independence on 14 March 1939 at the instigation of Nazi Germany. Before this it had already lost much of its ethnic Hungarian southern lands to Hungary in the First Vienna Award, as well as a strip of territory in the east during the Slovak-Hungarian War.
See also
- Second Czechoslovak Republic
- German occupation of Czechoslovakia
- Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
- Glossary of Nazi Germany
References
- ↑ Gruner, Wolf. 2015. Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. In: Wolf Grüner & Jörg Osterloh (eds.), The Greater German Reich and the Jews: Nazi Persecution Policies in the Annexed Territories 1935–1945, pp. 99–135. Transl. Bernard Heise. New York: Berghahn, p. 103.
- ↑ Ramsden, John. 2002. The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century British Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 450.
- ↑ Rothschild, Joseph. 1974. East Central Europe between the Two World Wars. Seattle: University of Washington Press, p. 366.
- ↑ German plans for solving the "Czechoslovak problem"
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