Czechoslovaks

Czechoslovakism (Czech: Čechoslovakismus, Slovak: Čechoslovakizmus) is a concept which underlines reciprocity of the Czechs and the Slovaks. It is best known as an ideology which holds that there is one Czechoslovak nation, though it might also appear as a political program of two nations living in one common state. The climax of Czechoslovakism fell on 1918-1938, when as a one-nation-theory it became the official political doctrine of Czechoslovakia; its best known representative was Tomáš Masaryk. Today Czechoslovakism as political concept or ideology is almost defunct; its remnant is a general sentiment of cultural affinity, present among many Czechs and Slovaks.

Wikipedia

Publications

MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 26 July 2022 English

Much of today’s international order can be traced to the experimentations with governance that occurred in central Europe immediately after World War I. And though Western governments did not bring …

Émigré representatives of the Yugoslavs, Czechoslovaks, and Poles were most prominent in London, forging Central and Eastern Europe, principally the Czechoslovaks and Yugoslavs, were carrying on similar campaigns uncommitted to the Allied cause, unlike the Czechoslovaks and Yugoslavs.119 The relative fortunes of


School of Public Policy, University of Calgary · 15 January 2021

As shown in the figure, 2018 marks Canada passing the US in leading refugee The UNHCR and participating countries negotiate the intake of resettlement refugees, in resettlement. [...] La réinstallation …

1956 and 1968: 37,000 Hungarians and 11,000 Czechoslovaks fleeing many, but countries are likely to be


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 15 May 2019 English

Until the outbreak of hostilities in 1939, Mackenzie King prided himself on never publicly saying anything derogatory about Hitler or Mussolini, unequivocally supporting the appeasement policies of British prime minister …

saw as the obstinacy and inflexibility of the Czechoslovaks made them and not Hitler responsible for the


UMP: University of Manitoba Press · 24 August 2018 English

During the Cold War, more than 36,000 individuals entering Canada claimed Czechoslovakia as their country of citizenship. A defining characteristic of this migration of predominantly political refugees was the prevalence …

attempted to unite with and represent Slovaks as “Czechoslovaks”—without regard for a separate Slovak ethnic the two ethnic groups were classified as “Czechoslovaks.”9 However, the inadequa- cies of the record-keeping Chatham’s St. Joseph’s Hall for all interested “Czechoslovaks.” Approximately 350 people were in attendance


PMLQ: Parti marxiste-léniniste du Québec · 14 November 2017 English

have betrayed Russia in the north, in the south, and in the east to foreign imperialist states, by calling foreign bayonets from wherever they could get them.[8] The failure of …

on Russia's eastern flank. Fifteen thousand CzechoSlovaks, aided by Japanese and British marines, seized Standard of Living,' Federationist, 28 May 1920, 'CzechoSlovaks Pass through City,' Federationist, 11 June 1920; killed in action against the Red Army. The Czechoslovaks and the Whiteguard-Socialist-Revolutionary bands -- the proletariat or the bourgeoisie. The Czechoslovaks, the Whiteguards, the kulaks, the Socialist-Revolutionaries


DDN: Dundurn Press · 9 June 2008 English

Commended for the 2009 Best Books for Kids & Teens Canadian World War II pilot Charley Fox, now in his late eighties, has had a thrilling life, especially on the …

Brit- ain protested. Unlike Austrians, most Czechoslovaks didn’t want to give up any territory to Germany for being German. Another two million German Czechoslovaks were deported to Germany. Their homes and property his nature, he refused to fly with his fellow Czechoslovaks and joined 303 Squadron, a Polish unit in the


WLU: Wilfrid Laurier University Press · 1 January 2006 English

How are Baptists distinctive as a Christian denomination? Canadian Baptists, confronted with the question of discovering a common identity from the welter of strands of influence that make up their …

orientation (Germans, Scandinavians, Ukrainians, Czechoslovaks, Hungarians) who began to immigrate in the late


UTP: University of Toronto Press · 2002 English

With the tumultuous thirty-day strikeof 1931 by miners in Bienfait, Saskatchewan as his focus, Stephen Endiciott explores the social consequences of capitalist restructuring during the Great Depression.

Europe - Lithuanians, Poles, Ukraini- ans, Czechoslovaks, and others who made up about 30 per cent of


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 2002 English

In The Lonely Cold War of Pope Pius XII Peter Kent shows how the Catholic Church was able to continue to exist on both sides of the Iron Curtain in …

victims of nazism – followed by the Austrians, Czechoslovaks, Poles, and so forth. While Nazi party membership


Wilson Center Canada · 23 March 1999 English

Parrish The Turn Toward Confrontation: The Soviet Reaction to the Marshall Plan, 1947 Introduction 1 Prelude: The Future of Europe and the Failure of the Moscow Conference 5 Initial Soviet …

Molotov’s departure from Paris, the Poles and the Czechoslovaks continued to show interest in participating embassy in Prague reported to Washington that the Czechoslovaks appeared “extremely anxious to participate in forming an anti-Soviet alliance, Stalin told the Czechoslovaks that for the USSR, Prague’s decision to participate attempt to form a bloc against the USSR. The Czechoslovaks, of course, both because of the power disparities those made by Stalin in his meeting with the Czechoslovaks, and had probably been transmitted to the Poles


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