Jana Skerlova 3a8687cbb6_17252391_o2.jpg žDuring the WW I – exile Polish National Comittee – Roman Dmowski – the spokesman for Polish nationalism in the Allied camp žAfter german victory on the Eastern front the Russian-ruled territory of Poland was occupied by German troops – The Kingdom of Poland consisting of German, Austrian and Russian part of Poland was established in 1916 – German puppet state – Mitteleuropa scheme žMore than 1 000 000 of Poles died during the WW I žDecember 1918 – The Greater Poland Uprising – against Germany, with the centre in the city of Poznan, succesfull žthe Treaty of Versailles granted a reconstituted Poland the area won by the Polish uprising plus some additional territory, most of which had been part of Poland before the partitions (from the end of 18th century) žthe Republic of Poland was reestablished in 1918 žhe independence of Poland was one of the war goals of the Allies (it was mentioned in President Wilson’s Fourteen Points) žThe western Polish borders and the borders in Baltic area were ratified by the Treaty of Versailles while the eastern and southern borders were not. ž ž žRepublic of Poland and its neighboring states after WW 1. Rzeczpospolita_1938_popisky.png ž27 milion of inhabitants in 1921 (35 milion in 1939) žMultinational country - one third of its population were national minorities •Ukrainians – 14 % •Jews – 10 % (by 1931 Poland had the biggest Jewish population in the world – over 3 milion people) •Belarusians – 3 % •Germans – 2 % •Others (Czechs, Lithuanians, Russians) – 3 % • ž1919 – the first elections to the Sejm (parliament) ž1921 – the March Constitution žThe Republic of Poland was a parliamentary democracy form 1919 till 1926 žMain political parties – National Democrats, Peasant Parties, Christian Democrats ž žSeveral regional conflicts with neigboring states – border disputes: vPolish- Lithuanian War – spring 1919 – November 1920 •April 1919 – Poland captured Vilnius •1922 – annexation of Vilnius (Vilno) Region from Lithuania •The dispute over Vilnius remained one of the biggest foreign policy issues in Lithuania and Poland. •Lithuania broke off all diplomatic relations with Poland and refused any actions that would recognize Poland’s control of Vilnius. v1918 – 1919 – Polish – Ukrainian War •A conflict between Polish republic and West Ukrainian People’s Republic for control over Eastern Galicia (ex Austro-Hungarian province with the centre in the town of Lviv). •1st November 1918 - West Ukrainian People’s Republic was proclaimed in former Habsburg provinces of Galicia and Bukovina •The local Poles wanted to rule over this territory – the war conflict broke out •Poland won this war and the territory was annexed by Poland – national conflicts •Approximately 10,000 Poles and 15,000 Ukrainians, mostly soldiers, died during this war. ž vSeven day war – January 1919 •A border conflict with Czechoslovakia for the territory of Těšin (Cieszyn in Silesia), Orava and Spiš (nothern Slovakia) •Czechoslovak units attacked the Polish part of Cieszyn Silesia to prevent the Polish elections in the contested territory •Great strategic importance of the region – coal mining basin and the important railroad connecting the Czech lands with Slovakia •The Czechoslovak attack was halted under the pressure from the Entente •a new demarcation line – the western part of the disputed territory was given to Czechoslovakia while Poland received the eastern part •Czechoslovak-Polish relations were not very good during the whole interwar period ž v1919 – 1921 – Polish-Soviet War •Soviet Russia wanted to govern the territory of Belarus and the areas of western Ukraine •Poland wanted to use Russian civil war to ensure its eastern borders •Firstly the Polish army was succesfull ( Marshall Jozef Piłsudski) •but later Soviet counteroffensive – they wanted to establish Soviet Republic in Poland and marched into Polish inland •August 1920 – the battle of Warsaw - the Soviet troops were defeated •September 1920 – the battle of Niemen river – the Polish troops won again •March 1921 – the Peace Treaty of Riga – Poland got parts of Belarus and Ukraine (4 millions of Ukrainians and 1 million of Belarussians in Poland) •The rest of Ukraine and Belarus became a part of the Soviet Union •The Peace Treaty of Riga left significant territories populated by Poles within the Soviet Union – almost 1 million of Poles living at the territory of the Soviet Russia (During the 1930s many of them were deported to Siberia) •While the Treaty of Riga led to a two-decade stabilization of the Soviet-Polish conflict, the conflict was renewed during World War II ž žMany problems in Poland – economy exhausted by the war, problems with unifying of disparate economic regions, which had previously been part of different countries žThe chief parties were the left-wing Polish Peasant Party led by Piłsudski and the national Democracy Party led by Roman Dmowski žWeak and inexperienced government had to face many problems. žSince June 1925 – trade war with Germany žOctober 1925 – Treaty of Locarno – Polish foreign minister Józef Beck said: "Germany was officially asked to attack the east, in return for peace in the west." žThe situation resulted in the May Coup d’État in 1926 – it was led by leftist politician and a popular Marshall Jozef Piłsudski žhe became most influential politician in Poland and became its de facto dictator till his death in 1935 though he was not a president but only a Minister of defence žSo called Sanation Government – its aim was the“moral healing“ of the Polish policy, the coalition rightist, leftist and centrists whose main focus was to eliminate the corruption and reduce the inflation žauthoritarian means ž1932 – non-agression pact with Soviet Union žOctober 1938 – the First Vienna Award – annexation of Zaolzie, Górna Orawa, Jaworzyna from Czechoslovakia žMarch 31, 1939: military guarantees from United Kingdom and France žAugust 23, 1939: non-aggression pact between Soviet Union and Germany: Ribbentrop-Molotow Pact with a secret military alliance protocol targeting Poland žJozef Piłsudski and other coup leaders Piłsudski_May_1926.jpg Polska-ww1-nation.png žSeptember 1 – October 6, 1939: German Invasion of Poland žPoland attacked by Nazi Germany without declaring war on Poland ž17th September – USSR attacked Poland and occupied eastern part of Poland žso called New Partition of Poland – western part under German Reich, central part – General Gouvernement (with the capital city of Krakow) – the head Hans Frank, žeastern part – occupied by USSR žmany concentration camps in Poland – Auschwitz, Majdanek, Sobibor, Treblinka ... žsegregation of Jews – a big ghetto in Warsaw – from April to May 1943 – Warsaw Ghetto Uprising žof Poland’s prewar Jewish population of 3 million, only about 369,000 survived the war žPolish resistance movement – Polish goverment in exile with Władysław Sikorski as Prime Minister, in Poland the Home Army (Armia Krajowa) and the Peoples Army (Armia Ludowa) ž žReadings: •Davies, Norman: The God’s Playground. A history of Poland. Volume II (1795 to present). Columbia University Press 1982. •Rothschild, Joseph: Pilsudski's Coup D'État. Columbia University Press 1967. •Rothschild, Joseph: East Central Europe Between the Two World Wars. Columbia University Press 1974. •Frucht, Richard (ed.): Eastern Europe: an introduction to the people, lands and culture. ABC- Clio, Inc. Santa Barbara, USA 2005. žThe First Czechoslovak republic was proclaimed on October 28, 1918 in Prague (Wenceslas Square). žA new era for two nations (Czechs and Slovaks) which had previously been part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire began. žCzechoslovakia consisted of: Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia žThe first Prime Minister – Karel Kramář ž1920 – the constitution (liberal) - plural parliament democracy žGeneral suffrage – free, direct and secret ballot, women suffrage since 1918 žPresident was elected by Parliament žin 1920 – Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk (1850–1937) was elected the first President (reelected in 1925 and 1929, served till 1935), he was a philosopher and a politician, very influential personality, his wife was American – Charlotte Garrigue, their son Jan Masaryk served later as Czechoslovak Foreign Minister žmost important and most influential political party - Peasant party, they ussually had a Prime Minister – Antonín Švehla in 1920s, Jan Malypetr and Milan Hodža in 1930s žSocial Democrats, Peoples Party, Communist Party žGerman parties – Social Democrats, Peasant Party žLand reform – the great estates of the nobility and the Church were distributed to the peasants žInternal problems – Slovak authonomist movement žAfter the war – economic problems but not so serious as in neighbouring countries žCzechoslovakia had developed industry žOne of the most progresive social-security and pension systems in Europe ž žThe first Czechoslovak republic consisted of: Bohemia, Moravia, Silesia, Slovakia and Carpathian Ruthenia (Sub-Carpathian Rus) 800px-Czechoslovakia01.png žProclamation of the first Czechoslovak Republic on October, 28 1918 in Prague (Wenceslaus Square). vaclavak.jpg žTomaš Garrigue Masaryk ž1st President of Czechoslovakia (1920–1935) žEdvard Beneš ž2nd President of Czechoslovakia (1935–1938, 1945–1948) tgm.jpg benes_edvard2.jpg žforeign policy – led by Minister Edvard Beneš from 1918 to 1935 – one of the most important European diplomats during the interwar period, in 1936 he was elected second President of Czechoslovakia žCzechoslovakia was faced with Hungarian demands for the return of parts of Slovakia žTo protect the borders the Little Entente was formed in 1921 žIt was an alliance of Czechoslovakia, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia) and Romania – against Hungary and its revanchism and against restoration of Habsburgs žLittle Entente was supported by France (1924 – Czechoslovak-French Agreement) žthe Little Entente was an idea of Czechoslovak Foreign Minister Edvard Beneš žIt was also an attmept to establish internationaly important organization with some influence in European politics. žThe most important Czechoslovak ally was France žsince 1925 – economic growth, cultural development žthe great depression since 1930 žsince 1933 – Czechoslovakia was threatened by Nazi Germany žCZE built border fortification ž1935 – mutual security pact with Soviet Union ž žCzechoslovakia + Yugoslavia + Rumania Little_Entente.png žCzechoslovak fortification – Hanička žhttp://www.hanicka.cz/ žCzechoslovak fortification – Bouda žhttp://www.boudamuseum.com/ Hanička.jpg 800px-Boudatvrz.jpg žMore than 3 million of ethnic Germans were living in Bohemian lands, they were called Sudeten Germans. oThe German minority living in Sudetenland demanded autonomy from the Czech government, claiming they were suppressed and repressed by the Czech government. o1938 - Munich Agreement o žOther national minorities in Czechoslovakia: o750 000 of Hungarians in southern Slovakia o450 000 of Ruthenians in Karpathian Ruthenia o75 000 of Poles oJews, Gypsies ž žThere was a numerous German minortity in Czechoslovakia, Sudeten German Party with the leader Konrad Henlein was established in 1935 ž1935 – Parliamentary elections, the newly founded Sudeten German Party under leadership of Konrad Henlein, financed with Nazi money, won an upset victory, securing over 2/3 of the Sudeten German vote, which worsened the diplomatic relations between the Germans and the Czechs. ž žhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cS5GglsNKyo ž žApril 1938 – Karlsbader Decrees demanding the authonomy for Sudeten Germans and the freedom to profess Nazi ideology, Sudeten Germans expected that President Beneš will refuse their exaggerated requirments žCzechoslovak government was forced to coclude an agreement with Henlein but he refused all their suggestions according to Hitler’s instructions žHitler accused Czechoslovak government of „oppresing“ the Greman minority and demanded ceding of the Sudetenland to Germany žCzechoslovak Govermnent responded that Germany had no legal claims to that region žGreat powers – Great Britain, France – were affraid of the new war → politics of appeassement ž ž žAppeasement – a diplomatic policy of making political or material concessions to an enemy power in order to avoid conflict žseveral negotiations on Czechoslovakia between Hitler and British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain during September 1938 •15th September – Berchtesgaden – Great powers were putting pressure on Czechoslovak government to accept Hilter´s requirments – he wanted Sudeten, firstly Czechoslovak government refused British and French pressure but on 21st September was forced to accept Hitler´s requirments •22nd September – Bad Godesberg – new Hitler´s requirments – he wanted to occupy Czechoslovak fortification and some border areas for Poland and Hungary ž žHitler announced that he would attack Czechoslovakia on 28th September (according to the Fall Grün prepared already in April 1938) • ž cr-pohranici.gif žSudetenland – the areas inhabited by Germans in Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia during the interwar period žchange of the government in Czechoslovakia – Prime Minister General Syrový ž23rd September – general mobilization in Czechoslovakia ž žhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvQMjamGjI8 ž ž29th to 30th September – negotiations of four Great powers in Munich ž (Germany – Hitler, Italy – Mussolini, Great Britain – Chamberlain, France – Daladier) – about Czechoslovak frontiers and German requirments but without Czechoslovakia – France and Great Britain were Czechoslovak allies but they signed the agreement with the enemy: the Munich Agreement žCzechoslovakia(Czechoslovak troops) had to evacuate Sudeten and cede it to Germany žthe USSR did not reply for the Czechoslovak application for the help žfrom 1st to 10th October Czechoslovak borderland was occupied by German troops and annexed to Germany, Poland got the area around Těšín and Spiš, Hungary got Carpathian Ruthenia and southern parts of Slovakia žThe Munich agreement shatterd Czechoslovakia’s democratic system and created profound disillusionment with the West žThe great powers were convinced that they had „saved the peace for our time“ (Neville Chamberlain) ž žhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zLR0Vt2sXWQ ž žChamberlain, Daladier, Hitler, Mussolini and Ciano pictured before signing the Munich Agreement (from left to right) Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-R69173,_Münchener_Abkommen,_Staatschefs.jpg 800px-Czechoslovakia_1939.SVG.png žCzechoslovakia lost 1/3 of its area, 1/3 of light industry ž in southern Slovakia fertile soil important for agriculture was lost žthe First Czechoslovak republic was dissoluted žso called Second Czecho-Slovak Republic was proclaimed - till March 1939 – President Emil Hácha žno parliamentary democracy anymore ž7th October – autonomy of Slovakia was proclaimed – Czecho–Slovakia ž ž ž13th March 1939 – Slovak Prime Minister Jozef Tiso was invited into Berlin – he was made to enforce the separation of Slovakia ž14th March 1939 – Slovak State was separated from Czecho-Slovakia, formally was independent but really the satelite of Nazi Germany ž14th March 1939 – President Hácha and Foreign Minister Chvalkovský were invited to Berlin – Hitler threatened with bombing of Prague – they were forced to sign the document asking Germany for protection what was in fact forced capitulations ž15th March 1939 – German army occupied Bohemia and Moravia – dissolution of Second Czechoslovak Republic ž16th March 1939 – the occupants proclaimed Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia žit was part of German Reich, formaly autonomous state with so called State President Emil Hácha and Prime Minister Rudolf Beran žbut the real power was in hands of Reichsprotektor Konstantin von Neurath and later Reinhard Heydrich žCzech administrations and economy entirely subjected to the German war machine žMany Czech political and cultural leaders were imprisoned or executed žJews were dismissed from the civil service and placed in an extralegal position žSpecial concentrations camps for Jews and Romas - Terezín žthe Czechs launched secret resistance movement to Nazi occupation žCzechoslovak Government in exile in London (President in exile Edvard Beneš, Prime Minister – Jan Šrámek) žmass demonstrations in October 28, 1939 – an anniversary of establishing of Czechoslovakia – one student Vojtěch Sedláček was shot to death and the second one – Jan Opletal was seriously injured and died later, his funeral on 15th November became a new mass manifestation against nazism žthe Nazis started an intervention against students on 17th November 1939 – 9 students were executed, 1200 of them deported into concentration camp in Sachsenhausen žall the Universities in Protectorate were closed (→ November 17 is International Students’ Day) žTerror, omnipresent Gestapo ž1942 – Reichsprotector Reinhard Heydrich was mortaly wounded by two members of Czechoslovak Army Abroad who had been trained in Great Britain and then were parachuted into Bohemia žIn retaliation the Nazis executed thousands of Czech patriots and razed the town of Lidice to the ground, destroying its entire male pouplation, women were deported into the concentration camps and childern to „re-education“ to German Nazi families žAusgust 1944 – an armed uprising against Nazis erupted in central Slovakia – supressed ž ž ž žReadings: žTUMA, Oldrich – JINDRA, Jiri (eds.): Czechoslovakia and Romania in the Versailles System. Prague 2006. žLUKES, Igor: Czechoslovakia Between Stalin and Hitler: The Diplomacy of Edvard Beneš in the 1930s. New York1996. žLUKES, Igor – GOLSTEIN, Erich (eds.): The Munich Crisis, 1938: Prelude to WWII. London 1999. žVoráček, Emil and others: The Disintegration of Czechoslovakia in the end of 1930s. Policy in Central Europe. Prague 2009. ž žhttp://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/toc.html žhttp://www.radio.cz/en/static/october28/ ž žA movie: Paradisecamp (1986) – a documentary about Terezin concentration camp - written and directed by the Australians Paul Rean and Frank Heimans ž ž ž ž ž