EN
This paper discusses the issue of Slovakia during the period from 1918 to 1938, or more precisely 1939, which represents a set of requests, demands and concepts by Slovak political, economic and cultural representatives within the specific state-political environment of Czechoslovakia. The constitutional approval of Slovak autonomy, determined by the Pittsburgh Agreement, signed by representatives of both nations in May 1918 in the USA, is considered the basis of the solution to this issue throughout the entire period. Slovak members of parliament and senators, chiefly from Hlinka’s Slovak People’s Party (led by Andre Hlinka) and the Slovak Nationalist Party, present solutions to the issue of Slovakia to the National Congress throughout the entire period of the First Republic, without accepting the broader context of the actual, internal and foreign-political situation of the republic. Victory in the form of constitutional acknowledgment of the autonomous standing of Slovakia was achieved on 6 October 1938, at a time when some of the representatives were already considering an independent state however.