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2010 | 58 | 3 | 439-469

Article title

VOJENSKÝ ZÁSAH ÚSTREDNEJ VLÁDY NA SLOVENSKU 9. – 11. MARCA 1939

Title variants

EN
Military intervention of the central government in Slovakia on 9-11th March 1939

Languages of publication

SK

Abstracts

EN
The military intervention of the Prague central government in Slovakia during the days from 9 to 11th March, 1939 was intended to prevent the internal disintegration of Czechoslovakia. It would achieve this by replacing the autonomous government of J. Tiso and limiting the separatist tendencies of the radical members of Hlinka's Slovak People's Party and the paramilitary Hlinka Guard. However, the military coup was not thoroughly prepared from the military, political or propaganda points of view. After the initial successes of the Czech gendarmes, who penetrated into Slovakia in the evening on March 9, the Hlinka Guard began to organize resistance and present the coup as an attempt to reverse the results of the Act on the Autonomy of the Slovak Region from November 2, 1938 and return to the centralist regime in Slovakia. In the struggle for public opinion, the Prague government could not convince the public about its intentions, and pressure from the People's Party and Hlinka Guard forced it to hand over power to the political representatives of the Slovak region in the afternoon on March 11. During the evening President E. Hacha appointed K. Sidor as the new premier of the autonomous government. Sidor began to work on political consolidation. He enforced the release of imprisoned members of the Hlinka Guard and representatives of the People's Party. He also forced the government in Prague to make various political concessions, which increased the legal powers of the autonomous government in Bratislava. The military intervention in Slovakia worsened relations between the Czechs and Slovaks. Adolf Hitler used the situation to achieve the internal break up of the republic. Berlin unambiguously supported the demand for the creation of a Slovak state. The Parliament of the Slovak Region declared an independent state on March 14, 1939. This began the process of internal disintegration of Czechoslovakia, which led to the occupation of Sub-Carpathian Ruthenia by Hungary and the occupation of Bohemia and Moravia by Nazi Germany on March 15.

Discipline

Year

Volume

58

Issue

3

Pages

439-469

Physical description

Document type

ARTICLE

Contributors

  • PhDr. Valerian Bystricky, DrSc., Historicky ustav SAV, Klemensova 19, 813 64 Bratislava, Slovak Republic

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

CEJSH db identifier
11SKAAAA097014

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.886e11c9-9e0f-331f-93cc-55e792cdb41c
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