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Former country in eastern central Europe, which came into existence as an independent republic in 1918 after the break-up of the
AustroHungarian empire at the end of World War I. It consisted originally of the Bohemian crown lands (
Bohemia,
Moravia, and part of
Silesia) and
Slovakia, the area of Hungary inhabited by Slavonic peoples; to this was added as a trust, part of Ruthenia when the Allies and associated powers recognized the new republic under the treaty of St Germain-en-Laye. Besides the Czech and Slovak peoples, the country included substantial minorities of German origin, long settled in the north, and of Hungarian (or Magyar) origin in the south. Despite the problems of welding into a nation such a mixed group of people, Czechoslovakia made considerable political and economic progress until the troubled 1930s. It was the only East European state to retain a parliamentary democracy throughout the interwar period, with five coalition governments (dominated by the Agrarian and National Socialist parties), with Tomas
Masaryk serving as president.
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