Abstract
The history of the position adopted by the Germans towards the state during the first years of the Czechoslovak republic has been dealt with in many ways, often in a more or less biased form. But the position assumed by the German Social Democratic Party toward the state is not usually understood. It has often been pointed out that the German social democrats formed, together with the other German parties, a government in the north of Bohemia and demanded the separation of the German-speaking territories from the new republic and their incorporation into German-Austria or Germany.
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Notes
Emil Franzel, ‘Tschechen und Deutsche in anderthalb Jahrtausenden’, in Arbeiterjahrbuch (1938) p. 44.
Karl Renner, Das nationale und oekonomische Problem der Tschechoslowakei (Prague, 1926) p. 9.
Dr. František Soukup, 28. Říljen, vol. 2 (Prague, 1938) p. 1185.
Dr. Emanual Rádl, Der Kampf zwischen Tschechen und Deutschen (Reichenberg, 1928) p. 177.
J. W. Brügel, Ludwig Czech (Vienna, 1960) p. 87; Klepetar, Seit 1918, p. 185.
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© 1992 International Council for Soviet and East European Studies, and John Morison
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Hahn, F. (1992). The German Social Democratic Party of Czechoslovakia, 1918–1926. In: Morison, J. (eds) The Czech and Slovak Experience. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22241-4_12
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22241-4_12
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