- Slovak Soviet Republic
-
Slovak Soviet Republic
Slovenská republika rád
Szlovák TanácsköztársaságPuppet state of Hungarian Soviet Republic ←
←1919 → Capital Prešov Language(s) Slovak, Hungarian Government Soviet socialist republic Chairman of the Revolutionary Government Council Antonín Janoušek Historical era Interwar period - Proclamation of independent socialist state of Slovakia by secular organization of Communist party in Prešov June 16, 1919 - Military intervention (though just "home police action" - area de jure belonged to Czechoslovakia) in order to dissolve group due to illegality of such action July 7, 1919 History of Slovakia
This article is part of a seriesRoman era Lombard State Medieval Slavic states Samo's Empire Principality of Nitra Great Moravia Slavic Pannonian State Medieval Kingdom of Hungary
(10th century-1526)Domain of Máté Csák Domain of Amade Aba Ottoman Empire
(16th-17th century)Uyvar Eyalet Budin Eyalet Eğri Eyalet Principality of Transylvania Principality of Imre Thököly Habsburg Monarchy
(1526-1918)Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary Slovak Uprising
(1848-1849)Military District of Preßburg Military District of Kaschau Czechoslovakia Slovaks in Czechoslovakia
(1918–1938)Slovak People's Republic
(1919)Slovak Soviet Republic
(1919)Slovak Republic
(1939–1945)Slovak National Uprising
(1944)Slovaks in Czechoslovakia
(1960–1990)Slovak Socialist Republic (1969–1990) Velvet Revolution
(1989)modern Slovakia Slovak Republic
Slovakia Portal
The Slovak Soviet Republic (Slovak: Slovenská republika rád, Hungarian: Szlovák Tanácsköztársaság, literally: "Slovak Republic of Councils" - the name originated before the Russian word soviet (council) became widespread in Slovak and other languages) comprised a very short-lived communist state in south and eastern Slovakia from 16 June to 7 July 1919, with its capital in Prešov,[1] and headed by the Czech journalist Antonín Janoušek.
After the conclusion of World War I in 1918, Czechoslovakia begun occupying the area in accordance with the preliminary peace settlements. However, Slovakia (Upper Hungary) was preemptively occupied by Red Guards from the Hungarian Soviet Republic, who set up the Slovak Soviet Republic as a puppet regime. Following a brief war between Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Romania, Slovakia was fully restored into Czechoslovakia and the Hungarian Soviet Republic was wholly occupied by Romania.
See also
- Hungarian Soviet Republic (Councils Republic of Hungary)
References
Timeline of Czechoslovak statehood Timeline Origins
pre-1918The First Republic
1918 – 1938World War II
1938 – 19451945 – 1948 Coup d'état
1948 – 1989Velvet Revolution
1989 – 1992Dissolution
1993 –Bohemia
Moravia
& Silesiacrown lands of the Austrian Empire First
Czechoslovak Republic
(ČSR, 1918 – 1938)
Full boundaries and government established by the 1920 constitutionSudetenland
annexed by Nazi Germany
(1938 – 1945)Third
Czechoslovak Republic
(ČSR, 1945 – 1948)Czechoslovak Republic
(ČSR, 1948 – 1960)
Declared a people's democracy (without a formal name change) under the Ninth-of-May Constitution following the 1948 coupCzechoslovak Socialist Republic
(ČSSR, 1960 – 1989)Czech and Slovak Federal Republic
(ČSFR, 1990 – 1992)Czech Republic
Czechia
(since 1993)Second
Czechoslovak Republic
(ČSR, 1938 – 1939)
Including the autonomous regions of Slovakia and Carpathian RutheniaProtectorate of Bohemia and Moravia
(1939 – 1945)After the Prague Spring, consisted of:
Czech Socialist Republic
(ČSR, 1969 – 1992)
Slovak Socialist Republic
(SSR, 1969 – 1992)
Socialist dropped from names in 1990Slovakia territory of the
Kingdom of HungarySlovak Republic
(1939 – 1945)Slovak Republic
Slovakia
(since 1993)Southern Slovakia and Carpatho-Ukraine
Annexed by: Hungary
(1939 – 1945)Carpathian Ruthenia Zakarpattia Oblast of the Ukrainian SSR
(1944/1946 – 1991)Zakarpattia Oblast of Ukraine
(since 1991)see: Austria-Hungary Czechoslovak government-in-exile Categories:- Former polities of the Interwar period
- Former countries in Europe
- States and territories established in 1919
- States and territories disestablished in 1919
- History of Slovakia
- Puppet states
- 1919 disestablishments
- Communist revolutions
- Early Soviet republics
- Former Slavic countries
- European history stubs
- Slovakia stubs
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