[Home]History of Sudeten

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Revision 3 . . (edit) October 2, 2001 1:48 pm by Damian Yerrick [fixed muchos typos and made it diff-friendly]
Revision 2 . . October 2, 2001 12:45 pm by J Hofmann Kemp [just a few changes...]
Revision 1 . . October 2, 2001 11:39 am by (logged).77.88.xxx
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 3c3,7
The Sudeten Mountains are in Bohemia (Boehmen). The German people who lived in these Sudeten mountains and surrounding areas were called Bohemia-Germans ("Boehmen-Deutsche").
The Sudeten Mountains are in Bohemia, which was once arguably attached to the Frankish kingdoms ruled by the Carolingians via a tributary relationship.
The people who lived there in the ninth and tenth centuries were mostly Slavs.
It was an independent Kingdom during the early modern period, where there was the normal interbreeding between local Slavic rulers and the rest of Europe's ruling families
(that same interbreeding that later put a bunch of Germanic types on the English throne, and made a Battenburg a Greek prince.)
Later, the Austro-Hungarian Empire absorbed it.

Changed: 5,7c9,12
AThe 1919/20 Treaty of Versailles forced these Germans, who had lived in the Holy Roman Empire state of Bohemia for over a 1000 years , now to live in the Slavic run state of Czechoslowakia . The Frankish and Holy Roman Empire had been governed by emperors and kings . The emperors, kings and queens ruled as fathers and mothers of the land.

The newly and artifically created state of Czechoslowakia was ruled by dictatorial Communists and Pan-Slavists? .
Because of the constant movement of peoples in response to the changing boundaries resulting from regular warfare and re-drawing of boundaries that plagued Central Europe from the Middle Ages to the present time,
an enclave of German people ended up living in these Sudeten mountains and surrounding areas. Their occupancy has continued through the establishment of the state of Czechoslovakia and later, through the division of that state into its successor republics, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
Hitler used the excuse of a native German population in the Sudetenland as one of his excuses for his invasion of that area.
These people are sometimes known as Bohemia-Germans ("Boehmen-Deutsche").

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