Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I Introductory survey: On the limits of modern history
- CHAPTER II The transformation of social life
- CHAPTER III The world economy: Interdependence and planning
- CHAPTER IV Science and technology
- CHAPTER V Diplomatic history 1900–1912
- CHAPTER VI The approach of the war of 1914
- CHAPTER VII The first world war
- CHAPTER VIII The peace settlement of Versailles 1918–1933
- CHAPTER IX The League of Nations
- CHAPTER X The Middle East 1900–1945
- CHAPTER XI INDIA AND SOUTH-EAST ASIA
- CHAPTER XII China, Japan and the Pacific 1900–1931
- CHAPTER XIII The British Commonwealth of Nations
- CHAPTER XIV The Russian Revolution
- CHAPTER XV The Soviet Union 1917–1939
- CHAPTER XVI Germany, Italy and eastern Europe
- Austria-Hungary 1900–1914
- The Balkan Peninsula
- Italy 1900–1914
- The aftermath of the first world war
- The Great Depression: Hitler becomes German chancellor
- ‘Gleichschaltung’ in Germany and Austria
- Czechoslovakia 1929–1938
- The attack upon Poland expands into a second world war
- CHAPTER XVII Great Britain, France, The Low Countries and Scandinavia
- CHAPTER XVIII The United States of America
- CHAPTER XIX Latin America
- CHAPTER XX Literature 1895–1939
- CHAPTER XXI PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
- CHAPTER XXII PAINTING, SCULPTURE AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER XXIII Diplomatic history 1930–1939
- CHAPTER XXIV The second world war
- CHAPTER XXV Diplomatic history of the second world war
Czechoslovakia 1929–1938
from CHAPTER XVI - Germany, Italy and eastern Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I Introductory survey: On the limits of modern history
- CHAPTER II The transformation of social life
- CHAPTER III The world economy: Interdependence and planning
- CHAPTER IV Science and technology
- CHAPTER V Diplomatic history 1900–1912
- CHAPTER VI The approach of the war of 1914
- CHAPTER VII The first world war
- CHAPTER VIII The peace settlement of Versailles 1918–1933
- CHAPTER IX The League of Nations
- CHAPTER X The Middle East 1900–1945
- CHAPTER XI INDIA AND SOUTH-EAST ASIA
- CHAPTER XII China, Japan and the Pacific 1900–1931
- CHAPTER XIII The British Commonwealth of Nations
- CHAPTER XIV The Russian Revolution
- CHAPTER XV The Soviet Union 1917–1939
- CHAPTER XVI Germany, Italy and eastern Europe
- Austria-Hungary 1900–1914
- The Balkan Peninsula
- Italy 1900–1914
- The aftermath of the first world war
- The Great Depression: Hitler becomes German chancellor
- ‘Gleichschaltung’ in Germany and Austria
- Czechoslovakia 1929–1938
- The attack upon Poland expands into a second world war
- CHAPTER XVII Great Britain, France, The Low Countries and Scandinavia
- CHAPTER XVIII The United States of America
- CHAPTER XIX Latin America
- CHAPTER XX Literature 1895–1939
- CHAPTER XXI PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS THOUGHT
- CHAPTER XXII PAINTING, SCULPTURE AND ARCHITECTURE
- CHAPTER XXIII Diplomatic history 1930–1939
- CHAPTER XXIV The second world war
- CHAPTER XXV Diplomatic history of the second world war
Summary
At first Czechoslovakia was not seriously affected by the Great Depression: her finances were sound: she was fairly self-sufficient. The population, at any rate in Bohemia and Moravia, was reasonably well educated, and the constitution worked satisfactorily. Here in the 'twenties there seemed to be the new twentieth-century society freed of an alien aristocracy. Life in Prague competed with that in Berlin and Vienna; the intellectuals had the same strong bias to the left and their own special relationship with the Russians—life was less brilliant than in Berlin but a little saner, less isolated from its hinterland. An interesting figure of the day was Kafka's Milena. Before 1914 she had been a revolutionary Czech schoolgirl thirsting for national independence. Then there was Kafka and his early death; after translating his novels she became a literary journalist and a focus of Czech intellectual life. In the later ’twenties not only the Prague Jews but some of the other Bohemian Germans began to settle down to acceptance of the Czechoslovak Republic: Beneš's activities at the League of Nations —the Czechoslovak Foreign Minister presided over the Assembly of the League of Nations on the day of Germany's admission in September 1926 —added to its standing.
Their own circumstances and temperament made it difficult for the Czechs, whether Masaryk and Beneš or the general public, to grasp what began to happen all round them in the ’thirties. Stalin had chosen the path of despotism already in 1928.
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- The New Cambridge Modern History , pp. 499 - 502Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1968