German Bohemia - History

History

Archaeologists have found evidence of Celtic and Boii migrations through the Bohemia in the 3rd century BC. Slavic people from the Black Sea-Carpathian region settled here in the 7-th century and the first German settlers came into the country in the High Middle Ages, they mainly settled in the less populated border region. Lands constituting German Bohemia were historically an integral part of the Duchy and Kingdom of Bohemia. Later with the imminent collapse of Habsburg Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I, areas of the Czech-majority Bohemia with an ethnic German majority began to take action to avoid joining a new Czechoslovak state. On 27 October 1918, the Egerland region declared independence from Bohemia and a day later the independence of Czechoslovakia was proclaimed in the Bohemian capital of Prague.

On 11 November 1918, Emperor Charles I of Austria relinquished power and, on 12 November, the ethnic German areas of the empire were declared the Republic of German Austria with the intent of unifying with Germany. The Province of German Bohemia (German: Provinz Deutschböhmen) was formed from the part of Bohemia containing the most ethnic Germans (however, ethnic German areas of southwestern Bohemia in the Bohemian Forest Region were added to Upper Austria instead of German Bohemia). The capital of the province was Liberec.

In late November 1918, the Czechoslovak army began an invasion of German Bohemia and during December it occupied the whole region, with Liberec falling on 16 December and the last major city, Litoměřice, falling on 27 December 1918.

The status of the German areas in Bohemia and Moravia was definitively settled by the 1919 peace treaties of Versailles and Saint-Germain-en-Laye, which declared that the areas belong to Czechoslovakia. The Czechoslovak Government then granted amnesty for all activities against the new state.

The region was then reintegrated into the Bohemian Land of the First Republic of Czechoslovakia and remained a part of it until the Nazi dismemberment of Czechoslovakia when it was added to Sudetenland. This unlawful act was marked by a wholesale flight of the Czech minority who had already experienced the violence of the Nazi-sponsored militia - the Sudetendeutsche Freikorps (SFK) - and were afraid to stay with their erstwhile German neighbours. After World War II, the area was returned to Czechoslovakia. Most of the remaining German population living in the region following the War were expelled from the country; many were killed or died during their flight from the attacking Czech and Soviet armies.

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