Slavonic Ideas and Political Variations in the Relationship of the Slovaks to Moscow (1934 – 1949) Cover Image

Slavonic Ideas and Political Variations in the Relationship of the Slovaks to Moscow (1934 – 1949)
Slavonic Ideas and Political Variations in the Relationship of the Slovaks to Moscow (1934 – 1949)

Author(s): Dagmar Čierna-Lantayová
Subject(s): History
Published by: Historický ústav SAV
Keywords: General history; USSR; Czechoslovak Republic; Slovak state; Political ideas; Slovak-Russian relations

Summary/Abstract: In the period 1934 – 1949, not only the real international situation, but to a large extent also political illusions were reflected in the relationship of the Slovaks to Russia. The alliance between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union in 1935 also had the support of Slovak members of the ruling circles in Prague. The orientation to Nazi Germany determined the foreign policy of the Slovak state from March 1939. The pact between Berlin and Moscow briefly opened the possibility of diplomatic relations between Slovakia and Russia. The entry of Slovakia to the anti-Soviet war on the side of Nazi Germany changed the political priorities. The anti-fascist elements in the illegal resistance took over the initiative in relations with Moscow. From the anti-fascist uprising in Slovakia, through the political developments in the first post-war years, the Slovak communists replaced spontaneous sympathy for Slavonic Russia with organized “love for the Soviet Union”.

  • Issue Year: 2009
  • Issue No: Supplement
  • Page Range: 41-74
  • Page Count: 34
  • Language: English
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