Czech Republic. It's bigger and it has always been a way stronger country than Slovakia.
The historic lands of the modern Czech Republic have been known by many names throughout its long history. Although the Czech Republic was only founded in 1989 after the Velvet Revolution, it has a long and complex history. The historic Czech crownlands include, Bohemia, Moravia, Upper and Lower Lusatia and Silesia. These were the names that would be used to identify the lands of the Czech people throughout most of its early history from 1100 ad to 1526, when the Hapsburg Dynasty acended to the throne of the Kindgom of Bohemia. It would be known as such until the 1st World War, after which what is now known as Slovakia, Sub Carpathian Ukraine, and the Modern day Czech Republic where combined to form the First Republic of Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia split in 1938, when Nazi troops invaded. Due to Slovakia's compliance, it was granted status as a republic, while the Czech state was split into the Protectorates of Bohemia and Moravia. After the war, CZechoslovakia would be reunited, but after the communist coup, it was known as the Czech Socialist Republic until 1990. Czechoslovakia formally plit in 1993, forming the modern day Czech state.
Czechoslovakia was independent during the Cold War. It was an independent country from 1918 to 1939, and again from 1945 to 1992. On 1st January 1993 it divided into two countries, The Czech Republic and Slovakia.
The Carthagian general Hannibal Barca.
I believe it was Czechoslovakia, which split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
Czechoslovakia, Serbia, Austria, Czech Republic.
they would find better life there in Texas
Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic
After WW0, but before 2012, because the world doesn't exist after that
The two key statesmen involved in creating a new nation, the Republic of Czechslovakia were Czech diplomats and political experts named Masaryk and Benes.
1. Czechoslovakia first became a nation-state at the end of World War 1 (1918) by breaking away from the collapsing Austro-Hungarian Empire. They had very able lobbyists at the Paris Peace Conference and managed to secure large areas of territory that had very few Czechs or Slovaks. 2. The country was dismembered by Germany and Hungary in 1938-39 but reunited in 1945. 3. Following the Velvet Revolution of 1989, the Czech Republic and Slovakia 'divorced' with effect from 1993.
In the start of world war 2 Germany invaded Poland but before that it also "stole" other neighbouring countries' land like Czech's