yes. it has split into the czech (pronounced 'check') republic and slovakia.
The old answer didn't answer the question at all, so I deleted it.What you are most likely referring to is the tetrarchy (from Greek, meaning "rule of four") instituted by Diocletian in 293CE. It didn't last very long (by 313CE there were only two "emperors" left), so perhaps that is why not many people know or talk about it.
france and japan
The seize of Vicksburg, because it gave to the Union full control over the Mississippi River and split into two parts the Confederacy.
No. Diocletian split the Roman Empire.
Constantine split the Roman Empire into the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire. It should be noted however that the emperor Diocletian (284-305 AD ) made this easier as he was the first to divide the empire into two parts, a western and eastern empire to be ruled separately. The emperors who followed Constantine, Julian and Theodosius I, made permanent the division of the Roman Empire into an eastern and western half.
it has been split into two countries one called the Czech republic the other called Slovakia.
They split into Czech Republic and Slovakia. I'm not totally sure on this but I thought it was in 1993.
No. In 1993 Czechoslovakia split into two countries, the Czech republic and Slovakia. Both of those countries are democratic countries.
No, Czechoslovakia is no longer a country. It split into two separate independent countries, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, on January 1, 1993.
TURKEY AND RUSSIA
no
China split into two nations when the Republic of China was established in 1912 under the rule of Sun Yat-sen in the Xinhai Revolution. The two states of China are the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China.
East/West
Czechoslovakia is no longer a country. In 1992, the country peacefully split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Both these countries are associated with Central, or sometimes Eastern, Europe.
Appeasement's the word you're looking for.
It is Prague.
Czechoslovakia split into two countries in 1993: the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The peaceful separation resulted in the dissolution of the federal state of Czechoslovakia and the emergence of two independent nations.