In November 1938, under the
First Vienna Award, which resulted from the
Munich Agreement,
Nazi Germany and
Fascist Italy prevailed on the
Second Czechoslovak Republic to cede the southern third of Slovakia and southern Carpathian Ruthenia to the
Kingdom of Hungary. Between 14 and 15 March 1939, the
Slovak Republic declared its independence while Nazi Germany
occupied Bohemia and Moravia creating the
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. On 15 March, Carpatho-Ukraine declared its independence as the Republic of Carpatho-Ukraine, with the Reverend
Avhustyn Voloshyn as head of state. Hungary immediately occupied and annexed the new republic. The remnants of the Czechoslovak Army abandoned the newly-formed republic, and Carpatho-Ukraine tried to defend itself by local self-defence groups, organised by the
Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists as
Carpathian Sich. On 18 March, resistance to the invasion ended. On 23 March, Hungary annexed further parts of eastern Slovakia west of Carpatho-Rus. The Hungarian invasion was followed by a few weeks of terror in which more than 27,000 people were shot dead without trial and investigation. The territory covered by the Governorate of Subcarpathia was divided into three, the administrative branch offices of Ung (
Ungi közigazgatási kirendeltség), Bereg (
Beregi közigazgatási kirendeltség) and Máramaros (
Máramarosi közigazgatási kirendeltség), having
Hungarian and the
Rusyn language as official languages.
Persecution of the Jewish population Beginning in 1939, the anti Jewish laws passed in Hungary were extended to the newly-annexed territories, including the rest of Carpathian Ruthenia. Then in the summer of 1941, Hungarian authorities deported about 24,000 Jews from Carpathian Ruthenia to the
Galician area of the occupied
Ukraine under the guise of expelling alien refugees, but in practice most of those expelled were from families that had lived in the region for the previous 50–100 years, but their legal identification was problematic because of the numerous change of status quo. Also, the laws and regulations did not help them confirm their former Hungarian citizenship. Later, most of the deportees were handed over to German
Einsatzgruppen units at
Kaminets Podolsk and machine-gunned over a three-day period in September 1941. A few thousand of the deportees never reached the massacre site but were instead abandoned in Galicia, in towns close to the massacre site such as Mielnitza-Podolsk (Mielnica). These deportees were forced to live in German-occupied Galicia and suffered the same fate as the Jews who were native to the area. Only a handful of these deportees survived until liberation by Soviet soldiers in summer of 1944. Hungarian authorities conscripted Jewish men of working age into
slave labor gangs in which a high proportion perished. In March 1944,
Operation Margarethe had German forces overthrow the Hungarian government and install
Döme Sztójay as prime minister. In April 1944, 17 main ghettos were set up in cities in Ruthenia. 144,000 Jews were rounded up and held there. Starting on 15 May 1944, Jews were taken out of these sites to
Auschwitz every day until the last deportation on 7 June 1944. By June 1944, nearly all the Jews from ghettos of Carpathian Ruthenia had been exterminated, together with other Hungarian Jews. Of more than 100,000 Jews from Carpathian Ruthenia, around 90,000 were murdered. == Transcarpathian Ukraine ==