, with the text "God/Our Lord, watch over our grandfatherland/heritage" in 8 Slavic languages. The first Pan-Slavic convention was held in Prague on June 2 through 16, 1848. The delegates at the Congress were specifically both
anti-Austrian and
anti-Russian. Still "the Right"—the moderately liberal wing of the Congress—under the leadership of
František Palacký (1798–1876), a Czech historian and politician, and
Pavol Jozef Šafárik (1795–1861), a Slovak philologist, historian and archaeologist, favored autonomy of the Slav lands within the framework of Austrian (Habsburg) monarchy. In contrast "the Left"—the radical wing of the Congress—under the leadership of
Karel Sabina (1813–1877), a Czech writer and journalist,
Josef Václav Frič, a Czech nationalist,
Karol Libelt (1817–1861), a Polish writer and politician, and others, pressed for a close alliance with the revolutionary-democratic movement going on in Germany and Hungary in 1848. He expressed confidence in the
Russian Empire however, as it was the only country of Slavs that was not dominated by anybody else, yet it was one of the most powerful nations in the world. He often symbolized Slavs as being a tree, with "minor" Slavic nations being branches while the trunk of the tree was Russian. His Pan-Slavic views were unleashed in this book, where he stated that the land of Slovaks should be annexed by the Tsar's empire and that eventually, the population could be not only
Russified, but also converted into the rite of
Orthodoxy, religion originally spread by
Cyril and Methodius during the times of
Great Moravia, which served as an opposition to the
Catholic missionaries from the
Franks. After the
Hungarian invasion of Pannonia, Hungarians converted into
Catholicism, which effectively influenced the Slavs living in
Pannonia and in the land south of the Lechs. However, the Russian Empire often claimed Pan-Slavism as a justification for its aggressive moves in the Balkan Peninsula of Europe against the Ottoman Empire, which conquered and held the land of Slavs for centuries. This eventually led to the
Balkan campaign of the Russian Empire, which resulted in the entire Balkan being liberated from the Ottoman Empire, with the help and the initiative of the Russian Empire. Pan-Slavism has some supporters among Czech and Slovak politicians, especially among the nationalistic and far-right ones, such as People's Party – Our Slovakia. The creation of an independent
Czechoslovakia made the old ideals of Pan-Slavism anachronistic. Relations with other Slavic states varied, sometimes being so tense it escalated into an armed conflict, such as with the
Second Polish Republic where border clashes over
Silesia resulted in a short hostile conflict, the
Polish–Czechoslovak War. Even tensions between Czechs and Slovaks had appeared before and during World War II. == Pan-Slavism among South Slavs ==