The end of the war in 1918 brought about the partition of the multiethnic
Austria-Hungary into its historical components, one of them, the
Bohemian Kingdom, forming the west of the newly created Czechoslovakia. Czech politicians insisted on the traditional boundaries of the
Bohemian Crown according to the principle of
uti possidetis juris. The new Czech state would thus have defensible mountain boundaries with Germany, but the highly industrialised settlement areas of three million Germans would now be separated from Austria and come under Czech control. The Austrian head of government,
Ernst Seidler von Feuchtenegg, wanted to divide Bohemia by setting up administrative counties (), which would be based on the nationalities of the population. On 26 September 1918, his successor,
Max Hussarek von Heinlein, offered the Czechs wide-ranging autonomy within Imperial and Royal Austria. Also, Austria was no longer considered to be a major power by the victors of the war. In addition to the establishment of the state's governmental organisation, higher authorities were also created, such as the Finance Ministry, the Department of Agriculture and the Higher Regional Court of Reichenberg as well as a general post office and railway administration. For geographical reasons, however, a territorial solution would have been impossible unless those regions, together with Austria, had been incorporated into
Germany. After the Czechoslovak Republic was proclaimed on 28 October 1918, the German Bohemians, claiming the right to
self-determination according to the tenth of US President
Woodrow Wilson's
Fourteen Points, demanded that their homeland areas remain with Austria, which by then had been reduced to the Republic of
German Austria. The German Bohemians relied mostly on peaceful opposition to the occupation of their homeland by the Czech military, which started on 31 October 1918 and was completed on 28 January 1919. Fighting took place sporadically, resulting in the deaths of a few dozen Germans and Czechs. On 4 March 1919, almost the entire ethnic German population peacefully demonstrated for its right to self-determination. The demonstrations were accompanied by a one-day general strike. The
German Social Democratic Workers Party in the Czechoslovak Republic, then the largest party, was responsible for the demonstration initiative, but it was also supported by other bourgeois German parties. The mass demonstrations were put down by the Czech military, involving 54 deaths and 84 wounded. American diplomat
Archibald Coolidge insisted on respecting the Germans' right to
self-determination and uniting all German-speaking areas with either Germany or Austria, with the exception of northern Bohemia. However, the
Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye, on 10 September 1919, made it clear that German Bohemia would not become part of the new
Austrian Republic. Instead, it would become part of
Czechoslovakia. The new state regarded ethnic Germans as an
ethnic minority. Nevertheless, some 90% lived in territories in which they represented 90% or more of the population.
Demography In 1921, the population of multi-ethnic Czechoslovakia comprised 6.6 million Czechs, 3.2 million Germans, two million
Slovaks, 0.7 million
Hungarians, half a million
Ruthenians (Rusyns), 300,000
Jews, and 100,000
Poles, as well as
Gypsies,
Croats and other ethnic groups. German-speakers represented a third of the population of the
Bohemian lands and about 23.4% of the population of the whole republic (13.6 million). The Sudetenland possessed huge chemical works and
lignite mines as well as textile, china, and glass factories. To the west, a triangle of historic ethnic German settlement surrounding
Eger was the most active area for pan-German nationalism. The
Upper Palatinate Forest, an area that was primarily populated by Germans, extended along the Bavarian frontier to the poor agricultural areas of southern
Bohemia.
Moravia contained many patches of ethnic German settlement in the north and the south. Most typical in those areas were German "language islands", towns inhabited by German speakers but surrounded by rural Czechs. Extreme German nationalism was never prevalent in those areas. German nationalism in the coal-mining region of southern
Silesia, which was 40.5% German, was restrained by fear of competition from industry in the
Weimar Republic. ==Gradual general acceptance of Czechoslovak citizenship==