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Memorial plaque to the Declaration of the Slovak Nation in Martin, Slovakia. The Martin Declaration (Slovak: Martinská deklarácia) is the name usually given to the Declaration of the Slovak Nation (Slovak: Deklarácia slovenského národa) that was proclaimed in the town of Turčiansky Svätý Martin (now Martin, Slovakia) on 30 October 1918.
28 October – The formal declaration is made that the Czech and Slovak people are to no longer part of Austria-Hungary and instead the new state of Czechoslovakia. [6] 31 October – The Martin Declaration declares Slovak independence from Hungary and adherence to the new state. [7] 5 November:
The occupation of Martin by Hungarian troops prevented the SNR doing much following the declaration, other than issuing around 200 directives, [1] and it was dissolved by the new Czechoslovak government on 8 January 1919 [5] as part of a centralising drive by Vavro Šrobár, the government's Minister for Slovakia. [6]
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It was one of the first municipalities to sign the Martin Declaration (30 October 1918), and until March 1919, it was the seat of the Slovak government. On 6 October 1938, shortly after the Munich Agreement , the autonomy of Slovakia within Czechoslovakia was declared in Žilina.
Learn to edit; Community portal; ... Pages in category "20th century in Slovakia" ... Martin Declaration; S. Slovak Republic (1939–1945)
The provisional government had begun drafting a declaration of independence on 13 October and completed its task on 16 October. The document was drafted by Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and American sculptor Gutzon Borglum [3] (Borglum hosted future soldiers of a Czecho-Slovak army on his farm in Stamford, Connecticut. [4]) On 17 October, Masaryk ...
The Slovak National Council's Declaration of Independence of the Slovak Nation (Slovak: Deklarácia Slovenskej národnej rady o zvrchovanosti Slovenskej republiky) was a resolution of the Slovak National Council on 17 July 1992, by which members of the Council demanded Slovakia's independence although it was not a Unilateral Declaration of Independence.