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The declaration announced: "The Slovak Nation is a part of the Czecho-Slovak Nation, united in language and in the history of its culture" [1] and declared that only the Slovak National Council, not the Hungarian government or any other authority, was authorised to speak for the Slovak nation. [3]
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.
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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the author of the present-day Slovak language standard 31 October (1517) Reformation Day: Deň reformácie: Commemorates the day Martin Luther nailed The Ninety-Five Theses on the door of All Saints' Church in Wittenberg, sparking the Protestant Reformation. 30 December (1977) Day of the Declaration of Slovakia as an Independent Ecclesiastic ...
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:
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The Autonomous Land of Slovakia was an autonomous republic within the Second Czechoslovak Republic, which briefly existed from 23 November 1938 to 14 March 1939, when it declared its independence from Czechoslovakia, due to mounting German pressure.