Abstract:
The article referred to some consequences of the end of the First World
War represented by the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the formation
of new independent national states, among which was Czechoslovakia. In the territorial
context, the Czechoslovakian state included the historical provinces Bohemia, Moravia
and Silesia, to which Slovakia and Ruthenia were added, having in total a surface of
140 394 square km. On 14 November 1918, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk had become
the first president of the country officially called Czecho-Slovakian Republic (RČS) in
1918 – 1920 period, and as a simplified form, it was called Czecho-Slovakia. During
the period 1920 – 1938, the country was named as Czechoslovakian Republic (ČSR),
and the short name Czechoslovakia. Becoming a subject of international relations, the
interwar Czechoslovakia played an important role in assuring the regional security in
Europe. The Little Agreement, initiated by the minister of foreign affairs, Edvard Beneš,
as organization of regional security, had quickened its activity by periodical convening
of those 10 Conferences, etc.