Talk:Second Czechoslovak Republic

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The successor States of Czechoslovakia, under international law, were Germany, Slovakia and Hungary, as sovereign and indipendent States. The Protectorate, its name automatically shows it, wasn't a subject of international law, even if, inside Germany, had a separate organization. For Ruthenia, its full annexation to Hungary cancels every doubt on this region, which never was a State.

By the way, where asre the sources whic speak about this Second republic? What constitutional changements happened in Czechoslovakia to justify this terminology?--Cusio (talk) 13:26, 2 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

The page links to Hungary, Slovak State and Nazi Germany. It should rather link to Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. The Hungarian page does not accept Czechoslovakian republics as former and successor states and refuses to link to their pages. It is insane, the page should have in successor and former states only the main states that arised from the state, not to a state that captured the territorry, even the state that captured the territory and even if after the war the territory has been returned! Based on this logic, there should be a link to Polish page and on the Polish page(because they occupied a part of Czechoslovakia too) should be link to this and the other czechoslovakian page and on the hungarian page should be linnk to this page... It´s just insane... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.135.165.63 (talk) 23:54, 5 February 2010 (UTC)Reply

"..sometimes also called the Czech-Slovak Republic.." edit

This appears to contradict the name given at the top of the infobox. Which of them is mentioned in the source cited? The term "Czecho-Slovakia", as mentioned later in the article, could also be added to the lede. Harfarhs (talk) 20:27, 17 February 2018 (UTC)Reply