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  2. Feb 4, 2024 · Czechoslovakia ceased to exist. A Czech and Slovak brigade was set up in Poland and fought the Germans the following September. Benes fled to London and set up a government in exile after the invasion of Poland.

  3. In 1942, the Czechoslovak Government-in-Exile received the formal support of the United Kingdom for the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia and, in March 1943, President Beneš received Moscow's support.

  4. Czechoslovak exile units saw action on most of the major fronts of WW2 and generally performed very well. They earned the respect and admiration of other Allied nations and units and their sacrifices were crowned when they could return home to a free Czechoslovakia in 1945, though now as part of the Soviet bloc in Europe.

  5. On September 28th 1939, the Czechoslovakian government agreed to let Hitler occupy Sudentenland due to pressure from Britain and France, but did not agree to hand over the remaining areas which were not highly populated by Germans; on September 29th, a deal was reached.

  6. When the Nazis occupied Czechoslovakia during World War II, the country was devastated. The Nazi annexation of Czechoslovakia advanced Hitler’s goals of expanding Nazi territory and dominating Europe’s Jewish population.

  7. Nov 21, 2023 · In October 1938, the parts of the country with ethnic German majority, called Sudetenland, were forcibly taken from Czechoslovakia. Germany forcibly subjugated the rest of the country in March...

  8. Oct 25, 2018 · The Origins and Outbreak of the Second World War. The Munich Agreement was supposed to end Hitler’s territorial ambitions in Europe and ensure that peace would prevail. However, in March 1939, Hitler’s forces invaded Czechoslovakia. They took all the territory with ease.

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