Czech and Slovak Federative Republic

After the Velvet Revolution in late-1989, Czechoslovakia adopted the official name Czech and Slovak Federative Republic (Czech: Česká a Slovenská Federativní Republika, Slovak: Česká a Slovenská Federatívna Republika; ČSFR) during the period from 23 April 1990 until 31 December 1992, after which the country was dissolved into the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic.

Czech and Slovak Federative Republic

Česká a Slovenská Federativní Republika  (Czech)
Česká a Slovenská Federatívna Republika  (Slovak)
1990–1992
Motto: "Pravda vítězí / Pravda víťazí"  (Czech/Slovak)
"Veritas vincit"  (Latin)
"Truth prevails"
(19901992)
Anthem: 
"Nad Tatrou sa blýska"
(English: "Lightning Over the Tatras")
Capital
and largest city
Prague
Official languagesCzech · Slovak
GovernmentFederal parliamentary constitutional republic
President 
 19891992
Václav Havel
Prime Minister 
 19891992
Marián Čalfa
 1992
Jan Stráský
LegislatureFederal Assembly
Chamber of Nations
Chamber of People
Historical eraVelvet RevolutionRevolutions of 1989
23 April 1990
31 December 1992
Area
1992127,900 km2 (49,400 sq mi)
Population
 1992
15,600,000
CurrencyCzechoslovak koruna
Calling code42
Internet TLD.cs
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
Czech Republic
Slovakia
Today part ofCzech Republic
Slovakia

Adoption of the name

Since 1960, Czechoslovakia's official name had been the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (Československá socialistická republika, ČSSR). In the aftermath of the Velvet Revolution, newly elected President Václav Havel announced that "Socialist" would be dropped from the country's official name.

Conventional wisdom suggested that the country would resume the name used from 1919 to 1938 and from 1945 to 1960, Czechoslovak Republic (Československá republika). However, Slovak politicians objected that the traditional name subsumed Slovakia's equal status in the federal state too much. The first compromise was Constitutional Law 81/1990, which changed the country's name to Czechoslovak Federative Republic (Czech: Československá federativní republika, Slovak: Česko-slovenská federatívna republika; ČSFR), explicitly acknowledging the federal nature of the state. It was passed on 29 March 1990 (coming into force on the same day) only after an informal agreement on the Slovak form which would be explicitly codified by a future law on state symbols. This was met with general disapproval and another round of haggling, dubbed "the hyphen war" (pomlčková válka/vojna) after Slovaks' wish to insert a hyphen into the name (Česko-Slovensko). However, aggrieved Czechs vehemently opposed it as too reminiscent of such practice during the Second Czechoslovak Republic (when the official name was "Czecho-Slovak Republic"—which had also been used from 1938 to 1939)—when the country had been mutilated by the Munich Agreement and was slipping toward its final dismemberment at the hands of Nazi Germany a year later. The resultant compromise, after much behind-the-scenes negotiation, was Constitutional Law 101/1990, passed on 20 April and in force since its declaration on 23 April. The law changed the country's name to "Czech and Slovak Federative Republic"; unlike the previous one, it also explicitly listed both versions and stated they were equal.

The name breaks the rules of Czech and Slovak orthography, which do not use capitalization for proper names' second and further words (see above), nor adjectives derived from them. Thus the correct form would be "Česká a slovenská federat... republika." However, "Česká a Slovenská F. R." was adopted in hopes of eliminating any debate about the prestige of Slovakia. While few people were happy with the name, it came into use quickly. Czech and Slovak tensions, of which this was an early sign, soon became manifest in matters of greater immediate importance which made the country's name a comparatively minor issue and at the same time even more impossible to change, so the name remained.

The 1960 Constitution remained in force on an interim basis. It was also heavily amended to remove its Communist character. Work on a permanent constitution was still underway at the time of the dissolution of Czechoslovakia.

See also

References

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