6533b836fe1ef96bd12a08a4
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Czech Case: From the Bohemian Slavophone Populus to Czech Nationalism and the Czechoslovak Nation
Tomasz KamusellaTomasz Kamusellasubject
Czechmedia_common.quotation_subjectEmpirePolishAncient historylanguage.human_languageCONQUESTNationalismGeographylanguageSlavic languagesOfficial languagePolityClassicsmedia_commondescription
Bohemia emerged as a separate polity after the Magyar conquest of Greater Moravia. The Frankish protection that extended to Bohemia attached this country to the empire, while Moravia became a province permanently linked to the Principality of Bohemia in the late 1020s. In 1079, Moravia was organized as a margraviate. Usually sons or younger brothers of the Bohemian princes reigned as margraves of Moravia, which emphasized the separateness of Moravia vis-a-vis Bohemia. A similar arrangement developed in Poland-Lithuania where sons or younger brothers of the King of Poland ruled in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (Třestik 1999: 140).
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009-01-01 |