I googled it and found this amongst other things;
"
Czech Nationalism and NationhoodThe 19th cent. brought a rebirth of Czech nationalism. Under the leadership of
Palacký a Slavic congress assembled at Prague in the Revolution of 1848, but by 1849, although the Czech peasantry had been emancipated, absolute Austrian domination had been forcibly restored. The establishment (1867) of the
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy thoroughly disappointed the Czech aspirations for wide political autonomy within a federalized Austria. Instead, the Czech lands were relegated to a mere province of the empire. Concessions were made (1879) by the Austrian minister
Taaffe; Czechs entered the imperial bureaucracy and parliament at Vienna. However, many Czechs continued to advocate complete separation from the Hapsburg empire.
9Full independence was reached only at the end of World War I under the guidance of T. G.
Masaryk. In 1918, Bohemia became the core of the new state of
Czechoslovakia. After the Munich Pact of 1938, Czechoslovakia was stripped of the so-called Sudeten area, which was annexed to Germany. In 1939, Bohemia was invaded by German troops and proclaimed part of the German protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.
10After World War II the pre-1938 boundaries were restored, and most of the German-speaking population was expelled. In 1948, Bohemia’s status as a province was abolished, and it was divided into nine administrative regions. The administrative reorganization of 1960 redivided it into five regions and the city of Prague. In 1969, Bohemia, along with Moravia and Czech Silesia, was incorporated into the Czech Socialist Republic, renamed the Czech Republic in 1990. The
Czech Republic became an independent state when Czechoslovakia was dissolved on Jan. 1, 1993."
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