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Czechoslovak declaration of independence
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Czechoslovak declaration of independence : ウィキペディア英語版
Czechoslovak declaration of independence
The Czechoslovak Declaration of Independence or the Washington Declaration ((チェコ語:Washingtonská deklarace); (スロバキア語:Washingtonská deklarácia)) was drafted in Washington, D.C. and published by Czecho-Slovakia's Paris-based Provisional Government on 18 October 1918. The creation of the document, officially the Declaration on Independence of the Czechoslovak Nation by Its Provisional Government ((チェコ語:Prohlášení nezávislosti československého národa zatímní vládou československou)), was prompted by the imminent collapse of the Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Empire, of which the Czech and Slovak lands had been part for almost 400 years, following the First World War.
==Background==

In the autumn of 1918, the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy was in a state of collapse. As one of his Fourteen Points, U.S. president Woodrow Wilson demanded that the nationalities of the Empire have the "freest opportunity to autonomous development". On 14 October 1918, Foreign Minister Baron István Burián von Rajecz asked for an armistice based on the Fourteen Points. In an apparent attempt to demonstrate good faith, Emperor Charles I issued a proclamation two days later which would have significantly altered the structure of the Austrian half of the monarchy. The Austrian part of the Empire was to be transformed into a federal union composed of four parts—German, Czech, South Slav and Ukrainian (Galicia was allowed to secede). Each of these was to be governed by a national council that would negotiate the future of the empire with Vienna, and Trieste was to receive a special status.
However, on that same day, a Czecho-Slovak provisional government joined the Allies. This provisional government had begun drafting a Declaration of Independence on 13 October and completed its task on 16 October. The document was drafted by Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and American sculptor Gutzon Borglum (Borglum hosted future soldiers of a Czecho-Slovak army on his farm in Stamford, Connecticut.〔Herbert Francis Sherwood. ("A New Declaration of Independence". ) ''The Outlook''. 120 (September–December 1918). p. 406.〕) On 17 October, Masaryk presented it to the U.S. government and the president. It was published in Paris 18 October 1918 with authorship attributed to Masaryk.
On the same day, United States Secretary of State Robert Lansing replied that the Allies were now committed to the causes of the Czechs, Slovaks, and South Slavs. Therefore, Lansing said, autonomy for the nationalities – the tenth of the Fourteen Points – was no longer enough and Washington could not deal on the basis of the Fourteen Points any more. The Lansing note was, in effect, the death certificate of Austria-Hungary. The national councils had already begun acting more or less as provisional governments of independent countries. With defeat in the war imminent after the Italian offensive in the Battle of Vittorio Veneto on 24 October, Czech politicians peacefully took over command in Prague on 28 October (later declared the birthday of Czecho-Slovakia) and followed up in other major cities in the next few days. On 30 October, the Slovaks followed with the Martin Declaration and the Austro-Hungarian state was officially dissolved the next day.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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