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After Czechoslovakia was liberated in the closing days of World War II, roughly 100,000 Germans were expelled from Sudetenland, and the area was resettled by Czechs. The name "Sudetenland" was banned.

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  • Sudetenland
  • Sudetenland
  • Sudetenland
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  • After Czechoslovakia was liberated in the closing days of World War II, roughly 100,000 Germans were expelled from Sudetenland, and the area was resettled by Czechs. The name "Sudetenland" was banned.
  • Das Sudetenland (polnisch: Kraj Sudetów, tschechisch: traditionell Sudety (euphemistisch auch pohraniční území – das an der Grenze liegende Gebiet, Grenzgebiete) ist ein ost-süd-nord-(siehe Europakarte)deutsches Gebiet unter tschechischer Verwaltung. Das Sudetenland gliedert sich in Sudetenböhmen, Sudetenmähren und Sudetenschlesien. thumb|220px|right|Sudetenland
  • The Sudetenland (Czech and , ) is the German name (used in English in the first half of the 20th century) to refer to those northern, southwest, and western areas of Czechoslovakia which were inhabited mostly by German speakers, specifically the border districts of Bohemia, Moravia, and those parts of Silesia located within Czechoslovakia.
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abstract
  • After Czechoslovakia was liberated in the closing days of World War II, roughly 100,000 Germans were expelled from Sudetenland, and the area was resettled by Czechs. The name "Sudetenland" was banned.
  • Das Sudetenland (polnisch: Kraj Sudetów, tschechisch: traditionell Sudety (euphemistisch auch pohraniční území – das an der Grenze liegende Gebiet, Grenzgebiete) ist ein ost-süd-nord-(siehe Europakarte)deutsches Gebiet unter tschechischer Verwaltung. Das Sudetenland gliedert sich in Sudetenböhmen, Sudetenmähren und Sudetenschlesien. thumb|220px|right|Sudetenland
  • The Sudetenland (Czech and , ) is the German name (used in English in the first half of the 20th century) to refer to those northern, southwest, and western areas of Czechoslovakia which were inhabited mostly by German speakers, specifically the border districts of Bohemia, Moravia, and those parts of Silesia located within Czechoslovakia. The name is derived from that of the Sudetes mountains – featuring in Ptolemy's 2nd-century Geography as Sudeti montes – which run along the northern Czech border as far as Silesia and contemporary Poland, although it encompassed areas well beyond those mountains. The word Sudetenland came into existence in the early 20th century, and only came to prominence after the First World War. The German-speaking inhabitants of the region were then called Sudeten Germans (German: Sudetendeutsche; Czech: Sudetští Němci; Polish: Niemcy Sudeccy). Previously, they were known variously as German Bohemians (Deutschböhmen) and German Moravians (Deutschmährer). The German minority in Slovakia, the Carpathian Germans, are not, however, included in any of these ethnic categories. Parts of the current Czech regions of Karlovy Vary, Liberec, Olomouc, Moravia-Silesia and Ústí nad Labem are situated within the former Sudetenland.
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