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Due to its ethnic diversity, the separate histories and greatly differing religious, cultural, and social traditions of the Czechs and Slovaks, the new state was far from being a stable political entity. The Germans and Magyars (Hungarians) of Czechoslovakia openly agitated against the territorial settlements. Although the constitution of 1920 provided for autonomy for Ruthenia, in practice autonomy was constantly postponed.
Hitler's rise in Germany, the German annexation (Anschluss) of Austria, the resulting revival of revisionism in Hungary and of agitation for autonomy in Slovakia, and the appeasement policy of the Western powers (France and the United Kingdom) left Czechoslovakia without allies, exposed to hostile Germany and Hungary on three sides and to unsympathetic Poland on the north.
Beneš resigned the presidency in October of 1938 and was succeeded by Emil Hácha[?]. In November of 1938, the truncated state, renamed Czecho-Slovakia, was reconstituted in three autonomous units - Bohemia and Moravia, Slovakia, and Ruthenia.
In March 1939, Hitler forced Hácha to surrender Czecho-Slovakia to German control and made Bohemia and Moravia into a German protectorate. Slovakia gained nominal independence as a satellite state under Josef Tiso[?]. Ruthenia was awarded to Hungary. After the outbreak of the war, Beneš set up a provisional government in London, and Czech military units fought alongside the Allied forces.
Except for the brutalities of the German occupation, Czechoslovakia suffered relatively little from the war. Prague was taken over in May 1945 by Soviet troops, and both Soviet and Allied troops were withdrawn in the same year.
On January 19, 1969 student Jan Palach[?] set himself on fire in Prague's Wenceslas Square[?] to protest the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Soviet Union in 1968.
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