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엘자스 · 케른텐 운트 크라인 · 베치르크 비아위스토크· 로트링겐 · 운터슈타이어마르크 · 룩셈부르크 · 포젠 · 주데텐란트 · 베스트프로이센 · 치헤나우
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군정청
폴란드 군정청1939년 9월 ~ 1939년 10월 · 벨기에-북프랑스 군정청1940년 5월 ~ 1944년 5월 · 프랑스 군정청1940년 5월 ~ 1947년 8월 · 세르비아 군정청1941년 4월 ~ 1943년 1월 · 브리튼 제도 군정청1941년 11월 ~ 1946년 12월 · 소련 군정청1941년 6월 ~ 1943년 1월
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Protektorat Böhmen und MährenProtektorát Čechy a Morava (Czech)
16 March 1939 – 5 March 1951
파일:Flag-bum-001.svg 파일:Coa-bum-001.svg
Flag
Coat of arms
History
Preceded by
Identity Predecessor
2nd Czechoslovak Republic
Succeeded by
Identity Successor
Großgermanisches Reich/1 Gau, 3 Reichsgau[4]
Human Geography
Capital
Prag
Religion
N/A
Languages
German, Czech
Population
Dem.
N/A
Ethn.
German, Czech
Tot.
About 7,700,000 1950 Census
Economy
Currency
파일:Flag-bum-001.svg Krone des Protektorats
Sphere
N/A
Politics
Independence
Leaders
Head of Prot.
Reichsprotektoren
1stKonstantin von Neurath1939년 3월 18일 - 1942년 12월 1일De fac.Reinhard Heydrich1941년 9월 27일 - 1942년 11월 15일2ndKurt Daluege1942년 12월 1일 - 1950년 6월 1일De fac.Karl Hermann Frank1943년 6월 1일 - 1950년 6월 1일3rdWilhelm Frick1950년 6월 1일 - 1951년 3월 5일
Head of State
State President
1stEmil Hácha1939년 3월 16일 - 1950년 5월 18일De fac.Richard Bienert1944년 5월 1일 - 1950년 5월 18일2ndRichard Bienert1950년 5월 23일 - 1951년 3월 5일
Head of Gov’t
Prime Minister
De fac.루돌프 베란1939년 3월 16일 - 1939년 4월 27일1st알로이스 엘리아시1939년 4월 27일 - 1941년 9월 27일De fac.야로슬라프 크레이치1941년 9월 28일 - 1942년 1월 19일2nd야로슬라프 크레이치1942년 1월 19일 - 1943년 6월 12일3rd리하르트 비에네르트1943년 6월 17일 - 1951년 3월 5일
Military
정부군 1939년 7월 25일 - 1951년 3월 5일

Overview

The Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (German: Protektorat Böhmen und Mähren) was a protectorate established by Germany on 16 March 1939, immediately after the occupation of the Czech rump state. It retained a nominal autonomous government and a State President, but real authority rested with the Reichsprotektor (Reich Protector) and the German occupation administration. The Protectorate was created after the annexation of the Sudetenland under the Munich Agreement of 1938 and the dissolution of Czechoslovakia in March 1939. Most of its population was Czech.

During World War II, the Protectorate became one of the principal production centers of the German armaments economy. It was officially dissolved on 5 March 1951 under the Germanization policy of the German authorities, and its territory was divided among four neighboring Reichsgaue.

Background

In September 1936, Adolf Hitler launched the Four Year Plan to prepare the German economy for total war by 1940. By around 1937, however, the plan had begun to encounter structural limits. Large-scale rearmament required large quantities of foreign currency and raw materials, but Germany depended on imports for many of the resources it needed and lacked sufficient foreign exchange reserves to sustain them. Within the regime, this strengthened the view that import substitution and industrial rationalization alone could not support continued military competition. Direct control over external industrial bases and resources was increasingly seen as necessary.

In this context, Czechoslovakia became an especially important target for Germany. It was one of the world’s major arms-producing states and possessed a highly developed base of heavy industry and military production. Hitler’s statement at the Hossbach Conference in November 1937 that Czechoslovakia would have to be brought under German control in the near future reflected not only territorial ambitions, but also economic and strategic requirements. By early 1939, as Germany’s foreign exchange position worsened further, the acquisition of Czechoslovakia’s gold reserves and industrial capacity had become an urgent issue.

The Munich Agreement, signed on 30 September 1938, marked a decisive stage in this policy of expansion. After the agreement, Germany annexed the Sudetenland, the region of Czechoslovakia with a large German-speaking population, in October of the same year. On 14 March 1939, Slovakia declared independence with German support. The following day, the German military occupied the remaining Czech lands, and Czechoslovakia was effectively dissolved. On 16 March 1939, Hitler issued a decree at Prague Castle proclaiming the establishment of the Protectorate of Böhmen and Mähren.

With the proclamation of the Protectorate, Hitler claimed that Böhmen and Mähren had belonged to the “living space of the German people for a thousand years.” The structure of the Protectorate, however, owed less to traditions of German imperial administration than to a system resembling the princely states of the British Raj. Native institutions and a head of state were preserved on the surface, while actual power was concentrated in the hands of a supervisor appointed by the dominant state. German press comparisons between Reichsprotektor Konstantin von Neurath and State President Emil Hácha, and between a British Resident and an Indian princely ruler, reflected this arrangement.

From the beginning, therefore, the Protectorate was designed as a special dual system of rule rather than as either a fully annexed territory or an independent state. To encourage cooperation from the Czech population, the German authorities preserved certain outward features of statehood, including an autonomous government, a president, postage stamps, and a presidential guard. Actual authority, however, was held by the Reichsprotektor and the German occupation administration. The Czech government could perform only limited administrative functions under German supervision.

History

Establishment

On 14 March 1939, Slovakia declared independence with German support. The following day, the German military entered Prag, and Czechoslovakia was effectively dissolved. On 16 March, Adolf Hitler issued a decree at Prague Castle proclaiming the establishment of the Protectorate of Böhmen and Mähren. State President Emil Hácha remained in office, and on 18 March Konstantin von Neurath took office as Reichsprotektor. After Rudolf Beran reorganized the government as acting prime minister, Alois Eliáš was appointed prime minister on 27 April.

After the Protectorate was established, the Czech government, ministries, and local administration were not dissolved. Authority over foreign affairs, military affairs, and security, however, passed directly to the German authorities. Ministerial appointments and major policies could not be carried out without German approval.

During the spring and summer of the same year, the public Czech political sphere was also rapidly reorganized. Existing parties were banned, and the only open political organization permitted for Czechs was the National Partnership (NS). The press and public assemblies were gradually brought under control, while local administration and police organizations were reorganized under German supervision.

The economy was immediately redirected toward the conduct of war. The industrial regions of Böhmen and Mähren were incorporated into the German armaments economy, and Czech labor was assigned first to mines, steelworks, machine industries, and armaments factories. Consumer-goods production declined, and rationing was introduced. The Czech koruna was fixed at 10 korunas to 1 Reichsmark, allowing Germany to procure goods from the Protectorate on favorable terms. Inflation and wage stagnation combined to produce a rapid decline in living standards.

The 1939 demonstrations and closure of the universities

On 28 October 1939, the anniversary of Czechoslovak independence, anti-occupation demonstrations took place in Prag, Brünn, and several other cities. They began as commemorative gatherings and marches, but soon escalated into clashes after the intervention of German troops and police. Several people were killed or wounded, and the medical student Jan Opletal was shot.

Opletal died on 11 November, and his funeral led to another large demonstration. In Prag, students and civilians took to the streets together, and the funeral procession soon became an anti-German protest. The German authorities interpreted the incident not as a limited student disturbance, but as a sign of broader collective resistance within Czech society.

On 17 November, the authorities closed all universities and institutions of higher education in the Protectorate. Nine student leaders were executed, and about 1,200 students were sent to Sachsenhausen concentration camp. The closure of the universities was not a short-term punitive measure. It became a long-term policy, and Czech higher education remained severely restricted throughout the Protectorate period.

After the incident, the German authorities treated universities and intellectual circles as potential centers of resistance. Student organizations and academic associations were dissolved or forced to cease activity. Czech universities remained closed for the duration of the Protectorate period.

Strengthening of control

From late 1939 into 1940, the public political space of the Protectorate narrowed further. Existing parties disappeared, and the only open political organization permitted for Czechs remained the National Partnership (NS). The press and public assemblies could not operate without official permission, and local administration and police organizations were reorganized under German supervision.

Measures against Jews expanded rapidly during the same period. Property registration, restrictions on business activity, and forced sales were introduced in sequence, and Jews were gradually excluded from public life and the economy. In June 1939, measures targeting Jewish property and economic activity began in earnest. Administrative preparations for later segregation and deportation also proceeded gradually.

At the same time, Germany began to treat the Protectorate not merely as an occupied territory, but as an administrative unit intended for long-term use. Internal documents referred to the classification of the Czech population and to plans for Germanization. Because the heavy industry and skilled labor force of Böhmen and Mähren remained essential to German armaments production, however, the immediate priority was to preserve production and order rather than to overturn the existing system at once.

Germanization plans

By around 1940, long-term German plans for the future of the Protectorate had become more concrete. German documents from this period set out criteria for dividing the Czech population into groups considered capable of Germanization and groups considered unsuitable for it. The intelligentsia and those judged incapable of Germanization were classified as targets for removal or expulsion. Measures to transform Czech society as a whole were not implemented immediately, but the long-term direction of policy had become clear. Administration, education, and population classification were to be used to reshape the Czech lands.

Germany did not treat Böhmen and Mähren solely as objects of repression. In 1939, the Czech lands were already an important base for the production of aircraft, tanks, and artillery. Germany needed to continue using their skilled labor force and heavy industrial facilities. For that reason, the German authorities prioritized the gradual expansion of control while preserving production and order. Until the summer of 1941, the Protectorate continued to operate with the outward structure of the Hácha government and the Eliáš cabinet. Reichsprotektor Neurath and the occupation administration approved and coordinated major policies. This structure changed significantly after the arrival of Reinhard Heydrich in the autumn of the same year.

The rise of Heydrich

In September 1941, Hitler judged that Konstantin von Neurath had been too lenient in dealing with the Czechs. He believed that anti-German sentiment and sabotage in the Protectorate had to be suppressed more forcefully. On 27 September, Neurath was effectively removed from day-to-day administration, and Reinhard Heydrich was appointed Acting Reichsprotektor. From 29 September, Heydrich took direct control of the Protectorate administration in Prag. Emergency measures and controls approaching martial law followed soon afterward. Prime Minister Alois Eliáš was arrested on suspicion of contact with the Czechoslovak government-in-exile. From 28 September, Jaroslav Krejčí served as acting prime minister, and on 19 January 1942 he was formally appointed prime minister.

After Heydrich’s arrival, the Gestapo and the Sicherheitspolizei (Security Police) increased arrests of resistance members, former party figures, teachers, clergy, and journalists. Jewish registration, property confiscation, and segregation measures were also pursued more systematically. Theresienstadt began to function during this period as a central site for the concentration and deportation of Jews from the Protectorate. The Czech government continued to exist, but after Eliáš’s arrest the political administration of the Protectorate operated through the Krejčí cabinet, the German police apparatus, and the Reichsprotektoramt (Office of the Reich Protector).

The attempted assassination of Heydrich and reprisals

On 27 May 1942, Acting Reichsprotektor Heydrich was attacked in Prag while traveling to work by agents of the Czechoslovak government-in-exile. He was seriously wounded, and his adjutant Johannes Klein was killed after a firefight. Heydrich received emergency treatment at the scene and was then taken to a nearby hospital for immediate surgery. His condition alternated between unconsciousness and critical instability.

After receiving news of the attack, Hitler ordered Karl Hermann Frank, the Höherer SS- und Polizeiführer (Higher SS and Police Leader; HSSPF), on 9 June to “raze all of Prag until Heydrich regains consciousness, and if he does not awaken and dies, dissolve Böhmen and Mähren itself and exterminate the Czech population.” The complete destruction of Prag was not carried out after objections from those around him, but Lidice was destroyed, and arrests, executions, hostage shootings, and forced relocations spread across the Protectorate. In Prag and northern Böhmen, night curfews and house searches were repeatedly imposed. Arrested residents were sent to police stations, temporary detention facilities, and camps. During the reprisals that continued until Heydrich regained consciousness on 17 September, about 8,000 residents were executed.

The authority of the Czech government was further reduced during this period. The Krejčí cabinet remained in existence, but key decisions concerning security, censorship, and public control were led by the German police apparatus and Frank. In workplaces, penalties for absenteeism and production disruption were strengthened. Interference with armaments production was treated almost as a political crime. The closure of the universities was made permanent, and the press and publishing sector were placed under direct censorship by the security authorities.

Reorganization of the wartime mobilization system

After Heydrich recovered around September, he responded to Hitler’s summons and decided to remain in Berlin. In November 1942, he stepped down as Acting Reichsprotektor. On 7 December, the resignation of Reichsprotektor Konstantin von Neurath was accepted. On 14 December, Kurt Daluege, chief of the Ordnungspolizei (Order Police; OrPo), was appointed full Reichsprotektor. The center of rule shifted to a structure linking the German police apparatus in Prag, the Reichsprotektoramt, and Staatsminister für Böhmen und Mähren (State Minister for Bohemia and Moravia) Karl Hermann Frank.

The first major change after Daluege’s appointment was the reorganization of the wartime economy. In 1943, most non-armaments industries were prohibited except for the production of essential goods. Factory output was assigned first to war-related items, including railway vehicles, metal products, machinery, artillery shells and ammunition, and vehicle parts. German supervisors revised production quotas and raw-material allocations for individual factories. Skilled workers were reassigned first to armaments factories, mines, and railway maintenance.

The cost of this reorganization appeared quickly in daily life. Consumer-goods production declined further, and more goods became unavailable without ration cards. Rationing did not improve during the effort to restore order after the turmoil of the 1942 reprisals. By 1943, even the shares allocated to urban laborers and factory workers had declined. Wages failed to keep pace with inflation. Absenteeism and production delays were treated not merely as labor-discipline issues, but as security matters. Acts that interfered with armaments production were treated almost as political crimes, and workplace supervision began to be linked to resident-registration data.

In May of the same year, Daluege suffered a heart attack, and the internal balance of power in the Protectorate shifted again. From 3 June, Frank, who had led the earlier reprisals, took charge of Protectorate administration as Acting Reichsprotektor. Even while Daluege formally remained Reichsprotektor, most major directives concerning policing, administration, and armaments production were issued through Frank.

The Frank system and the late Protectorate

After Frank came to the forefront, the Protectorate moved toward a more openly police-administrative system. His central priority was the combination of production maintenance and population management. Local police and administrative bodies were tied more closely into a regular reporting system. Lists of armaments workers, former soldiers, teachers, clergy, and local notables were reorganized. After 1943, rule in the Protectorate depended less on large public executions and more on the classification of individuals and the control of movement through surveillance lists and administrative records.

By this stage, the actual role of the Czech government was not to formulate independent policy, but to translate German directives into local administration. Czech officials handled practical matters such as food rationing, resident registration, labor allocation, factory staffing, and school operations. The standards and priorities for these tasks, however, were set by the German authorities. On paper, the Protectorate government still maintained a cabinet and ministries. In practice, it had become an administrative execution body for armaments production and population control.

Daily life in the late Protectorate appeared stable on the surface. Factories, mines, and railways continued to operate, and urban administration did not collapse. This stability, however, rested on declining living standards and administrative pressure. Rationing worsened, while long working hours and shortages of goods became routine. Schools and vocational education were increasingly adjusted to wartime mobilization. Young people were more closely managed according to the factories and occupations to which they would be assigned after graduation. By the late 1940s, the Protectorate had ceased to resemble the transitional occupation regime of 1939. It had become a space in which the German armaments economy, resident-registration administration, and police apparatus were bound together in a single framework.

The rise of Bienert

While Frank controlled the German side of Protectorate administration, Richard Bienert rose to prominence on the Czech side. He was a career official with a background in police and interior administration, and he expanded his position in the Protectorate through his work in security and population administration. After Emil Hácha’s health deteriorated from May 1944 onward, a large share of approval documents and reports sent to the Office of the State President began to pass through the Prime Minister’s Office and the interior authorities. In this process, Bienert came to occupy a position close to that of acting president in practice.

After Bienert was appointed prime minister on 19 November 1945, the Czech administration of the late Protectorate became more strongly concentrated in his hands. Hácha remained head of state, but routine functions such as external receptions, state addresses, and coordination among ministries were handled by the prime minister and cabinet ministers. Under German supervision, the Bienert cabinet took over daily administration while cooperating with the German police apparatus controlled by Frank.

The Czech government under Bienert continued to preserve outward forms such as Czech-language signs, ministry names, the Office of the State President, and the Prime Minister’s Office. In practice, however, it did not carry out independent national policy. Its work consisted of applying preexisting German directives to residents, administrative districts, schools, and factories. German-language education expanded in schools, and resident registration and personnel records were strengthened. During this period, more detailed data were accumulated on who could be assigned first to armaments factories, who was subject to surveillance, and who could be classified as suitable for Germanization.

Dissolution

After Hácha left office on 18 May 1950, Bienert was elevated to State President on 23 May. On 21 June of the same year, Wilhelm Frick took office as Reichsprotektor. After Frick’s appointment, the dissolution of the Protectorate and the reorganization of its institutions began in earnest. The German government and the leadership of the neighboring Reichsgaue concluded that the transitional structure of the Protectorate no longer had to be maintained. The ministries and administrative functions of Böhmen and Mähren were gradually transferred to Reichsgau administration.

From the second half of 1950, police, railway, postal, taxation, and industrial-supervision functions were the first targets of transfer. Separate liquidation departments were established within the Protectorate ministries. Jurisdictions, records, personnel lists, and financial ledgers were reorganized according to Reichsgau standards. The role of the Czech government during this period was to arrange the remaining state apparatus in a form suitable for dissolution. The Bienert government outwardly remained the last Czech government, but in practice it could do little beyond assisting the dissolution procedure.

On 5 March 1951, the Protectorate of Böhmen and Mähren was officially dissolved. Its territory was divided among four neighboring Reichsgaue. The Protectorate government, the Office of the State President, the Prime Minister’s Office, and the ministries were dissolved in sequence. Police, education, labor, and population administration in the Czech lands were placed directly under Reichsgau administration.

Politics

The politics of the Protectorate of Böhmen and Mähren operated through a dual structure in which the Czech government coexisted with the German occupation administration. Formally, a Czech government with a State President, prime minister, and ministries remained in place. In practice, the Reichsprotektor and the German police and administrative apparatus held the essential powers. The Protectorate was neither a fully annexed territory nor an independent state. It was a protectorate in which Germany ruled from above while preserving the outward form of a Czech government.

The Czech state apparatus retained the Office of the State President, the Prime Minister’s Office, the ministries, and local administration. Emil Hácha and his successor Richard Bienert held the nominal position of head of state as State President. The prime minister led the cabinet and handled routine administration, including food rationing, local government, education, taxation, transport, and factory operations. The appointment and dismissal of ministers, as well as the implementation of major policies, remained impossible without German approval. Foreign affairs, military affairs, and security were outside the authority of the Czech government from the outset. In the later Protectorate, the Czech government became less an institution of national policy and more an executive body applying German directives to local administration and everyday life.

The center of German power was the Reichsprotektor and the police and administrative apparatus stationed in Prag. Under the first Reichsprotektor, Konstantin von Neurath, German rule was exercised mainly by preserving the outward form of the Czech government while coordinating it from above. After Reinhard Heydrich became Acting Reichsprotektor in September 1941, rule became more direct. In late 1942, Kurt Daluege became full Reichsprotektor, but after 1943 Karl Hermann Frank became deeply involved in the administration of the Protectorate through his authority as deputy and as Staatsminister für Böhmen und Mähren. Even when laws and administrative orders were issued in the name of the Czech government, the actual decisions often came through the Reichsprotektoramt, the German police apparatus, and Frank.

Formal office and actual power often did not coincide in Protectorate politics. While Neurath legally retained the office of Reichsprotektor, Heydrich controlled Prag’s administration as acting protector. Even when Daluege formally held the office of Reichsprotektor, Frank issued the main directives on security, administration, and armaments production. For this reason, the Protectorate’s power structure cannot be explained by legal hierarchy alone. Its operation depended on which German authority held the strongest practical power at a given time.

The only open political organization permitted for Czechs was the National Partnership (NS). After the existing parties disappeared, Czech political activity in the Protectorate was absorbed into this organization. The National Partnership, however, was not an arena for mass party politics. It served as an officially controlled framework for organizing Czech society and regulating political activity.

After the dissolution procedure began in 1950, the role of the Czech government changed again. Following the appointment of Wilhelm Frick as Reichsprotektor, administrative functions were transferred in sequence to the four Reichsgaue of Sudetenland, Bayreuth, Oberdonau, and Niederdonau. The Bienert government outwardly remained the last Czech government, but functioned as an administrative body carrying out the dissolution process. The Protectorate was officially dissolved on 5 March 1951.

Economy

The economy of the Protectorate of Böhmen and Mähren was incorporated into the German war economy immediately after its establishment. Since the Czechoslovak period, Böhmen and Mähren had possessed a strong base in heavy industry, machine production, steel, and armaments. Germany used this base for armaments production and logistical support from the beginning of the occupation. Legally, the Protectorate economy retained the form of administration by the Czech government and its ministries. In practice, production priorities and resource allocation were determined by German supervisors, the Reichsprotektoramt, and armaments-related agencies.

The center of the economy was the industrial belt linking Prag, Pilsen, Brünn, and Mährisch-Ostrau. Railway vehicles, metal products, machine tools, vehicle parts, artillery, and ammunition were produced there in large quantities. As the war continued, armaments and war-related components took priority over civilian consumer goods. After 1943, most non-armaments industries were prohibited except for essential-goods production, and factory output was assigned first to war-related items. German supervisors revised factory production targets and raw-material allocations. Skilled workers were reassigned first to armaments factories, mines, and railway maintenance.

Finance and currency were also reorganized in Germany’s favor. The Czech koruna was valued at 10 Protectorate korunas to 1 Reichsmark, allowing Germany to procure goods and industrial output from the Protectorate on favorable terms. Financial assets and gold reserves accumulated during the Czechoslovak period were also absorbed by the German side after the occupation.

The impact of this reorganization was clearly visible in everyday life. Consumer-goods production declined, and rationing made food, clothing, and daily necessities difficult to obtain without ration cards. As the war continued, rationing worsened, and the shares allocated to urban laborers and factory workers gradually decreased. Wages failed to keep pace with inflation, and the purchasing power of the koruna continued to fall. Both urban workers and rural residents experienced declining living standards. Black markets and barter expanded as means of survival.

The Protectorate was adjacent to the German mainland and remained safe from direct attack by Allied bombers sortieing from Britain. This gave it considerable value as a rear-area armaments production region. Germany treated Böhmen and Mähren not as a mere occupied territory, but as a region capable of providing the industrial base and skilled labor needed for the war. Even after the reprisals and large-scale purge that followed the attack on Heydrich in 1942, Germany did not move toward indiscriminate destruction of the Protectorate as a whole or the sacrifice of its industrial base.

References

Notes(Obsidian)

External documents

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