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| Coat of arms of Czechoslovakia | |
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| Versions | |
The CoA of communist Czechoslovakia (1961-1989)
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The CoA of post-Velvet Revolution Czechoslovakia (1990-1992)
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| Details | |
| Adopted | 1918 1961 1990 |
Several Coat of arms were used during Czechoslovakia's history, some alongside each other.
Contents |
[edit] The First Republic (1918-1938) and post-war (1945-1961)
[edit] Occupied Czechoslovakia (1938-1945)
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The small CoA of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, |
The CoA of the World War II Slovak state. |
[edit] After 1961
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The CoA of communist Czechoslovakia (1961-1989) |
The CoA of post-Velvet Revolution Czechoslovakia (1990-1992) |
[edit] Post-Czechoslovakian Coat of Arms
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Coat of arms of the Czech Republic. In the upper left quadrant is the lion of Bohemia, in the upper right the Moravian chequered eagle, in the lower left the black Silesian eagle, and in the lower right a Bohemian lion again, symbolizing the whole nation. |
Coat of arms of Slovakia, a double-cross elevated on the middle peak of a dark blue mountain consisting of three peaks. |
The coat of arms of Carpathian Ruthenia, a territory of Ukraine (annexed by the USSR from Czechoslovakia after WW2). Adopted on 30 March 1920 by an act of the Czechoslovakian parliament, used to this day. |
[edit] References
| This Czech Republic-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
| This Slovakia-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |

