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(“bohemia” (/boʊˈhiːmiə/; Czech: Čechy; German: Böhmen (help·info); Polish: Czechy; French: Bohême; Latin: Bohemia; Italian: Boemia) is the westernmost and largest historical region of the Czech lands in the present-day ‘Czech Republic’)
(in a broader meaning, Bohemia sometimes refers to the entire Czech territory, including Moravia and Czech Silesia, especially in a historical context, such as the Lands of the Bohemian Crown ruled by bohemian kings)
(‘Bohemia’ was a duchy of Great Moravia, later an independent principality, a kingdom in the Holy Roman Empire, and subsequently a part of the Habsburg Monarchy and the ‘Austrian Empire’)
(after ‘World War I’ and the establishment of an independent Czechoslovak state, Bohemia became a part of ‘Czechoslovakia’)
(between 1938 and 1945, border regions with sizeable German-speaking minorities of all 3 Czech lands were joined to Nazi Germany as the ‘Sudetenland’)
(the remainder of Czech territory became the ‘Second Czechoslovak Republic’ and was subsequently occupied as the ‘Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia’)
(in 1969, the Czech lands (including Bohemia) were given autonomy within ‘Czechoslovakia’ as the ‘Czech Socialist Republic’)
(in 1990, the name was changed to the ‘Czech Republic’, which become a separate state in 1993 with the dissolution of ‘Czechoslovakia’)
(until 1948, Bohemia was an administrative unit of Czechoslovakia as one of its “lands” (“země”))
(since then, administrative reforms have replaced self-governing lands with a modified system of “regions” (“kraje”) which do not follow the borders of the historical Czech lands (or the regions from the 1960 and 2000 reforms))
(however, the 3 lands are mentioned in the preamble of the “Constitution of the Czech Republic”: “We, citizens of the Czech Republic in Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia…”)
(‘Bohemia’ had an area of 52,065 km2 (20,102 sq mi) and today is home to approximately 6.5 million of the Czech Republic’s 10.5 million inhabitants)
(‘Bohemia’ was bordered in the south by “Upper’ and ‘Lower’ Austria (both in Austria), in the west by Bavaria and in the north by Saxony and Lusatia (all in Germany), in the northeast by Silesia (in Poland), and in the east by Moravia (also part of the ‘Czech Republic’))
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(bohemia’s borders were mostly marked by mountain ranges such as the Bohemian Forest, the Ore Mountains, and the Krkonoše, a part of the Sudetes range; the Bohemian-Moravian border roughly follows the “Elbe-Donau watershed”)
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