The Slovak Republic is the youngest state in the Carpathian basin. Before World War I its territory was part of the Austro)Hungarian Empire. After the Peace Treaty of Trianon, it became part of the Czechoslovakian Republic which surely cannot be described as a ‘country of one)nation’. The new state had to accommodate many different minorities, including Germans and Hungarians, within its borders. After World War II, the majority of the largest minorities were relocated from the newly reformed country. Decades after sharing the same country with the Czechs, Slovakians finally decided to go their separate ways: In 1993 the Slovak Republic was born. The country, that shares borders with Hungary, has always tried to identify itself a...