22 May – Robert Cecil recognises right of the Czech and Slovak people for full independence on behalf of the Foreign Office.[3]
30 May – The Pittsburgh Agreement is signed by representatives of the Czech and Slovak communities in the United States, approving the formation of a state for both.[4]
28 October – The formal declaration is made that the Czech and Slovak people are to no longer part of Austria-Hungary and instead the new state of Czechoslovakia.[6]
13 November – The Provisional Constitution provides the new President of Czechoslovakia with executive powers, including the right to appoint cabinets.[11]
14 November – A National Assembly is created with 260 delegates.[12] A new cabinet is formed under Prime Minister Karel Kramář.[13]
4 December – The Allies recognise Czechoslovakia as the successor to the Austria-Hungary in Bohemia and Slovakia.[14]
Fawn, Rick; Hochman, Jiří (2010). Historical Dictionary of the Czech State. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. ISBN978-0-81085-648-6.
Graham, Malbone W. (1949). "Constitutional and Political Structure". In Kerner, Robert J. (ed.). Czechoslovakia. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 106–136. OCLC3834800.
Miller, Herbert Adolphus (1949). "What Woodrow Wilson and America Meant to Czechoslovakia". In Kerner, Robert J. (ed.). Czechoslovakia. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 71–89. OCLC3834800.
Siegman, Joseph (2020). Jewish Sports Legends: The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN978-1-49620-188-1.
Spinka, Matthew (1949). "The Religious Situation in Czechoslovakia". In Kerner, Robert J. (ed.). Czechoslovakia. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 284–301. OCLC3834800.