Population: 5.5 million
Capital: Bratislava
Major language: Slovak
Major religion: Christianity
Life expectancy: 70 years (men), 78 years (women)
Monetary unit: 1 koruna = 100 hellers/(halierov)
Main exports: Machinery and transport equipment, foodstuffs, chemicals
Average annual income: US $19,171
Internet domain: .sk
International dialling code: +421
About Slovakia
Slovakia is a landlocked country that is bordered by Poland in the north, Ukraine in the east, Hungary to the south and Austria and the Czech Republic to the west and northwest. It is a touch larger than Switzerland, and like that alpine country, it is predominantly a mountainous region - forty percent of the country is forested. The Carpathian mountain range, which is at its zenith in the High Tatras, forms a natural border along the north of the country.
The territory of present day Slovakia has been ruled over by several powers over the centuries, most significantly Hungary and Austria. Slovaks are Slavs, and the predominant religion is Roman Catholicism. Although the Church was considerably suppressed during the Cold War era, it has made a comeback in recent years. In the east of the country there are historic communities of Ruthenians (Greek Catholics), whose wooden churches add a fine feature to the hilly landscape.
The Slovak national movement took root during the eighteenth century, and the first Slovak newspaper was published in Bratislava (then known as Pressburg) in 1783. Over the next hundred years, several attempts were made to codify the language. The Slovaks often allied themselves with the Czechs in their bids for further rights within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and this alliance eventually bore fruit in the post First World War state of Czechoslovakia.
The state of Czechoslovakia was broken up by the Second World War, during which Hitler oversaw the formation of a Slovak republic that was a puppet state of the Reich.
Czechoslovakia was reborn after the war, but with little concession to democracy. The Communists took power and any attempt to promote a more liberal agenda was swiftly crushed, most notably in Prague in 1968.
Soon after the Berlin Wall fell Slovakia broke away from the Czechs to form their own nation state (1993). In 2004, Slovakia joined the EU, and the single currency is scheduled to be adopted in 2009.