Slavic corridor

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Slavic corridor denotes:

  • the Polish Corridor , a 30 to 90 km wide strip of land that gave Poland access to the Baltic Sea between the First and Second World Wars, but also separated East Prussia from the German heartland
  • the Czech Corridor , after the end of the First World War the demand for access from Czechoslovakia to the Adriatic via Yugoslavia
  • a revanchist plan of the Russian politician Zhirinovsky , who after the end of the Soviet Union by dividing Romania over the Dobrudscha (to Bulgaria) and the Danube Delta (to the Ukraine) South Slavs (Bulgarians) and East Slavs (Ukrainians and Russians in Ukraine) together again wanted to connect