• Thumbnail for Alexander Dubček
    to Alexander Dubček. Wikiquote has quotations related to Alexander Dubček. Alexander Dubček profile on the Sakharov Prize Network Dubcek: Dubcek and...
    95 KB (12,307 words) - 17:30, 30 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Prague Spring
    became major reformers—including Dubček—endorsed these moves. As President Antonín Novotný was losing support, Alexander Dubček, the First Secretary of the...
    69 KB (7,825 words) - 02:22, 5 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia
    and hundreds were wounded. Alexander Dubček called upon his people not to resist. The Central Committee, including Dubček, hunkered down at its headquarters...
    89 KB (9,748 words) - 16:06, 27 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Alexander
    basketball player Alexander Dubček (1921–1992), leader of Czechoslovakia (1968–1969) Alex Ebert (born 1978), American singer-songwriter Alexander Lee (born 1988)...
    32 KB (3,159 words) - 19:21, 27 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Socialism with a human face
    slogan referring to the reformist and democratic socialist programme of Alexander Dubček and his colleagues, agreed at the Presidium of the Communist Party...
    15 KB (1,701 words) - 18:31, 19 October 2023
  • Moscow Protocol by Dubček and the other jailed Czechoslovak leaders on 26 August 1968, while others date it from the replacement of Dubček by Gustáv Husák...
    13 KB (1,807 words) - 04:49, 16 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Velvet Revolution
    non-communist government in Czechoslovakia since 1948, and resigned. Alexander Dubček was elected speaker of the federal parliament on 28 December and Václav...
    45 KB (4,995 words) - 03:45, 21 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Communist Party of Czechoslovakia
    concurrently, but never all three at the same time. In 1968, party leader Alexander Dubček proposed reforms that included a democratic process and initiated the...
    49 KB (4,804 words) - 15:44, 6 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Antonín Novotný
    ardent hardliner, Novotný was forced to yield the reins of power to Alexander Dubček during the short-lived reform movement of 1968. Antonín Novotný was...
    9 KB (891 words) - 05:27, 13 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gustáv Husák
    kidnapped Dubček and Leonid Brezhnev in Moscow. Husák changed course and became a leader among those party members calling for the reversal of Dubček's reforms...
    23 KB (2,346 words) - 06:43, 19 April 2024