Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . of their domination over Slovakia acquired domicilein that The density of population is very great in Bohemia, reach-ing 210 per square mile (United States about 35, State of New York, includingthe city of New York, nearly 200 per square mile). Bohemia lies in the heart of the European continent, the remaining Provincesextending below and partly into the Carpathians, towards the east. Bohemiaitself forms a remarkable geographical unit. It is a great diamond-shaped 1 The figures here given are merely estimates. The
Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . of their domination over Slovakia acquired domicilein that The density of population is very great in Bohemia, reach-ing 210 per square mile (United States about 35, State of New York, includingthe city of New York, nearly 200 per square mile). Bohemia lies in the heart of the European continent, the remaining Provincesextending below and partly into the Carpathians, towards the east. Bohemiaitself forms a remarkable geographical unit. It is a great diamond-shaped 1 The figures here given are merely estimates. The only official data are those of the1910 Austrian and Hungarian censuses, which are grossly inaccurate as to the propor-tions of the different nationalities. The first census of the Republic is to he taken in Feb-ruary, 1921. See La RSpublique Tchecoslovaque, 8° Prague, 1920; Statistical Hand-book of the Czecho-Slovak Republic (in Boh.), 8°, Prague, 1920; and Slovakia in theLight of Statistics (in Boh.), 8°, Prague, 1920. 471 Smithsonian Report, 1919.— REPUBLIQUETCHECO-SLOVAQUE. Echelle 1:3, <an=30 km. Carle dressee par FranfcSek MachAt. Frontispiece.—The Czechoslovak Republic. lmpnmee par V 472 ANNUAL EErORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1019.
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Keywords: ., bookauthorsmithsonianinstitutio, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840