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The State Archival School during the Occupation - Continuation in Difficult Conditions

Publication at Faculty of Arts |
2021

Abstract

The article deals with the fate of the Archive School after the proclamation of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Its future was uncertain, especially after the closure of Czech universities in November 1939.

However,as the conceptprevailed that this was not a universits, teaching could continue. In the summer of 1940, the WIII Course ended, and in the autumn of the same year, the school management asked for permission of another course.

In the protectorate's conditions, the approval process was more complicated, but negotiations with the occupying authorities eventually led to the opening of a new course in March 1941. However, the Office of the Reich Protector set several conditions (imiting the number of students to 15, shortening the study period to two years, supplementing the study plan with subjects related to German history and German archiving).

In addition, he insisted that only archivists could teach at school. Under these circumstances, teaching could start from the spring 1941.

The education was not stpped even by major blow to the school, which was the arrest and subsequent death of its director Bedřich Jenšovský. Jaroslav Prokeš then suceeded him at the head of the school.

The school was kept running during the dramatic year of 1942, although as eyewitness Josef Kollmann recalled, it was "in a very uncertain and cramped atmosphere". IX course ended at the beginning of 1943.

The school then continued to formally continue, although its management did not request a new course. The fact that in Protectorate years an institution that was mainly engaged in Czech History, taught Czech and provided some form of higher education could operate legally is an interesting phenomenon, still relatively neglected when looking at the Protectorate period.ProP