Czech Republic–Denmark relations

Czech Republic–Denmark relations
Map indicating locations of Denmark and Czech Republic

Denmark

Czech Republic
Embassy of Denmark in Prague
Embassy of the Czech Republic in Copenhagen

Czech Republic–Denmark relations are the current and historical relations between Czech Republic and Denmark. Czech Republic has an embassy in Copenhagen, while Denmark has an embassy in Prague.[1][2] Diplomatic relations were established on 1 January 1993.[3] Both countries are members of the European Union and NATO.

Early history

The first contact between Czechoslovakia and Denmark occurred on 20 May 1919 when Czechoslovak President Edvard Beneš sent a note to Danish authorities asking them to recognize Czechoslovakia. Denmark responded to this positively on 25 May 1919 and Beneš went on to entrust diplomat Miroslav Plesinger-Božinov to open a representative office in Copenhagen. He presented his credentials on 27 May 1920. On 14 August 1920, the representative office was upgraded to an embassy and diplomatic relations were established on 4 September 1920. Plesinger-Božinov presented his credentials as ambassador to King Christian X on 24 September 1920. Denmark, at first, brought Czechoslovakia under the jurisdiction of the Danish embassy in Vienna but Foreign Minister Scavenius told the Czechoslovak ambassador that a Danish embassy would open in the future. Paul Nørgaard served as the first Danish ambassador to Czechoslovakia, presenting his credentials on 19 May 1921. The two countries immediately worked on strengthening cultural and trade relations and established the Danish-Czechoslovak Chamber of Commerce in Copenhagen. Czechoslovak Minister of Trade Ladislav Novák also visited Denmark to study the economic conditions to negotiate a trade agreement.[4]

High level visits

In 1994, Queen Margrethe II of Denmark visited Czech Republic, and in 2006 the Czech president Václav Klaus visited Copenhagen.[5]

Ambassadors

List of Czech ambassadors to Denmark:[6]

# Officeholder Term start date
1 Miroslav Plesinger-Božinov 27 May 1920
24 September 1920
2 Bohdan Pavlů 11 February 1927
3 Čeněk Ibl 20 July 1936
4 Zdeněk Němeček 22 November 1945
5 Vladimír Natula 3 June 1949
6 Karel Lukeš 11 February 1952
7 Jaroslav Reimoser 5 March 1955
8 Emil Hršel 16 September 1960
7 November 1963
9 Jaroslav Šmíd 27 August 1964
10 Antonín Vasek 11 December 1969
11 Jiří Skoumal 24 November 1971
12 František Mika 8 April 1976
13 Stanislav Matonoha 17 September 1980
14 Alojz Kusalík 19 May 1983
15 Ľudovít Pezlár 3 November 1988
16 Hana Ševčíková 25 January 1991
17 Alois Buchta 9 November 1995
18 Marie Košťálová 10 March 2000
19 Ivan Jančárek 25 October 2004
20 Zdeněk Lyčka 7 July 2008
21 Jiří Brodský 8 October 2013
22 Radek Pech 29 September 2017
23 Jiří Ellinger 15 December 2023[7]

List of Danish ambassadors to the Czech Republic

# Officeholder Term start date
1 Paul Nørgaard 19 May 1921[4]
2 Niels Johan Wulfsberg Høst 21 September 1923[4]
3 Eigil Leth 27 May 1938[8]
4 Peter Oluf Treschow 29 January 1946[9]
5 Karl I. Eskelund 1 July 1951[10]
6 Birger Dons Møller 1 March 1955[11]

References

  1. ^ "Embassy of the Czech Republic in Denmark". Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  2. ^ "Danmark i Tjekkiet" (in Danish). Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  3. ^ "Diplomatické styky, politické kontakty ČR – Dánsko" (in Czech). 25 February 2009. Archived from the original on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Štěpán, Jiří. "Československo-dánské vztahy 1919-1926 a úloha Miroslava Plesinger-Božinova" (in Czech). Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  5. ^ Diplomatic relations between Czech Republic and Denmark Archived 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine Czech embassy in Denmark (in Czech)
  6. ^ "Czech Ambassadors in Denmark". Retrieved 19 October 2024.
  7. ^ "Ambassadører der den 15. december 2023 afleverede akkreditiver til H.M. Dronningen" (in Danish). Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  8. ^ The Central European Observer, Volumes 16-17. Central European Observer. 1938. p. 187.
  9. ^ The Bulletin of the Ministry of Information, 1st Department. 1946. p. 160.
  10. ^ Udenrigsministeriets Tidsskrift (in Danish). 1951. p. 321.
  11. ^ "Dons-Møller, Birger Thomas Vilhelm" (PDF) (in Danish). Retrieved 20 October 2024.