Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 24. Chapters: Austria - Czech Republic border crossings, Czech Republic - Germany border crossings, Czech Republic - Poland border crossings, Czech Republic - Slovakia border crossings, esky T in, Mikulov, Cieszyn, B eclav, Paczkow, Nachod, Kudowa-Zdroj, Zittau, Krnov, Czech rail border crossings, Varnsdorf, elezna Ruda, Kuty, Rumburk, Zebrzydowice, Silesian Voivodeship, eske Velenice, Leszna Gorna, Lan hot, Hradek nad Nisou, Gorzyczki, Silesian Voivodeship, Grossschonau, Saxony, Bayerisch Eisenstein, Gmund, Lower Austria, Mieroszow, esky Ji etin, Prze cz Karkonoska, Seifhennersdorf, Deutschneudorf, Porajow, Pielgrzymow, Opole Voivodeship, Oberwiesenthal, Krasne Pole, Nova Ves v Horach, Waidhaus, Drasenhofen, Bily Potok, Olszyna, Boboszow, Okraj, Rozvadov, Jizerka, V ovice, Johstadt, Neualbenreuth. Excerpt: esky T in (Czech pronunciation: Polish: , German: ) is a town in the Karvina District, Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. The town is commonly known in the region as just T in (Polish: ). It lies on the west bank of the Olza River, in the heart of the historical region of Cieszyn Silesia. Until the 1920 division of the region between Poland and Czechoslovakia it was just a western suburb of the town of Teschen, which after the division fell to Poland as Cieszyn. Until 1918 the area was called Sachsenberg (local dialect: Sasko Kympa) meaning Saxon Hill and was a small western suburb of the town of Teschen (Polish: Cieszyn, Czech: T in) in the Duchy of Teschen, within Cieszyn Silesia of Austria-Hungary. Following the fall of Austria-Hungary, Czech and Polish local governments were established. Both of them claimed that the whole of Cieszyn Silesia belonged to Czechoslovakia or Poland respectively. To calm down the friction which developed, the local governments concluded an interim agreement on division..