Home » Languages » Slovak Translation Services
Slovak Translation Services
With a large network of in-country, professional Slovak translators, Verbatim Solutions Translations can respond quickly and effectively to your Slovak language translation needs.
Verbatim Solutions provides professional, high quality Slovak to English translations and English to Slovak translations. Our Slovak translation services will help you maximize your global strategy.
Native Speaking Slovak Translators
Verbatim Solutions Slovak translation teams are professional linguists performing translation from English to Slovak and Slovak to English for a variety of documents in various industries including:
Aerospace
Automotive
Defense
Desk-top publishing
E-Learning
Energy & power
Finance
Gaming & gambling
Government
Legal
Medical
Multimedia
Packaging
Rich media
Software
Technical
Tourism
Telecommunications
History
Main
article: History of Slovakia
The original Slavic population
settled the general territory of Slovakia in the 5th century.
Slovakia was part of the center of Samo's empire in the 7th century.
The highest point of the 9th century proto-Slovak state known as
Great Moravia came with the arrival of Cyril and Methodius and the
expansion under King Svatopluk. Eventually, Slovakia became a part of
the Kingdom of Hungary in the 11th-14th centuries and as such was
later part of Austria-Hungary prior to 1918.
In that year
Slovakia joined with the regions of Bohemia and neighboring Moravia
to form Czechoslovakia.
Following the break-up of that
country after the Munich Agreement of 1938, Slovakia became a
separate republic that would be tightly controlled by Nazi Germany.
Post World War II Czechoslovakia was reinstated and came
under the influence of the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact from 1945
onward.
The end of communist Czechoslovakia in 1989 during
the peaceful Velvet Revolution also meant the end for Czechoslovakia
as a whole and a creation of two successor states; Slovakia and the
Czech Republic went their separate ways after January 1, 1993.
Slovakia became a member of the European Union in May 2004.
See
also: Bratislava - History, and History of Bratislava
