In the paper, which presents the historical circumstances under which Central European
area was formed, the author expresses his conviction that Central Europe was never merely
an idea, but, at least from the eighteenth century onwards, a particular area between the
European east and west. By comparing the views by Edvard Kocbek, the Slovene poet and
politician, and Istvan Bibo, the Hungarian publicist, the author concludes that, in the period
between the beginning of the nineteenth century and the Second World War, there were two
tendencies in the development of the Central European idea: the first one sought the way
out of Central European fragmentation and backwardness in a federal association of the
Central European countries, whereas the second defended the view that Central Europe was
an integral part of the German cultural and economic area. Since with Nazism the German
idea of Mitteleuropa won, it seemed, after the Second World War, that the idea was
compromised. Although the idea was shortly revived in the 1980's, especially by the Polish,
Czech and Hungarian political dissidents, it lost its relevance after the fall of the Berlin Wall.