Paulová was born in Loukov in Bohemia.[2] Her mother died when she was three years old, and her father was the director of a sugarcane factory.[2] When the factory went bankrupt, the family moved to Prague, where she completed her education at the teachers' school for girls.[2] As the leaving exam for this school was not recognized by the university, she studied independently to take the final exam for Prague Grammar School, which she passed.[2]
In 1925, Paulová was made assistant professor of History of Eastern Europe and the Balkans, the first woman in Czechoslovakia to achieve this title.[1] She was appointed Special Professor in 1934 and Regular Professor in 1945.[1]
Paulová spent much of her time on research trips to Yugoslavia, France and the United Kingdom.[4] She was the author of several books on the history of Yugoslavia, the Czechoslovak-Yugoslavian relations, and Byzantium.[1] Paulová was the editor-in-chief of the journal Byzantinoslavica from 1946 until 1953.[5]
^ abHavlíková, L (2012). "Milada Paulová and her Byzantine world. Contribution to the relationship between M. Paulová and J. Hussey". Byzantinoslavica. LXX (1–2): 25–52.