List of prisoner-of-war camps in Germany
- Part of Lists of Prisoner-of-War Camps section in the Prisoner-of-war camp article.
This article is a list of prisoner-of-war camps in Germany (and in German occupied territory) during any conflict. These are the camps that housed captured members of the enemy armed forces, crews of ships of the merchant marine and the crews of civil aircraft.
For civilian and concentration camps, see List of concentration camps of Nazi Germany.
World War I POW Camps
During World War I camps were run by the 25 Army Corps Districts into which Germany was divided.[1][2]
Types of camps
Kriegsgefangenenlager (KGFL, "Prisoner of war camps") were divided into:
- Mannschaftslager ("Enlisted Men's Camp") for private soldiers and NCOs.
- Offizierslager ("Officer Camp") for commissioned officers.
- Internierungslager ("Internment Camp") for civilians of enemy states.
- Lazarett, military hospital for POWs.
List of camps by Army Corps districts
Guards Corps (Berlin)
- Mannschaftslager
- Döberitz. A large camp 8 miles from Berlin holding Russian, Polish, French, and British prisoners, including men of the Royal Naval Division captured at the Siege of Antwerp.
- Dyrotz near Wustermark.
- Lazarett
- Berlin. Located on Alexandrinenstrasse.
I Army Corps (Königsberg)
None found.
II Army Corps (Stettin)
- Mannschaftslager
- Altdamm. Three camps holding 15,000 men.
- Schneidemühl. Located three miles from the town this was a centre for work camps in the region, holding 40,000 to 80,000 men.
- Stargard.
- Stettin.
- Stralsund.
- Lazarett
III Army Corps (Berlin)
- Mannschaftslager
- Brandenburg an der Havel. Camp for Naval and Merchant Marine personnel.
- Cottbus. A sub-camp of Merzdorf.
- Crossen an der Oder.
- Frankfurt an der Oder. Four miles from the town, holding 18,000 men.
- Guben. Five miles from the town.
- Merzdorf.
- Müncheberg.
- Spandau. Camp for POW working at a chemical factory.
- Zossen. A camp 20 miles south of Berlin for British and French troops from India and Africa. The POW were subjected to propaganda urging them to revolt against their "colonial masters" with little result[3]
- Internierungslager
- Havelberg. For 4,500 internees of various nationalities, including nearly 400 British Indians
IV Army Corps (Magdeburg)
- Offizierlager
- Burg bei Magdeburg. Camp for 900 prisoners.
- Halle. Camp in a disused factory.
- Magdeburg. Camp on an island in the river.
- Torgau. Two camps in Bruckenkopf Barracks and in Fort Zinna.
- Mannschaftslager
- Gardelegen. Camp opened in September 1914.
- Grabow. Formerly a military camp, consisting of eight compounds of six barracks each.
- Merseburg An assembly camp holding up to 25,000 prisoners, from which men were drafted to work camps.
- Quedlinburg. A camp 2½ miles from the town, holding 12,000 men.
- Wittenberg. A camp 10½ acres in area at Klein Wittenberg, 2 miles from the city. Eight compounds held 13,000 men.
- Zerbst. A camp at an infantry drill ground two miles north of the city. It held up to 15,000 men, but there were 100,000 registered there, the majority engaged in industry and agriculture.
- Internierungslager
- Ruhleben. Camp for up to 4,500 internees six miles from Berlin located at a racecourse.
V Army Corps (Posen)
- Mannschaftslager
- Lauban.
- Sagan. A camp five miles from the town holding 6,000 men.
- Skalmierschütz. A very large camp for Russians and Romanians to which British and American prisoners were sent in early 1918.
- Sprottau A camp three miles from the town, and also a Lazarett for prisoners with tuberculosis.
- Stralkowo. A camp three miles from the town holding mainly Russians and Romanians, and British from March 1918.
VI Army Corps (Breslau)
- Offizierlager
- Gnadenfrei. Situated in a former boys school.
- Neisse. Located in former military academy in the centre of the town.
- Schweidnitz.
- Mannschaftslager
- Lamsdorf. A camp at a military training ground that was reopened during World War II as Stalag VIII-B.
- Neuhammer. A clearing camp for Upper Silesia. 100,000 men were registered there, but were mostly in work camps under its administration.
- Lazarett
- Beuthen. Two large Lazaretts, containing British prisoners from early 1918.
VII Army Corps (Münster)
- Offizierlager
- Mannschaftslager
- Burg Steinfurt. A camp for British prisoners.
- Dortmund.
- Duisburg.
- Dülmen.
- Düsseldorf.
- Erfurt. Held 15,000 men.
- Friedrichsfeld. Camp holding 35,000 men,
- Hammerstein. A camp for Russian prisoners.
- Heilsberg
- Minden. A camp three miles from the town with 18,000 men.
- Münster. There were four camps: Münster I was outside the city in open farming country, Münster II was at the racecourse, Münster III was a former Army barracks, and Münster IV was reserved for Russian prisoners.
- Sennelager. Three camps just north of Paderborn, named Senne I, II & III.
- Stendal. The camp was a mile NE of the town, and was centre of a number of work camps, holding 15,000 men.
- Tuchel. A camp for Russians and Romanians, also holding British and American prisoners from 1918.
- Lazarett
VIII Army Corps (Coblenz)
- Offizierlager
- Crefeld. There was also a Lazarett there.
- Mannschaftslager
- Limburg an der Lahn. A camp holding 12,000 men in which Irish prisoners were concentrated for the purpose of recruiting for the Irish Brigade.
- Meschede. The camp, just outside the town, held 10,000 POW.
- Wahn. Located 20 miles south-east of Cologne at the Wahner Heide Artillery practice camp. The camp has 35,000 men on its register and was formerly a parent camp for work camps in the district.
- Lazarett
- Aachen. Nine hospitals for British POW awaiting repatriation.
- Coblenz.
- Cologne. Several hospitals. British prisoners were treated either in the Garrison Lazarett I or the Kaiserin Augusta Schule Lazarett VI.
- Trier. Officer prisoners were treated in the Reserve Lazarett IV (Horn Kaserne).
IX Army Corps (Altona)
- Offizierlager
- Augustabad, Neubrandenburg. A former hotel holding British officers. Conrad O'Brien-ffrench was held there.
- Fürstenberg.
- Mannschaftslager
- Güstrow. Situated in pine-woods three miles from the town. It held 25,000 men, but had another 25,000 registered there assigned to work camps.
- Lübeck. A camp for men employed at the docks. Also a reserve Lazarett.
- Neumünster
- Parchim. A camp built on a former cavalry drill ground three miles from the town. Held 25,000 men, and up to 45,000 more registered in work camps.
- Lazarett
- Bremen. A garrison hospital and also a work camp attached to Soltau.
- Hamburg Reserve Lazarett VII was a ward of the central prison at Fuhlsbüttel. Reserve Lazarett III was at the Eppendorfer Krankenhaus, and at Veddel there was a Lazarett for Navy personnel.
X Army Corps (Hannover)
- Offizierlager
- Bad Blenhorst near Nienburg
- Celle. At Scheuen, and until late 1916 also Reserve Lazarett I (St Joseph).
- Clausthal.
- Hesepe nr. Osnabrück.
- Holzminden. For British officers. Housed in a former cavalry barracks (built 1913). The site of a noted tunnel escape in July 1918.
- Osnabrück. Camp located in a former artillery barracks.
- Ströhen.
- Schwarmstedt.
- Wahmbeck. At a hotel holding mostly officers from the merchant service.
- Mannschaftslager
- Göttingen.
- Hameln. Located a mile from Hameln, and the parent of many work camps.
- Munster. Camp opened in 1914 near Soltau on Lüneburg Heath
- Salzwedel.
- Soltau. Camp held 35,000, but had 50,000 on its register in work camps.
- Lazarett
- Hanover. Lazarett V was in the Royal War School, and there was another at the Garrison Lazarett.
- Internierungslager
- Celle Castle. For civilians and ex-officers.
- Holzminden. For up to 10,000 civilian internees, mainly Polish, Russian, French and Belgian, and including a small number of Britons. Comprised two camps, one for men, the other for women and children.
XI Army Corps (Cassel)
- Offizierlager
- Bad Colberg. Camp housed in a former sanatorium.
- Mannschaftslager
- Langensalza. Opened in 1914, the camp held 10,000 men.
- Ohrdruf. Located on a former Army training ground and held 15,000 men.
XII Army Corps (Dresden)
- Offizierlager
- Bischofswerda.
- Königstein. French and Russians held in the Fortress.
- Mannschaftslager
- Bautzen
- Königsbrück. Held 15,000 men.
XIII Army Corps (Stuttgart)
- Mannschaftslager
- Heilbronn Sub-camp of Stuttgart.
- Stuttgart. Two camps; one in the city in an abandoned factory building, the other in a disused factory three miles outside.
- Ludwigsburg.
- Lazarett
- Kempten. British prisoners quartered in the hospital there.
XIV Army Corps (Karlsruhe)
- Offizierlager
- Karlsruhe. Two camps; one in the grounds of the Karlsruher Schloss contained naval and, later, aviation officers, the other, the former Europäischer Hof, was known as "The Listening Hotel", and was an interrogation centre.
- Freiburg. Located in an old university building.
- Heidelberg. In barracks four miles from town.
- Ingolstadt. The camps were located in the city fortifications; fortresses 8, 9 & 10. As a camp for persistent escapers, it was the World War I counterpart to Colditz. Documented in the book The Escaping Club by Alfred John Evans.
- Villingen. The camp was in a disused barracks.
- Weingarten near Karlsruhe.
- Mannschaftslager
- Ingolstadt. Situated on the edge of the town, holding 4,000 men.
- Mannheim Located two miles outside of the city. From February 1917 it used as a clearing or exchange camp for British prisoners of war awaiting repatriation. Held 10,000 men.
- Internierungslager
- Rastatt Camp for French civilians. During 1918 it was used as a military transit camp.
XV Army Corps (Strasbourg)
- Offizierlager
XVI Army Corps (Metz)
- Metz. Known as Lazarett Saint-Clément.
XVII Army Corps (Danzig)
- Mannschaftslager
- Czersk. A camp for Russian POWs, to which British prisoners were also later sent.
- Danzig (Troyl) The "camp" consists of barges moored on the bank of the Vistula River, each containing from 100 to 500 men. The administration block, kitchen, and other facilities of the camp are on shore. Men from the failed Irish Brigade were sent here.[4]
XVIII Army Corps (Frankfurt-am-Main)
- Offizierlager
- Bingen am Rhein
- Friedberg
- Griesheim nr. Frankfurt
- Mainz. Camp is in the grounds of the Citadel, and holding 700 POW.
- Rosenberg. Located in Festung Rosenberg above the town of Kronach. Charles de Gaulle was held as a POW there.[5]
- Weilburg. POW held in a three-storied school-house.
- Mannschaftslager
- Darmstadt Located four miles from the town on a cavalry exercise ground.
- Giessen
- Görlitz. Held 14,000 POW.
- Lazarett
XIX Army Corps (Leipzig)
- Offizierlager
- Mannschaftslager
XX Army Corps (Allenstein)
- Mannschaftslager
- Arys
- Osterode Located at a locomotive works. A sub-camp of Preußisch Holland.
- Preußisch Holland. Holds 15,000 POW, though up to 35,000 registered there in various work camps.
XXI Army Corps (Saarbrücken)
- Offizierlager
- Neunkirchen. Located in a former monastery.
- Saarbrücken. In a former school.
- Saarlouis
- Zweibrücken. British officers were first sent there in 1916.
I Royal Bavarian Army Corps (Munich)
- Mannschaftslager
- Landsberg am Lech
- Lechfeld. Held 10,500 POW.
- Puchheim. Located on a military airfield 13 miles from Munich. Held 12,000 POW.
- Lazarett
- Munich. The large war school in the Mars Platz is used as a hospital, and there is another known as Lazarett B.
II Royal Bavarian Army Corps (Würzburg)
- Offizierlager
- Würzburg. Located in Festung Marienberg.
- Mannschaftslager
- Hammelburg
- Germersheim. Held 6,000 men.
- Würzburg. Outside the town on a high hill.
III Royal Bavarian Army Corps (Nürnberg)
- Mannschaftslager
- Amberg. Held 5,000 POW.
- Bayreuth. Held 5,000 POW.
- Landau
- Nuremberg. Located three miles from the town on an old training ground of the Nuremberg Garrison.
- Lazarett
- Erlangen. For officers only.
Others
- Offizierlager
- Eutin
- Graudenz
- Lahr. British from 1917.
- Landshut
- Ludwigshafen. From 1917.
- Münden. Camp for up to 600 officers located in a former factory a mile from the town.
- Osnabrück
- Pforzheim. From early 1918.
- Strasbourg
- Mannschaftslager
- Cassel (Niederzwehren). Held 20,000 POW.
- Constance. All officers and men for internment in Switzerland are concentrated here. Held 15,000.
- Deutsch Gabel Camp for merchant seamen under Austrian administration.
- Grafenwöhr Camp and Lazarett (Bavarian Corps)
- Gleiwitz. Located in a cavalry barracks. British prisoners sent there after March 1918.
- Heustadt. A centre for work camps in East Prussia.
- Heuberg. Located at the training area Lager Heuberg.
- Kalisch. Camp for Russian and Romanian soldiers, and also British from April 1918.
- Kattowitz Camp for Russian and Romanian soldiers, and also British from April 1918.
- Marienburg A centre for work camps in East Prussia.
- Neuburg am Inn
- Ulm. Camp on the outskirts of the town, of the usual barrack type.
- Zittau Russian POWs.
- Lazarett
- Frankfurt am Main. Several hospitals for British prisoners; Reserve Lazarett II and H65 are the principal ones.
- Ingolstadt. Two hospitals in the town.
- Ratisbon
World War II POW Camps
POW camps run by the Germans during World War II. There were around 1,000 Prisoner-of-War camps in Germany during World War II.[6]
Germany was a signatory at the Third Geneva Convention, which established the provisions relative to the treatment of Prisoners of War.
- Article 10 required that PoWs should be lodged in adequately heated and lighted buildings where conditions were the same as German troops.
- Articles 27-32 detailed the conditions of labour. Enlisted ranks were required to perform whatever labour they were asked and able to do, so long as it was not dangerous and did not support the German war effort. Senior Non-commissioned officers (sergeants and above) were required to work only in a supervisory role. Commissioned officers were not required to work, although they could volunteer. The work performed was largely agricultural or industrial, ranging from coal or potash mining, stone quarrying, or work in saw mills, breweries, factories, railroad yards, and forests. PoWs hired out to military and civilian contractors were supposed to receive pay. The workers were also supposed to get at least one day a week of rest.
- Article 76 ensured that PoWs who died in captivity were honourably buried in marked graves.
Types of Camps
- Dulag or Durchgangslager (transit camp) – These camps served as a collection point for POWs prior to reassignment. These camps were intelligence collection centers.
- Dulag Luft or Durchgangslager der Luftwaffe (transit camp of the Luftwaffe) – These were transit camps for Airforce POWs. The main Dulag Luft camp at Frankfurt was the principal collecting point for intelligence derived from Allied POW interrogation.
- Ilag/Jlag or Internierungslager ("Internment camp") – These were civilian internment camps.
- Marlag or Marine-Lager ("Marine camp") – These were Navy personnel POW camps.
- Milag or Marine-Internierten-Lager ("Marine internment camp") – These were merchant seamen internment camps.
- Oflag or Offizier-Lager ("Officer camp") – These were POW camps for officers.
- Stalag or Stammlager ("Base camp") – These were enlisted personnel POW camps.
- Stalag Luft or Luftwaffe-Stammlager ("Luftwaffe base camp") – These were POW camps administered by the German Air Force for Allied aircrews.
Nomenclature
At the start of World War II, the German Army was divided into 17 military districts (Wehrkreis), which were each assigned Roman numerals. The camps were numbered according to the military district. A letter behind the Roman number marked individual Stalags in a military district.
e.g.
- Stalag II-D was the fourth Stalag in Military District II (Wehrkreis II).
Sub-camps had a suffix "/Z" (for Zweiglager - sub-camp). The main camp had a suffix of "/H" (for Hauptlager - main camp).
e.g.
- Oflag VII-C/H meant this is the main camp.
- Oflag VII-C/Z meant this is a sub-camp of a main camp.
Some of these sub-camps were not the traditional POW camps with barbed wire fences and guard towers, but merely accommodation centers.
List of Camps by Military District
Military District I (Königsberg)
- Stalag I-A Stablack, Preußisch Eylau
- Stalag I-B Hohenstein
- Stalag I-C, from June 1943: Stalag Luft VI, Heydekrug
- Stalag I-D Montwy
- Stalag I-E Prostken
- Stalag I-F Sudauen
Military District II (Stettin)
- Stalag II-A Neubrandenburg
- Stalag II-B Hammerstein–Schlochau
- Stalag II-C Greifswald
- Stalag II-D Stargard
- Stalag II-E Schwerin
- Stalag II H Raderitz
- Oflag II-A Prenzlau
- Oflag II-B Arnswalde
- Oflag II-C Woldenberg
- Oflag II-D Gross Born
- Oflag II-E Neubrandenburg
Military District III (Berlin)
- Stalag III-A Luckenwalde
- Stalag III-B Fürstenberg/Oder
- Stalag III-C Alt-Drewitz
- Stalag III-D Berlin
- Oflag III-A Luckenwalde
- Oflag III-B Wehrmachtlager Tibor/Zuellichau
- Oflag III-C Luebben/Spree
Military District IV (Dresden)
- Stalag IV-A Elsterhorst
- Stalag IV-B Mühlberg (Elbe)
- Stalag IV-C Wistritz bei Teplitz
- Stalag IV-D Torgau
- Stalag IV-E Altenburg
- Stalag IV-F Hartmannsdorf
- Stalag IV-G Oschatz
- Oflag IV-A Hohnstein
- Oflag IV-B Koenigstein
- Oflag IV-C Colditz Castle
- Oflag IV-D Elsterhorst
Military District V (Stuttgart)
- Stalag V-A Ludwigsburg
- Stalag V-B Villingen
- Stalag V-C Wildberg
- Stalag V-D Strasbourg
- Oflag V-A Weinsberg
- Oflag V-B Biberach
- Oflag V-C Wurzach
Military District VI (Münster)
- Stalag VI-A Hemer/Iserlohn
- Stalag VI-B Neu-Versen
- Stalag VI-C Oberlangen/Emsland
- Stalag VI-D Dortmund
- Stalag VI-F Bocholt
- Stalag VI-G Bonn–Duisdorf
- Stalag VI-H Arnoldsweiler/Dueren
- Stalag VI-J S.A. Lager Fichtenhein/Krefeld and Dorsten
- Stalag VI-K Stukenbrock
- Oflag VI-A Soest
- Oflag VI-B Doessel–Warburg
- Oflag VI-C Eversheide/Osnabrück
- Oflag VI-D Münster
- Oflag VI-E Dorsten
Military District VII (Munich)
- Stalag VII-A Moosburg
- Stalag VII-B Memmingen
- Oflag VII Laufen
- Oflag VII-A Murnau am Staffelsee
- Oflag VII-B Eichstaett
- Oflag VII-C Laufen
- Oflag VII-D Tittmoning
Military District VIII (Breslau)
- Stalag VIII-A Görlitz
- Stalag VIII-B Lamsdorf
- Stalag VIII-C Sagan
- Stalag VIII-D Teschen
- Stalag VIII-E/308 Neuhammer
- Stalag VIII-F Lamsdorf
- Oflag VIII-A Kreuzburg/Oppeln
- Oflag VIII-B Silberberg
- Oflag VIII-C Juliusburg
- Oflag VIII-D/Tittmoning Castle
- Oflag VIII-E Johannisbrunn
- Oflag VIII-F Mährisch-Trübau
- Oflag VIII-G Weidenau/Freiwaldau
- Oflag VIII-H/H Oberlangendorf/Sternberg
- Oflag VIII-H/Z Eulenberg/Roemerstadt
Military District IX (Kassel)
- Stalag IX-A Ziegenhain
- Stalag IX-B Wegscheide/Bad Orb
- Stalag IX-C Bad Sulza
- Oflag IX-A/H Burg Spangenberg
- Oflag IX-A/Z Rotenburg/Fulda
- Oflag IX-B Weilburg/Lahn
- Oflag IX-C Molsdorf near Erfurt
Military District X (Hamburg)
- Stalag X-A Schleswig
- Stalag X-B Sandbostel
- Stalag X-C Nienburg/Weser
- Oflag X Hohensalza
- Oflag X-A Itzehoe
- Oflag X-B Nienburg/Weser
- Oflag X-C Lübeck
- Oflag X-D Fischbek
Military District XI (Hanover)
- Stalag XI-A Altengrabow
- Stalag XI-B Fallingbostel
- Stalag XI-C Bergen-Belsen
- Stalag XI-D Oerbke
- Oflag XI-A Osterode am Harz
Military District XII (Wiesbaden)
- Stalag XII-A Limburg an der Lahn
- Stalag XII-B Frankenthal/Palatinate
- Stalag XII-C Wiebelsheim/Rhein
- Stalag XII-D Trier/Petrisberg (Trèves)
- Stalag XII-E Metz
- Stalag XII-F Forbach
- Oflag XII-A Hadamar/Limburg an der Lahn
- Oflag XII-B Mainz
Military District XIII (Nuremberg)
- Stalag XIII-A Bad Sulzbach
- Stalag XIII-B Weiden/Oberpfalz
- Stalag XIII-C Hammelburg/Mainfranken
- Stalag XIII-D Nuremberg-Langwasser
- Oflag XIII-A Nuremberg-Langwasser
- Oflag XIII-B Hammelburg
- Oflag XIII-D Nuremberg-Langwasser
Military District XVII (Vienna)
- Stalag XVII-A Kaisersteinbruch
- Stalag XVII-B Krems–Gneixendorf. Formerly named Dulag Gneixendorf
- Stalag XVII-C Döllersheim. Previously named Dulag Döllersheim
- Stalag XVII-D Pupping. Previously named Zweiglager Pupping, renamed Stalag 237, Stalag 397, and finally Stalag 398 Pupping
- Oflag XVII-A Edelbach
Military District XVIII (Salzburg)
- Stalag XVIII-A Wolfsberg
- Stalag XVIII-AZ Spittal
- Stalag XVIII-B Oberdrauburg
- Stalag XVIII-C Markt Pongau
- Stalag XVIII-D Maribor
- Oflag XVIII-A Lienz/Drau
- Oflag XVIII-B Wolfsberg/Kaernten
- Oflag XVIII-C Spittal/Drau
Military District XX (Danzig)
- Stalag XX-A Thorn (Poland)
- Stalag 312 (also known as Stalag XX-C) Thorn (Poland) Same as above
- Stalag XX-B Marienburg (Poland)
Military District XXI (Posen)
- Stalag XXI-A Schildberg (Poland)
- Stalag XXI-B Schubin (Poland)
- Stalag XXI-B Thure (Poland)
- Stalag XXI-C/H Wollstein (Poland)
- Stalag XXI-C/Z Graetz
- Stalag XXI-D Posen (Poland)
- Oflag XXI-A Schokken (Poland)
- Oflag XXI-B Schoken (Poland)
- Oflag XXI-C Schubin/Schokken/Schildberg (Poland)
- Oflag XXI-C/Z Grune bei Lissa (Poland)
Other Camps
- Oflag 6 Tost (Poland)
- Oflag 53 Pagėgiai (Lithuania)
- Oflag 60 Širvintos (Lithuania)
- Oflag 64 Schubin
- Oflag 79 Waggum, Braunschweig
- Stalag 56 Prostken (Poland)
- Stalag 133 Rennes (France)
- Stalag 302 Gross-Born
- Stalag 307 Biała Podlaska (Poland)
- Stalag 307 Dęblin (Poland)
- Stalag 313 Czarne (Poland)
- Stalag 315 Przemyśl (Poland)
- Stalag 319 Chełm (Poland)
- Stalag 323 Gross-Born
- Stalag 324 Grodno (Belarus)
- Stalag 325 Zamość (Poland)
- Stalag 325 Rawa Ruska (Poland)
- Stalag 327 Jarosław (Poland)
- Stalag 328 Lemberg (Poland)
- Stalag 333 Ostrów-Komorowo (Poland)
- Stalag 336 Kaunas (Lithuania)
- Stalag 343 Alytus (Lithuania)
- Stalag 344 Vilnius (Lithuania)
- Stalag 351 Berkenbrugge
- Stalag 355 Khmelnytskyi Ukraine
- Stalag 357 Kopernikus (Poland)
- Stalag 359 Poniatowa (Poland)
- Stalag 361 Šiauliai (Lithuania)
- Stalag 366 Siedlce (Poland)
- Stalag 369 Krakau (Poland)
- Stalag 369 Kobierzyn (Poland)
- Stalag 371 Stanislau (Poland)
- Stalag XX-A (301) Friesack, Wutzetz/Brandenburg, (Germany)
Luftwaffe Camps
The camps for Allied airmen were run by the Luftwaffe independently of the Army.
- Dulag Luft Oberursel, Frankfurt
- Stalag Luft I Barth
- Stalag Luft II Litzmannstadt (Poland)
- Stalag Luft III Sagan
- Stalag Luft IV Groß Tychow (Poland)
- Stalag Luft V Halle/Saale
- Stalag Luft VI Heydekrug
- Stalag Luft VII Bankau
- Stalag Luft VIII-B Lamsdorf
- Stalag Luft XI-B
Kriegsmarine Camps
The camps for Allied seamen was run by the Kriegsmarine independently of the Army.
Fictional prison camps
- Luft-Stalag 13 - from the TV series Hogan's Heroes.
- Stalag 17 - from the 1953 film.
- Stalag Luft Nord - from the 1963 movie The Great Escape.
See also
- Concentration Camp
- German camps in occupied Poland during World War II
- List of Nazi concentration camps
- Lists of World War II prisoner-of-war camps
- Nazi concentration camps
- World War I prisoners of war in Germany
References
- Notes
- ↑ Steuer (2008) Ch.13, pp.3-6
- ↑ Pope-Hennessy, Una (1920). Map of the Main Prison Camps in Germany and Austria, with Gazetter and Index. London: Nisbet & Co. Ltd. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
- ↑ Steuer (2008) Ch.11, p.6
- ↑ "Danzig Prisoner of War Camp in WWI". irishbrigade.eu. 2011. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- ↑ "History of the Fortress". kronach.de. 2012. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- ↑ Eric Lichtblau (3 March 2013). "The Holocaust Just Got More Shocking". New York Times. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
- Bibliography
- Steuer, Kenneth (2008). Pursuit of an 'Unparalleled Opportunity' : The American YMCA and Prisoner of War Diplomacy among the Central Power Nations during World War I, 1914-1923. New York City: Columbia University Press. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
- Official list of World War II Stalags (German)
- Official list of World War II Oflags (German)
- List of Nazi camps for Allied POWs in Germany and occupied territories (German)
External links
- Map of German World War II Prisoner of War Camps
- Lamsdorf Remembered
- POW Camp Listings
- Stoker Harold Siddall Royal Navy, captured on Crete and his life in Stalag VIIA
- Oflag VC Wurzach / Ilag (Civil internees from Jersey)
- Stalag VIIIC and Stalag Luft 3 POW Camps Museum in Zagan, Poland
Further reading
- Nichol, John. The Last Escape. ISBN 0-670-03212-3 (The suffering of Allied POWs in the last months of the war.)