The Great Escapes of World War I: The History of the Most Famous Prisoner Breakouts during the Great War By Charles River Editors

War has always led to prisoners In ancient times many were turned into slaves by the victorious armies while in medieval Europe they were often returned to their families in return for a ransom leading to fortune or poverty depending upon which side one was on By the Napoleonic era as armies grew in size and professionalism many were kept in camps for the duration of the fighting their captors not wanting to restore their enemies manpower while the fate of nations hung in the balance In the first half of the 20th century war was fought on a global and industrial scale Millions of men were flung into the grinder of World War I and World War II leading to commensurately huge numbers of prisoners of war POWs Camps were built to hold thousands of captives with their own barracks blocks parade grounds and even farms In World War I there were several fronts in the war Britain France Belgium and Germany faced each other on the Western Front fought mostly in northeast France and Belgium while Germany and Austria Hungary faced Russia on the Eastern Front where much of the war was fought in East Prussia and what is now Poland The Italians and Austrians fought in the region of northeast Italy and the Austrians and Bulgarians faced Serbia and then later an Allied army based in Salonica in the Balkans The Ottomans faced Russia in northeast Anatolia the British and Allied forces in the Mesopotamian campaign mainly in today s Iraq the British in Palestine and the Allies at Gallipoli Further there were subsidiary areas of conflict African troops under European officers largely fought on the African front German troops in East Africa faced British troops from India South Africa Portugal and Belgium There was submarine warfare in the Atlantic German commerce raiders in the Pacific and the Japanese besieged the German base of Qingdao in China There were even naval battles between British and German fleets off Chile and Argentina All of this meant that prisoners were taken across the world and prisoners of war were typically comprised of two officers and other ranks Officers were often treated well as there was still a sort of aristocratic courtesy among officers particularly among the Germans British French and somewhat less so for the Russians Italians and Turks Concepts such as honor still held considerable currency and bravery was greatly admired Enemy officers as a class often had in common with each other than with the millions of draftees in their armies so enlisted men as POWs generally were not as well treated Regardless of rank though throughout the war many of these men did not sit idle Many spent their time preparing elaborate escape plans in the hopes of returning to their home nations and back to the fight Following World War I several books were published giving romantic accounts of successful escapes For example the wildly popular film The Great Escape 1963 has been a main factor in how the public views prisoners of war and while that film was based on a book that details a mass escape of British and Allied prisoners from a World War II German prison camp for aviators Stalag Luft III a real escape from a German prisoner camp in World War I inspired the 1944 great escape from Stalag Luft III The Great Escapes of World War I The History of the Most Famous Prisoner Breakouts during the Great War
The Great Escapes of World War I: The History of the Most Famous Prisoner Breakouts during the Great War By Charles River Editors
English
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