User Contributed Dictionary
see Stalag
Extensive Definition
In Germany, Stalag was
a term used for prisoner-of-war
camps. Stalag is an abbreviation for "Stammlager", itself a
short form of the full name "Mannschaftsstamm und
-straflager".
Legal definitions
According to the Third
Geneva Convention of 1929 and its
predecessor the Hague
Convention of 1907, Section
IV, Chapter 2, those camps were only for prisoners
of war, not civilians. Stalags were operated in both World War I
and World War
II and intended to be used for non-commissioned personnel
(Enlisted
ranks in US Army, Other ranks
in British
Commonwealth forces). Officers
were held in separate camps called Oflag. In World War
II, the German Air Force operated Stalag Luft in which flying
personnel, both officers and non-commissioned officers were held.
The German Navy operated Marlag for Navy personnel.
Civilians that were officially attached to
military units, such as war correspondents, were provided the same
treatment as military personnel by the Conventions.
The Third Geneva Convention, Section III, Article
49, permits non-commissioned personnel of lower ranks to be used
for work in agriculture and industry, but not in any industry
producing war material. Further articles of Section III detailed
conditions under which they should work, be housed and paid. During
World War II these latter provisions were consistently breached, in
particular for Polish and Yugoslav prisoners.
Prisoners of various nationalities were generally
separated from each other by barbed-wire fences subdividing each
Stalag into sections. Frequently prisoners speaking the same
language, for example British Commonwealth soldiers, were permitted
to intermingle.
According to the Nazi ideology, Slavic people
were regarded as rassisch minderwertig ("racially inferior").
Because of that, the treatment of Slavic prisoners of war was much
worse than the treatment of Anglo-American or French internees.
Hundreds of thousands of Soviet prisoners died in Stalags as a
result of this inhumane treatment.
Arbeitskommandos
At each Stalag the German Army set up sub-camps called Arbeitskommando to hold prisoners in the vicinity of specific work locations, whether factories, coal-mines, quarries, farms or railroad maintenance. These sub-camps sometimes held more than 1,000 prisoners, separated by nationality. The sub-camps were administered by the parent Stalag, which maintained personnel records, collected mail, International Red Cross packages and then delivered to the individual Arbeitskommando. Likewise any individuals that were injured in work, or became ill, were returned to the Lazarett (medical care facilities) at the parent Stalag.Best known Stalags
Stalag Luft
III, a massive camp near Sagan,
Silesia,
(Now Żagań, Poland), was the
site of spectacular escape attempt (later filmed as The
Great Escape). On March 24,
1944, 76
Allied
prisoners escaped through a 110 m (approx 360 feet) long tunnel. 73
were recaptured within two weeks. 50 of them were executed by order
of Hitler.
The largest German World War
II POW camp was Stalag VII-A
at Moosburg, Germany. Over 110,000 Allied soldiers were imprisoned
there. It was liberated by the
U.S. 14th Armored Division following a short battle with SS
soldiers of the 17th SS Panzer Grenadier Division on 29 April,
1945.
In popular culture
The soldiers in the show Hogan's Heroes were imprisoned in fictitious Stalag 13. (An actual Stalag XIII was created in 1939 at Langwasser near Nuremberg from a former SA camp, but closed in 1940 and dispersed as three camps: Stalag XIII-A in Rhineland-Palatinate, and Oflag XIII-B Weiden and Stalag XIII-C in Lower Franconia. OFLAG XIII-B was a camp for officer POWs in which the son-in-law of U.S. General George S. Patton was held and a rescue attempt made by Task Force Baum.)A Stalag magazine series was published in Israel
in the early 1960s. The covers often featured drawings of imaginary
attractive buxom female SS staff in tight uniforms beating and
assaulting prisoners, suggestive of sado-masochism.
In the 2002 video game
Prisoner of War you play as the POW Captain Lewis Stone who has
been captured and sent to work in a Stalag Luft camp. The objective
of the game is to escape the camp by any means necessary.
In the popular teen book series Confessions
of Georgia Nicolson, protagonist Georgia refers to her all
girls school as Stalag 14.
References
External links
- La GUEFANGUE - La Vie des prisonniers de guerre Français en Basse-Bavière - 1939-1945 par Roger DEVAUX
- German prisoner of war camps
- Lamsdorf Reunited
- Documentary looks at Nazi porn in Israel
- Arbeitskommando 10001 in Ruckenwaldau (now Wierzbowa, Lower Silesia - Poland), Agency Camp German Stalag VIII-A.
- List of POW camps in Germany and occupied territories
stalag in Danish: Stalag
stalag in German: Stammlager
stalag in Spanish: Stalag
stalag in French: Stalag
stalag in Polish: Stalag
stalag in Swedish: Stammlager
stalag in Walloon: Stalag