Difference between revisions of "Prisoners of the Turks (First World War)"

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(Created page with "==Mesopotamia== For many accounts of members of the allied forces taken prisoner in Mesopotamia, especially after the fall of Kut, see Mesopotamia Campaign‎#External links...")
 
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Officers who were captured were generally treated better than “other ranks”, who almost always experienced terrible conditions often leading to death.
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==Mesopotamia==
 
==Mesopotamia==
 
For many accounts of members of the allied forces taken prisoner in Mesopotamia, especially after the fall of Kut, see [[Mesopotamia Campaign‎#External links|'''Mesopotamia Campaign-External links''' and '''Historical books online''']]
 
For many accounts of members of the allied forces taken prisoner in Mesopotamia, especially after the fall of Kut, see [[Mesopotamia Campaign‎#External links|'''Mesopotamia Campaign-External links''' and '''Historical books online''']]
 
==Other==
 
==Other==
 
===External links===
 
===External links===
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*[http://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/prisoners_of_war_ottoman_empiremiddle_east "Prisoners of War (Ottoman Empire/Middle East)"] by Yücel Yanıkdağ . Scroll down to the  section "Entente Prisoners of War in the Ottoman Empire" encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net. The mortality rate of the British and Dominion prisoners in Ottoman captivity was very high.
 
*[http://www.gutenberg-e.org/steuer/index.html'' Pursuit of an 'Unparalleled Opportunity': The American YMCA and Prisoner of War Diplomacy among the Central Power Nations during World War I 1914-1923''] by Kenneth Steuer, written as a dissertation in 2008.  Website of  Gutenberg-e, a program of the American Historical Association and Columbia University Press.
 
*[http://www.gutenberg-e.org/steuer/index.html'' Pursuit of an 'Unparalleled Opportunity': The American YMCA and Prisoner of War Diplomacy among the Central Power Nations during World War I 1914-1923''] by Kenneth Steuer, written as a dissertation in 2008.  Website of  Gutenberg-e, a program of the American Historical Association and Columbia University Press.
 
**[http://www.gutenberg-e.org/steuer/archive/AppendixA/turkey/index.html Turkish Prison Camps]. Click on the map for a list of the camps in Turkey.  
 
**[http://www.gutenberg-e.org/steuer/archive/AppendixA/turkey/index.html Turkish Prison Camps]. Click on the map for a list of the camps in Turkey.  

Revision as of 07:24, 3 February 2015

Officers who were captured were generally treated better than “other ranks”, who almost always experienced terrible conditions often leading to death.

Mesopotamia

For many accounts of members of the allied forces taken prisoner in Mesopotamia, especially after the fall of Kut, see Mesopotamia Campaign-External links and Historical books online

Other

External links

Historical books online

  • Prisoners of the red desert, being a full and true history of the men of the "Tara" by Captain Rupert Stanley Gwatkin-Williams RN 1919 Archive.org. HMS Tara was sunk by a German submarine near Sollum, Egypt in 1915. The surviving crew were handed over to the Senussi, allies of the Turks and were held prisoners at Bir Hakkim (Bir el Hakim) in Libya until rescued in 1916 in dramatic circumstances by British Armoured Cars under the command of the Duke of Westminster.
  • Eastern Nights--and Flights; a Record of Oriental Adventure by Alan Bott 1920 Archive.org The author was a scout pilot in Palestine, who became, after his plane crashed in 1918 a prisoner of the Turks, eventually in Afion-Kara-Hissar in Turkey. Alan Bott Wikipedia.
  • In Brigands' Hands and Turkish Prisons, 1914-1918 by A Forder 1920 Archive.org The author was an American missionary who was taken prisoner in Jerusalem in November 1914 and jailed by the military He was a prisoner in Damascus for four years until the British occupation.