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[[Image:Marriage cert Amritsar Boer POW1.jpg|thumb|right|400px| The marriage of Edward Meyers, Boer Prisoner of War took place on 28 November 1902 at Amritsar]]
'''Prisoner of War and Internment Camps in India'''
'''Prisoner of War and Internment Camps in India'''
==Boer War==
==Boer War==
In India, there were Boer prisoners of war camps at
Until  April 1901 the British captured approx 25,000 Boers. Of these various numbers were sent to various places as POWs. Only a total of 9000 Boer POWs were ever sent out to India of this number, and they were held in some 14-15 camps in selected Indian cantonments. A ten year old boy was known to be a prisoner in India.<ref>[https://www.amazon.com/Boer-Boy-Memoirs-Anglo-Boer-Youth/dp/1770221387 ''Boer Boy: Memoirs of an Anglo-Boer War Youth''] by Chris Schoeman 2011. Biography of Charles du Preez, POW at Umballa and Solon, where he was the youngest inmate. Amazon.com.</ref>
 
In India, there were Boer prisoners of war camps at  
 
*Kakool  (Kakul) near [[Abbottabad]]
*Kakool  (Kakul) near [[Abbottabad]]
*[[Ahmadnagar]]
*[[Ahmadnagar]]
*[[Bellary]]
*[[Bellary]]
*Bhim Tal, near [[Naini Tal|Nainital]]
*Bhim Tal, near [[Naini Tal]]
*[[Dagshai]] and [[Solon]]
*[[Dagshai]] and [[Solon]]
*Fort Govindgarh,  (Gobindgarh) , [[Amritsar]]
*Fort Govindgarh,  (Gobindgarh) , [[Amritsar]]
*Kaity ( Keti,Kaiti) in the Nilgiris, near [[Ootacamund]]. There is also mention of a camp at Wellington which is in the same area. It is not known whether these are the same, or different camps.
*Kaity (Keti,Kaiti) in the Nilgiris, near [[Ootacamund]]. There is also mention of a camp at Wellington which is in the same area. It is not known whether these are the same, or different camps.
*[[Satara]]
*[[Satara]]
*[[Shahjahanpur]]
*[[Shahjahanpur]]
*[[Sialkot]]
*[[Sialkot]]
*[[Trichinopoly]]
*[[Trichinopoly]]
*[[Umballa]]
*[[Umballa]], now Ambala.
*Upper Topa, near  [[Murree]]
*Upper Topa, near  [[Murree]]
(Information mainly from the Anglo Boer War Museum website)
(Information mainly from the Anglo Boer War Museum website)
Catalogue reference [[BACSA]] Archive at the [[British Library]] Ceylon: Boer POW Camp Mss Eur F370/785
===FamilySearch digitised microfilms===
*[https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/185421 Archives of the Staff Officer, Prisoners of War, Cape Town, 1900-1903 (SO/POW)]. Digitised microfilm of originals at the Transvaal Archives Depot, Pretoria. Contains details of Boer prisoners of war, lists of prisoners who were in the various camps in India, Ceylon, St. Helena and Portugal, lists of prisoners who were released, paroled or who took the oath of allegiance.
*[https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/567053 Lists of prisoners of war in South Africa, 1899-1902]. Digitised microfilm of original manuscripts in Orange Free State Archives, Bloemfontein, Republic of South Africa. High reduction (42x) microfilm, use high magnification reader. Published lists of Afrikaner prisoners of war, arranged alphabetically and chronologically, with full name, home address, marital status, regiment location, age; date and place of capture, internment, death, relocation; notes on parole, rank, or release during the Boer War in South Africa (1899-1902). Besides South Africa, many P.O.W.s were relocated to the island of St. Helena, India, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), and elsewhere in the British Empire.
*Both series of digitised microfilms appear to be freely available on your home computer, but if not, see [[FamilySearch Centres]] for viewing options.
===External links===
===External links===
*[http://www.anglo-boer.co.za/pow/pow-camps-overseas.php Prisoner of War Camps in the Boer War in India , Ceylon and St Helena] with a [http://www.anglo-boer.co.za/pow/pow-camps-overseas-2.php map] from [http://www.anglo-boer.co.za/ Anglo Boer War Museum]. This website includes a [http://www.anglo-boer.co.za/database-search/index.php?section=Prisoners_of_War#sectionHeader Prisoners of War database search]
*[http://www.wmbr.org.za/view.asp?pg=research&pgsub=prison&pgsub1=2&head1=Prisoners%20of%20War  POW Camps Overseas]. Prisoner of War Camps in the Boer War in India , Ceylon and St Helena from [http://www.wmbr.org.za Anglo Boer War Museum]. This website includes a [http://www.wmbr.org.za/view.asp?pg=research&pgsub=databases&head1=Search  Prisoners of War database search].  
*[http://ancestry24.com/boers/ Boers],( ancestry24.com) includes a section “Boer Prisoners of War – Camps” (scroll down) including general mention of the camps in India
*[http://www.angloboerwar.com/other-information/89-prisoner-of-war-camps/1840-camp-for-boers-india  Camps for Boers - India] angloboerwar.com  (This link is found at Miscellaneous information/Prisoner of war camps/ Camps for Boers – India). Also [https://www.angloboerwar.com/other-information/89-prisoner-of-war-camps/1839-camp-for-boers-ceylon-sri-lanka Camps for Boers - Ceylon (Sri Lanka)] and [https://www.angloboerwar.com/other-information/89-prisoner-of-war-camps/1842-camps-for-boers-st-helena Camps for Boers - St Helena].
*[http://www.angloboerwar.com/other-information/89-prisoner-of-war-camps/1840-camp-for-boers-india  Camps for Boers - India] angloboerwar.com  (This link may be slow to load and is found at Miscellaneous information/Prisoner of war camps/ Camps for Boers – India).
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20130917032246/http://ancestry24.com/boers/ Boers] (ancestry24.com, now archived) includes a section “Boer Prisoners of War – Camps” (scroll down) including general mention of the camps in India.
*Article "South-South Gothic" by Isabel Hofmeyr, University of the Witwatersrand “A haunting tale of suspense featuring a cemetery in the punjab, boer prisoner of war graves, cold war neo-medievalism and much more” [https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:XEWh-77E5VQJ:www.jwtc.org.za/resources/docs/salon-volume-2/isabelhofmeyer_southsouthgothic.pdf+pow+camp+india&hl=en&gl=au&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEEShznQqtlxi_aPWcyWP3dMEUhE-Mhj2m-G-j0nhE_7CZkUUexSF5kzUiwg7riqiS-myVHvclUlEDpIY3ZUXUsYndgxa-xgY3yCZY8VFXdCjVsMO8YuslITqxUXeObTvthzPrfyXq&sig=AHIEtbSKbsyvoPlk2j_L80I-DXnZKlqISw html version], [http://www.jwtc.org.za/resources/docs/salon-volume-2/isabelhofmeyer_southsouthgothic.pdf original pdf]
*Article [https://web.archive.org/web/20160316191705/http://www.jwtc.org.za/resources/docs/salon-volume-2/isabelhofmeyer_southsouthgothic.pdf "South-South Gothic"] by Isabel Hofmeyr, University of the Witwatersrand. jwtc.org.za, now archived. “A haunting tale of suspense featuring a cemetery in the punjab, boer prisoner of war graves, cold war neo-medievalism and much more”. The cemetery at [[Ambala]].
*Article "The Indian Ocean Civil Dead: Boer Prisoner-of-War Graves in India" by Isabel Hofmeyr, University of the Witwatersrand. Paper presented at "The Politics of Heritage" 8-9 July 2011 Museum Africa, Johannesburg [https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:Gw_ntkh19OkJ:sitemaker.umich.edu/politics.of.heritage/files/hofmeyr_war_graves.pdf+pow+camp+india&hl=en&gl=au&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEEShv_AQMFyCV-rQUrA-kcSXC7EQys_rP-XLqES7YEfiOx1rcuvERPCUsAQHQ1vjXoatDa9GV19vgXsjfhAUjdnJgOXKmalg2Fv484U1EhOlcaq3713siWg2wiFApqkS0E0ZVWgF9&sig=AHIEtbTp299TZ0XpzVRhBLkClhfEA85JRg html version], [http://sitemaker.umich.edu/politics.of.heritage/files/hofmeyr_war_graves.pdf original pdf]
*Article [https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.geocities.com/enugareddy/southafrica/1991-1992-Boer_Prisoners_of_War_in_India.pdf "Boer Prisoners Of War In India"] by E S Reddy  written in 1991-1992. Now an archived webpage. A download to your computer, which you may need to locate in a downloads folder)
*Article "India and the Anglo-Boer War" by E S Reddy 29 July 1999 [https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:bcYW58v9fasJ:www.geocities.com/enugareddy/southafrica/1999-India_and_the_Anglo-Boer_War.pdf+POW+Camp+India+Boer&hl=en&gl=au&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEEShYNo1YF40HGHDZhlFiuc1EHJw1kmVyu8hOAn-_KytBFAQt906soL3NK3a4eXkWR32092nuPaG7OzkUb40YEtM-W8K8lkKK-vF5Tga2oa8CfU6ogDQtAu1TmMgvJ3LBTLHauI1O&sig=AHIEtbRXl59r063fFyGR3GfE74xJ93OXLA html version], original pdf not available; [http://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/boer_war.htm version from mkgandhi.org],without footnotes
**Contains  “Inscriptions on Gravestone at Ambala Cemetery, Ambala, Haryana State, India, for Boer Prisoners of War Who Died At Ambala”.
*[http://www.filat.ch/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=1282 India 1902 Fort Govindgarh Censored Envelope With Letter] "The POW camp at Fort Govindargh was known as "The Hell" amongst the 1200 Boer prisoners kept there. The heat was oppressive and the Boers sometimes swam in the moat surrounding the fort. The water, however, was polluted and inevitably would give both the POWs and their guards typhoid fever. The camp was eventually closed on 10 December 1902".  
*Article  [http://wayback.archive.org/web/*/http://www.geocities.com/enugareddy/southafrica/1999-India_and_the_Anglo-Boer_War.pdf "India and the Anglo-Boer War"] by E S Reddy 29 July 1999 now archived,  [https://web.archive.org/web/20130310232326/http://mkgandhi.org/articles/boer_war.htm  version from mkgandhi.org], without footnotes
*[http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-5354208/Boer-prisoner-of-war-art.html Boer prisoner of war art] Extract of article by Fransjohan Pretorius in  ''History Today'' 1 March 2006
*Hansard transcripts
*[http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/opinion/time-to-settle-old-score-1.1201161?ot=inmsa.ArticlePrintPageLayout.ot Time to settle old score] 20 December 20 2011. iol.co.za. Contains reference to the playing of cricket in the camps, particularly in Ceylon, and contains a photograph of the Ahmednagar Boer Cricket Club in India who  "played frequently against their British guards"
**[http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1901/jun/13/boer-prisoners-internment-in-india Boer Prisoners - Internment In India]. 13 June 1901
**[http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1903/mar/09/boer-prisoners-in-india Boer Prisoners in India]. 09 March 1903
*Newspaper article [http://trove.nla.gov.au/ndp/del/article/68706149 At Ahmednagar. The Boer Prisoners]  ''West Gippsland Gazette'' (Warragul, Victoria) 10 December 1901. Trove (nla.gov.au)
*[http://www.confluence.mobi/blog/a-boer-in-bangalore/ "A Boer in Bangalore"] by Adam Yamey 14 September 2016 ''Confluence''.  George Glaeser Munnik, a Boer Officer, was a POW at [[Trichinopoly]] and later [[Amritsar]]. During his stay in India he was able to visit Bangalore and the Kolar Gold Fields. He wrote an account ''A Boer in India'' published 1903. He subsequently became a Senator in South Africa.
*[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-x1q3J2Mm4  Ahmednagar: Fort: Boer and German POWs Held by the British] YouTube Video. Contains some cemetery images.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131127124539/http://www.filat.ch/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=1282 India 1902 Fort Govindgarh Censored Envelope With Letter] "The POW camp at Fort Govindargh was known as "The Hell" amongst the 1200 Boer prisoners kept there. The heat was oppressive and the Boers sometimes swam in the moat surrounding the fort. The water, however, was polluted and inevitably would give both the POWs and their guards typhoid fever. The camp was eventually closed on 10 December 1902". filat.ch, now an archived webpage.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20090807124745/http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-5354208/Boer-prisoner-of-war-art.html Boer prisoner of war art] Extract of article by Fransjohan Pretorius in  ''History Today'' 1 March 2006, now an archived webpage.
*[http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/opinion/time-to-settle-old-score-1.1201161?ot=inmsa.ArticlePrintPageLayout.ot Time to settle old score] 20 December 20 2011. iol.co.za. Contains reference to the playing of cricket in the camps, particularly in Ceylon, and contains a photograph of the Ahmednagar Boer Cricket Club in India who  "played frequently against their British guards". ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131127125028/http://www.iol.co.za/dailynews/opinion/time-to-settle-old-score-1.1201161?ot=inmsa.ArticlePrintPageLayout.ot  archive.org] link)
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20140310132142/http://www.freestatetennis.co.za/files/2013/fs_tennis_history/The_History_of_Tennis_in_the_Free_State.pdf  The History of Tennis in the Free State] advises that tennis was played at the camps in Ahmednagar,  Amritsar and  Trichinopoly. freestatetennis.co.za, now an archived webpage.
*[http://www.gettyimages.com.au/detail/news-photo/boer-prisoners-held-by-the-british-army-at-kakul-india-news-photo/56928889 Photograph of Boer prisoners held by the British army at Kakul, India (now in Pakistan) during the Second Boer War, 1902]. Getty Images
*[http://www.gettyimages.com.au/detail/news-photo/boer-prisoners-held-by-the-british-army-at-kakul-india-news-photo/56928889 Photograph of Boer prisoners held by the British army at Kakul, India (now in Pakistan) during the Second Boer War, 1902]. Getty Images
*[http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajch/article/view/64696 Abstract] of an article "The erection and maintenance of monuments to Boer prisoners of war in India 1902-1948" by J Wassermann ''South African Journal of Cultural History''  Volume 24, No 2 (2010). ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128102532/http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajch/article/view/64696  archive.org] link)
*[http://www.geni.com/projects/Anglo-Boere-Oorlog-Boer-War-1899-1902-POW-India/14302 Anglo Boere Oorlog/Boer War (1899-1902) POW India] geni.com
*[http://www.geni.com/projects/Anglo-Boere-Oorlog-Boer-War-1899-1902-POW-Ceylon/14300 Anglo Boere Oorlog/Boer War (1899-1902) POW Ceylon] geni.com
**[https://www.scribd.com/doc/24687734/Diyatalawa  Diyatalawa] by Major Anton Edema. POW Camp for Boers in Ceylon.
:Also see the Fibiwiki page [[Ceylon]] for additional information about POWs in Ceylon.
*[http://www.geni.com/projects/Anglo-Boere-Oorlog-Boer-War-1899-1902-POW-Saint-Helena/14301 Anglo Boere Oorlog/Boer War (1899-1902) POW Saint Helena] geni.com
:[http://samilitaryhistory.org/vol113an.html  "Boer prisoners of war on the Island of St Helena"] by A J Nathan. ''Military History Journal'' Vol 11 No 3/4 - October 1999. The South African Military History Society.
:*Article [https://web.archive.org/web/20120724205739/http://www.theaustralian.com.au/travel/island-of-no-return/story-e6frg8rf-1226424604109  "Island of no return"]  ([[St. Helena]])  by Gavin Bell ''Weekend Australian 14 July 2012'' Travel and Indulgence section, page 1 briefly says "Nothing remains of a prisoner-of-war camp on a high plateau where 6000 Afrikaners were held during the Boer War, but the graves of 156 who never saw their homeland again are carefully tended on a steep hillside. Two granite obelisks bearing their names stand as a memorial ...". Now an archived webpage.
:Also see the Fibiwiki page [[St. Helena]] for additional information about POWs in St. Helena.
*Details of [http://www.pey.co.za/site/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage-ask.tpl&product_id=9&category_id=1&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=1&vmcchk=1&Itemid=1 ''The Anglo-Boer War Diaries of Jan Geldenhuys''] Includes the period from April 1902 when he was captured and sent as a prisoner of war to Umballa, where his experiences till  20th November 1902, were documented.  He later met up with his father and brother who were POW’s at Bhimtal. The diaries were originally written in High Dutch. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131127124258/http://www.pey.co.za/site/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage-ask.tpl&product_id=9&category_id=1&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=1&vmcchk=1&Itemid=1  archive.org] link)
====Historical books online====
*[http://archive.org/stream/recollectionsab00bringoog#page/n10/mode/2up ''Recollections of a Boer Prisoner-Of-War at Ceylon''] by J N Brink, "late adjudant of General Crowther" 1904 Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.501563/2015.501563.Bengal-Past#page/n111/mode/2up Boer Prisoner of War Deaths at Kakul,  Abbottabad]. Also includes two guards. "Monumental Inscriptions, Third Series" Part VI Nos.1891-2000 by H Bullock, Major  page 97 ''Bengal Past and Present'' Volume 53 January-June 1937. Archive.org, Digital Library of India Collection.


==First World War==
==First World War==
===Historical books online===
===Historical books online===
*[http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/n3/mode/2up ''Reports on British prison-camps in India and Burma, visited by the International Red Cross Committee in February, March and April, 1917''] 1917 Archive.org [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/6/mode/2up  Contents]
*[http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/n3/mode/2up ''Reports on British prison-camps in India and Burma, visited by the International Red Cross Committee in February, March and April, 1917''] 1917 Archive.org [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/6/mode/2up  Contents]
Line 39: Line 71:
**page 45 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/44/mode/2up Katapahar] in the Hills near [[Darjeeling]]. Civilians
**page 45 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/44/mode/2up Katapahar] in the Hills near [[Darjeeling]]. Civilians
**page 47 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/46/mode/2up  Thayetmyo], Burma. Turkish prisoners of war.
**page 47 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/46/mode/2up  Thayetmyo], Burma. Turkish prisoners of war.
**page 57 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/56/mode/2up Camp for Convalescents at Schwebo], Burma. Turkish prisoners of war.
**page 57 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/56/mode/2up Camp for Convalescents at Shwebo], Burma. Turkish prisoners of war.
**page 59 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/58/mode/2up Quarantine Camp Rangoon], Burma.  Turkish prisoners of war.
**page 59 [http://www.archive.org/stream/reportsonbritish00inteuoft#page/58/mode/2up Quarantine Camp Rangoon], Burma.  Turkish prisoners of war.
:The [http://grandeguerre.icrc.org/en/Camps/Calcutta/7/fr/  original report (in French)], also available [https://archive.org/details/icrcreportindiafrenchlanguage Archive.org version],  appears to contain some additional information, such as the location of camps, and more details of the types of prisoners. (From the website "Prisoners of the First World War-ICRC Historical Archives")
*''List of Places of Internment'' produced  by the Prisoners of War Information Bureau in 1919  is an alphabetical listing of Prisoner-of-War camps in Britain and the Commonwealth during the First World War. It is available in a reprint edition,<ref>[https://www.naval-military-press.com/product/lists-of-places-of-internment-2/ ''List of Places of Internment''] Naval & Military Press reprint edition.</ref> which in turn is available as an online book on the Ancestry owned pay website fold3 titled [https://www.fold3.com/browse/251/hTGb85NZ8wIfXXI19aXfvGiL4  ''Prisoners of War Information Bureau: List of Places of'']  (located in World War II/Military Books/Britain, letter P)
:Nineteen camps were in this  1919 (January) list in India:
:Ahmednagar, Bankura, Belgaum, Bellary, Colaba War Hospital, Cumballa War Hospital, 34th General Hosp (Deolali), 44th General Hosp (Deolali), Indian Troops War Hosp Poona, Indian Troops War Hosp Marine Lines Bombay, Nowgong, Thayetmyo (in Burma), Meiktila (also Burma), Takdah <nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Darjeeling]] area], Sholapur, Yercaud, Poona Military Prison, Victoria War Hospital Bombay, Sumerpur.<ref>gmark. [http://c-c-s-g.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=32#p66 India- WWI POW camps] ''Civil Censorship Study Group Forum'' 11 December 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2019.</ref> In addition, a 1915 postcard from Dinapur addressed to Germany had been seen with a "Prisoner of War Mail" caption on it.
*[https://indianculture.gov.in/archives/list-enemy-subjects-interned-civil-detention-camps  ''List of Enemy Subjects Interned in Civil Detention Camps. Home Department March 1918'']. The camps included are Takdah, Berhampore, Bankura, all Bengal Presidency,  Belgaum, Bombay Presidency, and Yercaud, Madras Presidency. From the National Archives of India, reference File No.: HOME_POLITICAL_A_1918_MAR_93-95 indianculture.gov.in . Some pages may be difficult to view on a fixed computer screen as the pages are "on their side".
*The POW Camps are mentioned on [http://www.archive.org/stream/undertenviceroys00woodiala#page/210/mode/2up pages 211-212], ''Under Ten Viceroys: the Reminiscences of a Gurkha'' by Major-General Nigel Woodyatt  1922 Archive.org
*"Australian Nurses in India 1916-1919". Scroll to page 124,  ''With Horse and Morse in Mesopotamia: The Story of Anzacs in Asia'' edited by Keast Burke 1927.  Includes a list of the main WW1 hospitals in India, and there are mentions of the treatment of Turkish POWs at these hospitals. NZsappers.org.nz has two digital files/series, the first contains some digital pages  which  are of very poor quality. The second series of files from nzsappers.org.nz [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-1-70.pdf Pages 1-70], [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-71-132.pdf pages 71-132]; [https://www.nzsappers.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pages-133-206.pdf pages 133-206]. Also see External links, below.
*[https://archive.org/details/furthercorrespon00grea ''Further correspondence respecting the proposed release of civilians interned in the British and German empires. (In continuation of "Miscellaneous, no. 35 (1916)": Cd. 8352.)''] HMSO, London 1917. Presented to both Houses of Parliament January 1917. Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/agreementbetween00ingrea ''Agreement between the British and Ottoman governments respecting prisoners of war and civilians'']  Presented to Parliament  April 1918  HMSO. Archive.org
*[https://archive.org/details/lauterbachofchin00lowe ''Lauterbach of the China Sea : the Escapes and Adventures of a Seagoing Falstaff''] by Lowell Thomas, 1930 Archive.org. During WW1 Julius Lauterbach was navigator on the German  SMS Emden and subsequently  was  a prisoner in Singapore at Tangling prison camp [https://archive.org/stream/lauterbachofchin00lowe#page/94/mode/2up page 95], and helped ferment dissatisfaction which led to the 1915 Singapore Mutiny, during which he escaped and fled, initially to Sumatra.
===External links===
===External links===
*[http://www.stampcommunity.org/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=20627 Postcard to Germany from Ahmednagar POW camp 1919] stampcommunity.org
*[http://grandeguerre.icrc.org 
Prisoners Of The First World War- 
ICRC Historical Archives].  International Committee of the Red Cross. Includes a free Search facility. Retrieved 4 August 2014
** The International Prisoners-of-War Agency. The ICRC in World War One.  [http://www.icrc.org/eng/assets/files/other/icrc_002_0937.pdf pdf]    An eleven page 2007 document setting out the type of records available.  Retrieved 4 August 2014
* Finding Aid:  Foreign Office Files (FO 383) at the National Archives: Regarding Military & Civilian Prisoners of War: List of Files and Contents: 1915-1919. Compiled September 2014 by seaforths of the Great War Forum, and now available as a pdf from that Forum.<ref>seaforths [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/218552-foreign-office-files-on-pows-fo-383/?do=findComment&comment=3074906 Foreign Office Files on POWs (FO 383)] ''Great War Forum'' 12 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.</ref> Contains references such as
**Reference: FO 383/20 1915. Description: Germany: Prisoners, including: Correspondence regulations at Ahmednagar, India: includes printed copy of Memorandum issued by the Adjutant General in India (in docket no.147691).
**Reference: FO 383/436 1918 Description: Germany: Prisoners, including:  Lists (in docket nos. 97151 and 109002) of German civilians transferred from East Africa to camps at Ahmednagar and Belgaum, India, with printed correspondence relating to individual cases.
*[http://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/feature/2013/india-first-mission-1917.htm  India: first mission led to long tradition of humanitarian action in Asia]  icrc.org. Includes photograph taken at Belgaum, WW1.
*The POW Camp at [[Belgaum]] is mentioned in the entry for 6 April 1917 from [http://web.archive.org/web/20040407134248/http://home.clara.net/nhpendall/fpdiary.htm The Diary of Frederick Pendall], a  member of the [[9th Regiment of Foot‎|Norfolk regiment]] who was in Belgaum from  March 1917 to March 1918  (archived website).
*[http://grandeguerre.icrc.org/en/PostCards/gb Postcards of British Camps] includes two of Ahmednagar.  grandeguerre.icrc.org. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131128053807/http://www.stampcommunity.org/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=20627 Postcard to Germany from Ahmednagar POW camp 1919] stampcommunity.org, now an archived webpage.
*[http://www.gaebler.info/2014/07/tucher-3/ Ahmednagar] from ''German Missions in British India Nationalism: Case and Crisis in Missions'' by Paul von Tucher 1980. From the website "Gaebler info and Genealogy" section Indien
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120313145717/http://gaebler.info/politik/indien-1.htm Reports of Germans about the time of the First World War in British India]  Includes two reports concerning Ahmednager, and reports from missionaries in the camps.  In German language, with [https://translate.google.com.au/translate?sl=de&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=https%3A%2F%2Fweb.archive.org%2Fweb%2F20120313145717%2Fhttp%3A%2F%2Fgaebler.info%2Fpolitik%2Findien-1.htm&edit-text=&act=url Google Translate English version], or Google Chrome provides an automatic translation. From the website "Gaebler info and Genealogy", section Indien. See [[POW Camps in India#Italian prisoners of war|Second World War-Italian prisoners of war]] for comments about Google Translate.
*[http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/3072/ ''Prisoners of war and civilian internees captured by British and Dominion forces from the German colonies  during the First World War''] by Mahon Murphy. A thesis submitted to the Department of International History of the London School of Economics for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, London, July 2014. The references to India appear to be minor,  but Ahmednagar is mentioned on pages 59 and 67, and Belgaum is also mentioned on page 59. There is a map,  which includes camps in India and Ceylon,  on page 7, with  a description on page 9.
*Turkish POWs at [[Deolali]] are mentioned in [http://www.awm.gov.au/journal/j36/nurses.asp Reading between unwritten lines: Australian Army nurses in India, 1916-19] by Ruth Rae.  Australian War Memorial website.  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131020125644/https://www.awm.gov.au/journal/j36/nurses.asp archive.org] link)
**From notes in the Australian Archives regarding  34 Welsh General Hospital in Deolali : Sister Alma L. Bennett, Matron in 1917,  said: ‘containing 3000 beds – 4 hrs train journey from Bombay'. ... Our cases were all from Mesopotamia – some direct – others individually coming from various Bombay Hospitals… We also had 200 Turkish Prisoners of War, almost all Surgical cases, some with shocking wounds – septic.’ Matron Gertrude Davis said: ‘When we became a P. of W. hospital our number of beds was increased to 700, 200 for British and 500 for prisoners as later we had the German prisoners from East Africa also an occasional one from Mespot’. <ref> kjharris. [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/112227-concentration-camp-_-deolali/?do=findComment&comment=2022171 Concentration Camp Deolali] ''Great War Forum''  23 January 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2019. </ref>
:Also see Historical books online, above.
*Turkish POWS on the ship S.S. Ellenga in Bombay Harbour in late December 1915 are mentioned in a poem written by Rifleman John Layton of the 18th Battalion, Rifle Brigade, who wrote "Those barbarious Turkish brutes, who looked a deplorable sight. They were dirty and covered with vermin, dying like rotten sheep"<ref>stiletto_33853 [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/53333-18th-rifle-brigade/ 18th Rifle Brigade] ''Great War Forum'' 30 May 2006 et al. Retrieved 13 September 2019.</ref>
*There was a POW Camp for Turkish prisoners at Kirkee<ref>Huw  (Guest PJI777). [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/111506-kirkee-india-april-1919/?do=findComment&comment=2208175 Kirkee India April 1919] ''Great War Forum'' 4 January 2015. Retrieved  13 September 2019.</ref>. It is possible that it was located near a hospital to provide labour for the hospital.<ref>kjharris. [https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/111506-kirkee-india-april-1919/?do=findComment&comment=1663057 Kirkee India April 1919] ''Great War Forum'' 2 November 2011, Retrieved 7 November 2019.</ref> An image of an tobacco tin was seen, with the inscription Prisoners of War Camp Kirkee India 1914-1918 A V Lawes 62515 8th Welch Pioneers<ref>Image of tobacco tin  inscribed Prisoners of War Camp Kirkee India 1914-1918 A V Lawes 62515 8th Welch Pioneers. Retrieved 15 January 2015, but no longer available.</ref>, perhaps indicating the camp was in operation throughout the war.
*British Library India Office Records catalogue [http://searcharchives.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?menuitem=0&fromTop=true&fromPreferences=false&fromEshelf=false&vid=IAMS_VU2 Search] result  IOR/L/PJ/6/1504, File 4110 includes a brief  mention  of Turkish War Prisoners Camp, Nowgong, Central India.
*[http://amitavghosh.com/blog/?p=4657 Turkish POWs in India and Burma: First World War, Part 1] by Vedica Kant September 14, 2012;  [http://amitavghosh.com/blog/?p=4667  Part 2] September 17, 2012        amitavghosh.com
*[http://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/2012/12/world-war-indian-soldiers-prisoners.html "Indian Soldiers and POWs in the Middle East during World War I"] by Vedica Kant, Robert Upton, and Chris Gratien, Ottoman History Podcast, No. 86 (December 21, 2012) “ In this podcast, Vedica Kant talks about the experience of Indian POWs in the Ottoman Empire as well as that of Ottoman soldiers captured by the British army and brought to India and Burma, with additional commentary by Robert Upton regarding military recruitment in British India...” Webpage contains images of prisoners at Bellary and Thayetmyo. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131114003647/http://www.ottomanhistorypodcast.com/2012/12/world-war-indian-soldiers-prisoners.html archive.org] link)
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20140327035305/http://www.turkishreview.org/tr/newsDetail_getNewsById.action?newsId=223337 The history hidden in Haydarpaşa Cemetery] by Vedika Kant 01 August 2013. turkishreview.org, now an archived webpage. Includes a section on the Thayetmyo POW camp
*[https://armenianweekly.com/2019/08/06/turkish-and-armenian-prisoners-of-war-held-in-india-and-burma-during-wwi/ "Turkish and Armenian Prisoners of War Held in India and Burma During WWI"] by Harut Sassounian August 6, 2019 ''The Armenian Weekly''.
*[http://nek.istanbul.edu.tr:4444/ekos/TEZ/ET001765.pdf BİRİNCİ DÜNYA SAVAŞI’NDA İNGİLİZLERE ESİR DÜŞEN TÜRK ASKERLERİ] by Vedat TÜFEKÇİ  Turkish language doctoral thesis, Istanbul University 2019. English title (possibly) "Turkish soldiers who were captured by the British in the first war".  Appears to include chapters about camps in India and Burma, from page 141. Use [https://translate.google.com Google Translate]


==Second World War==
==Second World War==
The Prisoners-of-war were interned in India in 29 camps forming 6 Groups of camps. In addition, there were two Civil Internment Camps at Dehradun and Deoli and one camp in Delhi for the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.
The Prisoners-of-war were interned in India in 29 camps forming 6 Groups of camps. In addition, there were two Civil Internment Camps at Dehradun and Deoli and one camp in Delhi for the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.  
*Group I – [[Bangalore]]: Camps 1 to 8 - Italian prisoners.  
 
Some 18,400 Italian prisoners of war (out of 50,000 requested by the Australian Government, to be employed as farm labourers) were transported from India to Australia from 1943. Some of the [Italian?] POWs in India were shipped to South Africa to help build the railway there.<ref>[http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2013/08/19/italian-pows-helped-grow-australia Italian POWs helped grow Australia] 26 August 2013 SBS News [Special Broadcasting Service] Television and Radio, Australia, quoting Gianfranco Cresciani, author of ''The Italians in Australia''</ref><ref>Francesco  Barbera was an Italian POW captured in North Africa in 1941, who spent a few years In India. He was sent to Australia in 1943 where he spent time in POW camps in Liverpool, Cowra, Tumut and St Ives, now a suburb of Sydney. Article in the Sydney suburban newspaper  ''North Shore Times'' 25 April 2014, page 11, (previously available online).</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20160324112725/http://www.army.gov.au/~/media/Files/Our%20history/AAHU/Primary%20Materials/Post%20War%20and%20Korea%201946-1953/Documents/History%20Directorate%20of%20Prisoners%20of%20War%20and%20Internees%201939%20to%201951%20Part%20Two.pdf  Part II: Administration of Enemy Prisoners of War] File from army.gov.au, now an archived webpage</ref>
*Group I – [[Bangalore]]: Camps 1 to 8 - Italian prisoners. There were Camps at Jakkur, Hebbal and Jalahalli.<ref>[https://aturquoisecloud.wordpress.com/2011/07/07/pensioners-paradise-or-pow-camp/ Pensioner’s Paradise or POW Camp ?] by Aliyeh Rizvi, July 7, 2011</ref>
*Group II – Bhopal: Camps 9 to 16 – Italian prisoners. Camp 16 was a hospital. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhopal_Bairagarh Bhopal Bairagarh] (Wikipedia)
*Group II – Bhopal: Camps 9 to 16 – Italian prisoners. Camp 16 was a hospital. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhopal_Bairagarh Bhopal Bairagarh] (Wikipedia)
*Group III – Ramgarh: Camps 17 to 20 – German Civil Internees and later Italian prisoners. Had a punishment camp for difficult Italian POWs Ramgarh was near [[Hazaribagh]]
*Group III – Ramgarh: Camps 17 to 20 – German Civil Internees and later Italian prisoners. Had a punishment camp for difficult Italian POWs Ramgarh was near [[Hazaribagh]]. It was used as a POW camp up to  May 1942 when the POWs were  moved out and the United States Chinese Training Command was established there.
*Group IV - Clement Town ([[Dehra Dun]]): Camps 21 to 24 – Separated in Wings 1: pro-Nazi, 2: anti-Nazi, 3: Italians. One of the camps was a *Central Internment Camp.  
*Group IV - Clement Town ([[Dehra Dun]]): Camps 21 to 24 – Separated in Wings 1: pro-Nazi, 2: anti-Nazi, 3: Italians. One of the camps was a *Central Internment Camp.  
*Group V – YOL: Camps 25 to 28 – Italian prisoners.  Yol was situated near [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharamsala Dharamsala] (Wikipedia)
*Group V – YOL: Camps 25 to 28 – Italian prisoners.  Yol was situated near [[Dharamsala]]
*Group VI – Bikaner: Camp 29 – Japanese prisoners. It was also a punishment camps for difficult Italian POWs.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bikaner Bikaner] (Wikipedia)
*Group VI – Bikaner: Camp 29 – Japanese prisoners. It was also a punishment camps for difficult Italian POWs.[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bikaner Bikaner] (Wikipedia)
*Central Internment Camp ([[Dehra Dun]] / Premnagar): This was mixed civilian internment and prisoner-of-war camp. Italian prisoners of war and German civilian internees housed in separate camps. WING 1 and WING 6 held German internees.  
*Central Internment Camp ([[Dehra Dun]] / Premnagar): This was mixed civilian internment and prisoner-of-war camp. Italian prisoners of war and German civilian internees housed in separate camps. Wing 1 and Wing 6 held German internees.  
*Delhi – Japanese Camp: [[Delhi]] housed the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.  
*Delhi – Japanese Camp: [[Delhi]] housed the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.  
*Deoli – Civil Internment Camp: Deoli housed German civilian internees and Japanese civilian internees. It was also a punishment colony for Germans. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deoli,_Rajasthan Deoli] (Wikipedia)
*Deoli (Ajmer) – Civil Internment Camp: Deoli housed German civilian internees and Japanese civilian internees. It was also a punishment colony for Germans. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deoli,_Rajasthan Deoli] (Wikipedia)
The above information is mainly taken from the website [http://indianbanknote.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/india-prisoner-of-war-coupons.html  Indian Banknote:India: Prisoner-of-War Coupons]
The above information is mainly taken from the website [http://indianbanknote.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/india-prisoner-of-war-coupons.html  Indian Banknote:India: Prisoner-of-War Coupons] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128055915/http://indianbanknote.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/india-prisoner-of-war-coupons.html archive.org] link).


This [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_concentration_and_internment_camps#British-India Wikipedia article] lists the following additional camps  
This [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_concentration_and_internment_camps#British-India Wikipedia article] lists the following additional camps  
Line 62: Line 129:
*Fort William, [[Calcutta]], army camp, closed early 1940, males were sent to [[Ahmadnagar|Ahmednagar]], females to Katapahar parole camp.
*Fort William, [[Calcutta]], army camp, closed early 1940, males were sent to [[Ahmadnagar|Ahmednagar]], females to Katapahar parole camp.
*Smaller Parole Camps at [[Naini Tal]], Kodaikanal and Katapahar (near [[Darjeeling]]), were all closed by late 1942. Inmates transferred to (family reunions) to the camps near [[Poona]]: [[Satara]] from May 1940, Purandhar (lower Fort), initially for Jewish refugees, later also other Germans, many missionaries with families.  
*Smaller Parole Camps at [[Naini Tal]], Kodaikanal and Katapahar (near [[Darjeeling]]), were all closed by late 1942. Inmates transferred to (family reunions) to the camps near [[Poona]]: [[Satara]] from May 1940, Purandhar (lower Fort), initially for Jewish refugees, later also other Germans, many missionaries with families.  
There was an internment camp at Mhow for Germans residing in India.<ref>
[http://books.google.com.au/books?id=SoG0yYBlvf8C&lpg=PA25&pg=PA25#v=onepage&q=Mhow%20internment&f=false Page 25] ''A Soldier's Life in War and Peace'' by Maj.Gen A. S. Naravane Google Books ISBN 81-7648-437-7</ref>
Catalogue reference [[BACSA]] Archive at the [[British Library]] India: Italian POW Camps Mss Eur F370/853
There are some catalogue references at the British Library in the series
IOR/L/PJ/8/1-76 Collection 101: Aliens ‎ (1931-1950), particularly from OR/L/PJ/8/30A  "Coll 101/10A; Treatment of aliens, prisoners of war and civilian internees in India ‎ (Apr 1939-Aug 1943)" onwards, including "Nominal rolls and monthly returns"; "Reports on internment camps in India (excluding Japanese camps) ‎ (Oct 1942-Oct 1945)"; Internees; "Repatriation of civilians" etc.[http://searcharchives.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=1&dstmp=1583113933726&vid=IAMS_VU2&fromLogin=true Search for these records] in the Archives and Manuscripts catalogue.
===External links===
*[http://indianbanknote.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/india-prisoner-of-war-coupons.html  Indian Banknote: India: Prisoner-of-War Coupons] Money used in the Prisoner-of-War Camps. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128055915/http://indianbanknote.blogspot.com.au/2010/05/india-prisoner-of-war-coupons.html archive.org] link)
*[http://worldandmilitarynotes.com/?s=India+  World and Military Notes] contains examples of money used in the  Prisoner-of-War Camps. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128060238/http://worldandmilitarynotes.com/?s=India+  archive.org] link)
*Use [https://www.deepl.com/translator DeepL Translator] or [https://translate.google.com.au Google Translate]  Italian language [http://prigioniero.weebly.com/moneta.html Prigioniero a Yol India] about the money used in the camps. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128061612/http://prigioniero.weebly.com/moneta.html  archive.org] link)
====German prisoners of war====
*[http://gaebler.info/indien.htm India] gaebler.info.  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131014211542/http://gaebler.info/indien.htm  archive.org] link). Includes
**"German Missions in India" mainly in German language but includes
***extracts from the book [http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher.htm ''German Missions In British India Nationalism: Case And Crisis In Missions''] by Paul Von Tucher 1980 concerning internment of German missionaries during World War 2 at Premnagar near Dehra Dun, Purandhar, about 40kms south-east of Poona and [[Satara]]. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120206093119/http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher.htm  archive.org] link)
****[http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-11.htm Campus Teutonicus At Dehra Dun] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120313145454/http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-11.htm archive.org] link)
****[http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-13.htm Purandhar]  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120313145816/http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-13.htm  archive.org] link)
****[http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-14.htm Satara] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120206093149/http://gaebler.info/politik/tucher-14.htm  archive.org] link)
**[http://gaebler.info/india/escape.htm#croston Prisoners of the Raj] by Roger Croston. Originally published in ''The Alpine Journal 2006''  Escape from internment at Dehra Dun.  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20111230002513/http://gaebler.info/india/escape.htm#croston  archive.org] link)
**[http://gaebler.info/india/escape.htm#1 Escape by Rolf Magener from internment at Dehra Dun]  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20111230002513/http://gaebler.info/india/escape.htm#1  archive.org])
**[http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm ''World War II in British India''] by Hermann M. Selzer, M. D. Born a Polish Jew, he studied medicine in Germany and Italy and worked with his wife, as  doctors in Lahore from the late 1930s. In December 1940, the family was arrested and taken as enemy aliens to first Purandhar and then Satara internment camps in Southern India until August 1946, when they were released and returned to Lahore.  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120421001014/http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm  archive.org] link)
***[http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#purandhar Internment and Parole Camp Purandhar]. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120421001014/http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#purandhar  archive.org] link). The author [http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#tacuisses details] how the Camp Commandant misappropriated money meant for the medical care of the prisoners and also money from their food allowance, which is described in this [http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#life link]  (archive.org links [https://web.archive.org/web/20120421001014/http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#tacuisses  1]  and [https://web.archive.org/web/20120421001014/http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#life  2])
***[http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#satara Internment and Parole Camp Satara] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20120421001014/http://gaebler.info/india/selzer.htm#satara  archive.org] link)
====Italian prisoners of war====
*[https://international-review.icrc.org/sites/default/files/S1026881200024843a.pdf "Délégations du Comité international dans les cinq continents: Rapports télégraphiques sur des visites de camps de prisonniers de guerre et d'internés civils"] a section commencing page 347, part of  [https://international-review.icrc.org/fr/revues/bulletin-no-317-revue-internationale-de-la-croix-rouge-et-bulletin-international-des ''Revue Internationale de la Croix-Rouge et Bulletin international des Sociétés de la Croix-Rouge'' Volume 27, Issue 317, May 1945] French language. Scroll to digital page 6 (page 350 of original document) "Delegation aux Indes britannique" for details of a visit to India 26 February to 20 March [1945]. icrc.org. If required, copy and paste the text in  [https://www.deepl.com/translator DeepL Translator] or [https://translate.google.com.au Google Translate] 
:ICRC photographs: [https://avarchives.icrc.org/Picture/21720 Bangalore. Group I. Italian prisoners of war camp. ICRC delegate with a group of detainees 3/44]; [https://avarchives.icrc.org/Picture/21747 Italian prisoners of war camp. ICRC delegate with italian detainees 10/44]; [https://avarchives.icrc.org/Picture/21744 Italian prisoners of war camp. Delegate visiting the cemetery 10/44]; [https://avarchives.icrc.org/Picture/21736 Group IV. Italian prisoners of war camp], ICRC's delegates with italian doctors in front of the patient's barrack. WW2.
*[https://blogs.bl.uk/untoldlives/2013/10/italian-prisoners-of-war-and-internees-in-india.html "Italian Prisoners of War and Internees in India"] blogs.bl.uk. Records relating to Italian Prisoners of War and Internees WW2 at the British Library. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20190913124308/https://blogs.bl.uk/untoldlives/2013/10/italian-prisoners-of-war-and-internees-in-india.html  archive.org] link)
*[http://www.tribuneindia.com/1998/98oct17/saturday/head4.htm#1 "Yol: Once a haven for prisoners of war"] (Scroll down) by Rajendra Rajan Saturday, October 17, 1998  ''The Tribune'' (tribuneindia.com) ([https://web.archive.org/web/20090514014301/http://www.tribuneindia.com/1998/98oct17/saturday/head4.htm#2  archive.org] link)
*For the following links use a Translator.  '''If you use Google Chrome, click on the archived Italian link, then use the translation link within Google Chrome'''. Alternatively copy and paste using  [https://www.deepl.com/translator DeepL Translator] or [https://translate.google.com.au Google Translate].
*"The story of the ten thousand Italian soldiers prisoners in India" Google Translate English title  of  original Italian version: "La storia dei diecimila soldati italiani prigionieri in India" [https://web.archive.org/web/20131110234041/http://www.loccidentale.it/articolo/la+storia+dei+diecimila+soldati+italiani+prigionieri+in+india+%281a+parte%29.0085440    (1a parte)], [https://web.archive.org/web/20131110232017/http://www.loccidentale.it/articolo/a.0085800 (2a parte)], [https://web.archive.org/web/20100215153530/http://www.loccidentale.it/articolo/la+storia+dei+diecimila+soldati+italiani+prigionieri+in+india+%283a+parte%29+.0086241 (3a parte)] loccidentale.it, now archived webpages
* "Updated list of Italian prisoners in Yol (India)":  Google Translate English title  of original Italian version [https://web.archive.org/web/20160322021448/http://www.loccidentale.it/node/85514 "Elenco aggiornato dei prigionieri italiani a Yol (India)"] loccidentale.it, now archived.
*"10,000 in Himalayas: a story of war"  Google Translate  English title  of original Italian version [https://web.archive.org/web/20120415011104/http://erewhon.ticonuno.it/riv/storia/yol/prigionia.htm "10.000 in Himalaya: una storia di Guerra"] erewhon.ticonuno.it, now archived. Mentions the book ''10.000 in Himalaya 1941-1947 Tesori, Orsi, Idee, Fughe - Treasures, Bears, Ideas, Escapes'' by Lido Saltamartini, published 1997 by Humana of Ancona. Parallel Italian and English text and illustration captions, with many images. Available at the Imperial War Museums, reference IWM LBY 05 / 527. The webpage includes a link to
**an  Interview with Toto Fabbri, about his time at Yol 1942-1946 from the website chiamamicitta.com, the online magazine of the city  of Rimini. Original Italian version [https://web.archive.org/web/20050126094519/http://www.chiamamicitta.com/Welcome/ser/n240/cardelli.htm "Quattro anni a due passi dal Tibet"] (now archived)
* "Prisoners in India" Google Translate  English title of original Italian version [http://digilander.libero.it/frontedeserto/prigionieri/prigionieriindia.htm  "Prigionieri in India"] digilander.libero.it  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20100705133303/http://digilander.libero.it/frontedeserto/prigionieri/prigionieriindia.htm  archive.org] link)
*[http://faroutliers.blogspot.com.au/2006/04/italian-pows-in-india-1944.html Italian POWs in India, 1944] faroutliers.blogspot. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128075037/http://faroutliers.blogspot.com.au/2006/04/italian-pows-in-india-1944.html archive.org] link)
*[http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/aviators/balsamo.htm Aviators from WWII Generale di Brigata Aerea Alfredo Balsamo]  ([https://web.archive.org/web/20130423130542/http://surfcity.kund.dalnet.se/aviators/balsamo.htm  archive.org] link). Contains a few photographs of Italian prisoners at Yol camp
*[http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&lang=en "Umberto's War: From the diary of  Umberto Cofrancesco"] ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128075631/http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&lang=en  archive.org] link):  From capture in Libya to the prisoner of war camps at Ramgarh  and Bairagarh [http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=5&lang=en page 6]. [http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=6&lang=en  page 7], [http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=7&lang=en page 8] cofrancesco.net (archive.org links [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128075738/http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=5  1], [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128075847/http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=6  2] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128075937/http://cofrancesco.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&Itemid=86&limit=1&limitstart=7 3]). He was subsequently transferred to Australia.
* "Memories of an Italian Naval Signalman" bbc.co.uk
**[http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/39/a5815839.shtml  Part Four - From POW Camp at Geneiffa, Egypt to a POW Camp at Poona, India]
**[http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/48/a5815848.shtml Part Five - From Poona to POW Camp at Ramghar, India]
**[http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/93/a5815893.shtml  Part Six - From Ramghar to POW Camp 26/3 at Pathankot, Kangra Vallery, near Kashmir on to Bhopal in April 1944 and arrival in Greenoch on 1st June 1944.]  (archive.org links [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128080659/http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/39/a5815839.shtml  1], [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128080843/http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/48/a5815848.shtml  2] and [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128081000/http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/93/a5815893.shtml  3])
*From the website "Footprints of Italian Prisoners of War in Australia"
**[https://italianprisonersofwar.com/2019/08/30/in-india/ In India]
**[https://italianprisonersofwar.com/2019/09/01/prigionieri-in-india/ Prigionieri in India]
*This  [https://web.archive.org/web/20131128081204/http://www.comandosupremo.com/forums/topic/4273-dehra-dun-pow-camp-india/page__p__99805  link] mentions  a diary book written by an Italian POW in Dehra Dun: [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=8i8WAAAACAAJ ''Prigioniero in India: Vita quotidiana e grande storia nel diario di un ufficiale'' (Collana di biografie e testimonianze)] by Domenico Salvatori 1989 ( No preview Google Books details). Includes bibliographical references.  Google English translation: ''Prisoner in India: everyday life and great history in the diary of an officer''
*[http://bhopale.blogspot.com.au/2007/11/bairagarh-near-bhopal.html Bairagarh near Bhopal].  Some details of the specially built camp. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20131128081452/http://bhopale.blogspot.com.au/2007/11/bairagarh-near-bhopal.html  archive.org] link)
*[https://timesofmalta.com/articles/view/an-italian-pow-in-india.15561 An Italian POW in India (Bhopal)] timesofmalta.com. Includes a photograph of a football team. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20190913104240/https://timesofmalta.com/articles/view/an-italian-pow-in-india.15561  archive.org] link)
*Photographs from flickr.com, tagged Bhopal [http://www.flickr.com/photos/riam/1085270327/pow camp barracks ruins], [http://www.flickr.com/photos/riam/1086123168/pow camp ruins]. [http://www.flickr.com/photos/riam/1086241398/ drainage system, the POW camp]
*This British Library [http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/indiaofficeselect/PhotoShowDescs.asp?CollID=1092  catalogue entry] indicates  some photographs of the Italian prisoners of war camp at Bairagarh (Bhopal) are in the collection.
*[http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/157879132 Photograph of a Group of Italian POWs at the Ramgarh POW camp in northern India 1942].  [http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/157879134 Group of Italian POWs about to begin a soccer game at the Ramgarh POW camp in northern India 1942] trove.nla.gov.au
====Japanese internees====
*[http://blogs.bl.uk/untoldlives/2016/08/a-forgotten-story-from-the-second-world-war.html "A forgotten story from the Second World War"] by Hedley Sutton. Untold lives blog, British Library. Japanese internees in the Internment Camp, Deoli (Ajmer).  The majority were interned during December 1941 in Singapore and Malaya, although a few were picked up in Burma and in India itself.  There is a reference  to British Library records IOR/L/PJ/8/405.
*[https://avarchives.icrc.org/Picture/22003 Photograph: Bikaner. Camp n° 29 de prisonniers de guerre japonais. 11/44] Bikaner. Japanese Prisoner of War Camp No.29.  icrc.org.
==Records==
===British Library===
Records include
*[http://hviewer.bl.uk/IamsHViewer/Default.aspx?mdark=ark:/81055/vdc_100000000026.0x00011a  IOR/L/ PJ/8/1-76 Collection 101: Aliens ‎ (1931-1950)] which includes sub categories such as IOR/L/ PJ/8/31 Coll 101/10AA; Nominal rolls of internees and parolees in India and IOR/L/ PJ/8/34 Coll 101/10AB; Reports on internment camps in India (excluding Japanese camps) ‎ (Oct 1942-Oct 1945).
*[http://hviewer.bl.uk/IamsHViewer/Default.aspx?mdark=ark:/81055/vdc_100000000015.0x0001db  United Kingdom High Commission files relating to cemeteries '''IOR/R/4/1-539'''] 1943-1967. Transferred from Indian Public Works Department to the British High Commission, New Delhi, and from there to the India Office Records in 1972-73. As they were originally Public Works Department files, they may not often (if at all) refer to individuals.
**File 18/3/1 General correspondence on prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/102 Dec 1947-Feb 1951
**File 18/3/2 General correspondence on prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/103 Feb 1951-Jul 1965
**File 18/3a Lucknow Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/104 Mar 1951-Jul 1952
**File 18/3b Bombay Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/105 Nov 1948-May 1953
**File 18/3c Nasik Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/106 Nov 1948-Jul 1952
**File 18/3d Calcutta Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/107 Nov 1948-May 1953
**File 18/3e Nagpur Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/108 Oct 1951-Dec 1953
**File 18/3f Punjab Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/109 Jul 1948-May 1953
**File 18/3g Delhi Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/110 May 1949-May 1953
**File 18/3h Chota-Nagpur Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/111 Jul 1950-Apr 1953
**File 18/3i Madras Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/112 Nov 1948-Jun 1953
**File 18/3j Assam Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/113 Nov 1948-Jun 1949
**File 18/4/1 Correspondence on German prisoner of war graves in India IOR/R/4/115 Dec 1952-Jul 1953
:Note these records are available on [[FamilySearch]] (LDS) microfilm<ref>FamilySearch microfilm  catalogue entry [https://familysearch.org/search/catalog/1112010  British High Commission cemetery records, ca. 1870-1967]. See [[FamilySearch Centres]] for details about microfilm/digitised microfilm. </ref> where there is more detail provided about the individual items, in the "Film Notes" and is indicated there are at least some lists of prisoner-of-war graves. As an example “R/4/102-103 Correspondence regarding prisoner-of-war graves (frames 1213-1222, 1325-1327, 1339, 1358, 1397, 1401-1402 include a list of prisoner-of-war graves, as well as 33rd Duke of Wellington's Regiment. Also includes list of cemeteries that include German, Boer, Italian, and Turkish graves), ca. 1947-1954”
*[[BACSA]] Archive at the British Library '''Mss Eur F370'''
**[http://hviewer.bl.uk/IamsHViewer/Default.aspx?mdark=ark:/81055/vdc_100000001160.0x000221 Mss Eur F370/785] Diyatalawa Camp, Ceylon 1900-1946 ‎ (1900-1946)
**[http://hviewer.bl.uk/IamsHViewer/Default.aspx?mdark=ark:/81055/vdc_100000001160.0x000264 Mss Eur F370/852] Boer POW Camps, India and Ceylon  1899-1903
**[http://hviewer.bl.uk/IamsHViewer/Default.aspx?mdark=ark:/81055/vdc_100000001160.0x000265 Mss Eur F370/853] Italian POW Camps, WWII
*See [[POW Camps in India#External links 2|First World War - External links]] for a brief mention of a Turkish POW camp at Nowgong
*For Italian records during WWII, see [[POW Camps in India#Italian prisoners of war|Italian prisoners of war]] above.
*For Japanese internee records from WWII, see [[POW Camps in India#Japanese internees|Japanese internees]] above.
===The National Archives===
*[http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C7697 FO 383 Foreign Office: Prisoners of War and Aliens Department: General Correspondence from 1906] Includes references to camps in India.
== References ==
<references />
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[[Category:Indian Army]][[Category:British Army]]

Latest revision as of 05:41, 3 August 2024

The marriage of Edward Meyers, Boer Prisoner of War took place on 28 November 1902 at Amritsar

Prisoner of War and Internment Camps in India

Boer War

Until April 1901 the British captured approx 25,000 Boers. Of these various numbers were sent to various places as POWs. Only a total of 9000 Boer POWs were ever sent out to India of this number, and they were held in some 14-15 camps in selected Indian cantonments. A ten year old boy was known to be a prisoner in India.[1]

In India, there were Boer prisoners of war camps at

(Information mainly from the Anglo Boer War Museum website)

Catalogue reference BACSA Archive at the British Library Ceylon: Boer POW Camp Mss Eur F370/785

FamilySearch digitised microfilms

  • Archives of the Staff Officer, Prisoners of War, Cape Town, 1900-1903 (SO/POW). Digitised microfilm of originals at the Transvaal Archives Depot, Pretoria. Contains details of Boer prisoners of war, lists of prisoners who were in the various camps in India, Ceylon, St. Helena and Portugal, lists of prisoners who were released, paroled or who took the oath of allegiance.
  • Lists of prisoners of war in South Africa, 1899-1902. Digitised microfilm of original manuscripts in Orange Free State Archives, Bloemfontein, Republic of South Africa. High reduction (42x) microfilm, use high magnification reader. Published lists of Afrikaner prisoners of war, arranged alphabetically and chronologically, with full name, home address, marital status, regiment location, age; date and place of capture, internment, death, relocation; notes on parole, rank, or release during the Boer War in South Africa (1899-1902). Besides South Africa, many P.O.W.s were relocated to the island of St. Helena, India, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), and elsewhere in the British Empire.
  • Both series of digitised microfilms appear to be freely available on your home computer, but if not, see FamilySearch Centres for viewing options.

External links

Also see the Fibiwiki page Ceylon for additional information about POWs in Ceylon.
"Boer prisoners of war on the Island of St Helena" by A J Nathan. Military History Journal Vol 11 No 3/4 - October 1999. The South African Military History Society.
  • Article "Island of no return" (St. Helena) by Gavin Bell Weekend Australian 14 July 2012 Travel and Indulgence section, page 1 briefly says "Nothing remains of a prisoner-of-war camp on a high plateau where 6000 Afrikaners were held during the Boer War, but the graves of 156 who never saw their homeland again are carefully tended on a steep hillside. Two granite obelisks bearing their names stand as a memorial ...". Now an archived webpage.
Also see the Fibiwiki page St. Helena for additional information about POWs in St. Helena.
  • Details of The Anglo-Boer War Diaries of Jan Geldenhuys Includes the period from April 1902 when he was captured and sent as a prisoner of war to Umballa, where his experiences till 20th November 1902, were documented. He later met up with his father and brother who were POW’s at Bhimtal. The diaries were originally written in High Dutch. (archive.org link)

Historical books online

First World War

Historical books online

The original report (in French), also available Archive.org version, appears to contain some additional information, such as the location of camps, and more details of the types of prisoners. (From the website "Prisoners of the First World War-ICRC Historical Archives")
  • List of Places of Internment produced by the Prisoners of War Information Bureau in 1919 is an alphabetical listing of Prisoner-of-War camps in Britain and the Commonwealth during the First World War. It is available in a reprint edition,[2] which in turn is available as an online book on the Ancestry owned pay website fold3 titled Prisoners of War Information Bureau: List of Places of (located in World War II/Military Books/Britain, letter P)
Nineteen camps were in this 1919 (January) list in India:
Ahmednagar, Bankura, Belgaum, Bellary, Colaba War Hospital, Cumballa War Hospital, 34th General Hosp (Deolali), 44th General Hosp (Deolali), Indian Troops War Hosp Poona, Indian Troops War Hosp Marine Lines Bombay, Nowgong, Thayetmyo (in Burma), Meiktila (also Burma), Takdah [Darjeeling area], Sholapur, Yercaud, Poona Military Prison, Victoria War Hospital Bombay, Sumerpur.[3] In addition, a 1915 postcard from Dinapur addressed to Germany had been seen with a "Prisoner of War Mail" caption on it.

External links

  • 
Prisoners Of The First World War- 
ICRC Historical Archives. International Committee of the Red Cross. Includes a free Search facility. Retrieved 4 August 2014
    • The International Prisoners-of-War Agency. The ICRC in World War One. pdf An eleven page 2007 document setting out the type of records available. Retrieved 4 August 2014
  • Finding Aid: Foreign Office Files (FO 383) at the National Archives: Regarding Military & Civilian Prisoners of War: List of Files and Contents: 1915-1919. Compiled September 2014 by seaforths of the Great War Forum, and now available as a pdf from that Forum.[4] Contains references such as
    • Reference: FO 383/20 1915. Description: Germany: Prisoners, including: Correspondence regulations at Ahmednagar, India: includes printed copy of Memorandum issued by the Adjutant General in India (in docket no.147691).
    • Reference: FO 383/436 1918 Description: Germany: Prisoners, including: Lists (in docket nos. 97151 and 109002) of German civilians transferred from East Africa to camps at Ahmednagar and Belgaum, India, with printed correspondence relating to individual cases.
  • India: first mission led to long tradition of humanitarian action in Asia icrc.org. Includes photograph taken at Belgaum, WW1.
  • The POW Camp at Belgaum is mentioned in the entry for 6 April 1917 from The Diary of Frederick Pendall, a member of the Norfolk regiment who was in Belgaum from March 1917 to March 1918 (archived website).
  • Postcards of British Camps includes two of Ahmednagar. grandeguerre.icrc.org. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  • Postcard to Germany from Ahmednagar POW camp 1919 stampcommunity.org, now an archived webpage.
  • Ahmednagar from German Missions in British India Nationalism: Case and Crisis in Missions by Paul von Tucher 1980. From the website "Gaebler info and Genealogy" section Indien
  • Reports of Germans about the time of the First World War in British India Includes two reports concerning Ahmednager, and reports from missionaries in the camps. In German language, with Google Translate English version, or Google Chrome provides an automatic translation. From the website "Gaebler info and Genealogy", section Indien. See Second World War-Italian prisoners of war for comments about Google Translate.
  • Prisoners of war and civilian internees captured by British and Dominion forces from the German colonies during the First World War by Mahon Murphy. A thesis submitted to the Department of International History of the London School of Economics for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, London, July 2014. The references to India appear to be minor, but Ahmednagar is mentioned on pages 59 and 67, and Belgaum is also mentioned on page 59. There is a map, which includes camps in India and Ceylon, on page 7, with a description on page 9.
  • Turkish POWs at Deolali are mentioned in Reading between unwritten lines: Australian Army nurses in India, 1916-19 by Ruth Rae. Australian War Memorial website. (archive.org link)
    • From notes in the Australian Archives regarding 34 Welsh General Hospital in Deolali : Sister Alma L. Bennett, Matron in 1917, said: ‘containing 3000 beds – 4 hrs train journey from Bombay'. ... Our cases were all from Mesopotamia – some direct – others individually coming from various Bombay Hospitals… We also had 200 Turkish Prisoners of War, almost all Surgical cases, some with shocking wounds – septic.’ Matron Gertrude Davis said: ‘When we became a P. of W. hospital our number of beds was increased to 700, 200 for British and 500 for prisoners as later we had the German prisoners from East Africa also an occasional one from Mespot’. [5]
Also see Historical books online, above.
  • Turkish POWS on the ship S.S. Ellenga in Bombay Harbour in late December 1915 are mentioned in a poem written by Rifleman John Layton of the 18th Battalion, Rifle Brigade, who wrote "Those barbarious Turkish brutes, who looked a deplorable sight. They were dirty and covered with vermin, dying like rotten sheep"[6]
  • There was a POW Camp for Turkish prisoners at Kirkee[7]. It is possible that it was located near a hospital to provide labour for the hospital.[8] An image of an tobacco tin was seen, with the inscription Prisoners of War Camp Kirkee India 1914-1918 A V Lawes 62515 8th Welch Pioneers[9], perhaps indicating the camp was in operation throughout the war.
  • British Library India Office Records catalogue Search result IOR/L/PJ/6/1504, File 4110 includes a brief mention of Turkish War Prisoners Camp, Nowgong, Central India.
  • Turkish POWs in India and Burma: First World War, Part 1 by Vedica Kant September 14, 2012; Part 2 September 17, 2012 amitavghosh.com
  • "Indian Soldiers and POWs in the Middle East during World War I" by Vedica Kant, Robert Upton, and Chris Gratien, Ottoman History Podcast, No. 86 (December 21, 2012) “ In this podcast, Vedica Kant talks about the experience of Indian POWs in the Ottoman Empire as well as that of Ottoman soldiers captured by the British army and brought to India and Burma, with additional commentary by Robert Upton regarding military recruitment in British India...” Webpage contains images of prisoners at Bellary and Thayetmyo. (archive.org link)
  • The history hidden in Haydarpaşa Cemetery by Vedika Kant 01 August 2013. turkishreview.org, now an archived webpage. Includes a section on the Thayetmyo POW camp
  • "Turkish and Armenian Prisoners of War Held in India and Burma During WWI" by Harut Sassounian August 6, 2019 The Armenian Weekly.
  • BİRİNCİ DÜNYA SAVAŞI’NDA İNGİLİZLERE ESİR DÜŞEN TÜRK ASKERLERİ by Vedat TÜFEKÇİ Turkish language doctoral thesis, Istanbul University 2019. English title (possibly) "Turkish soldiers who were captured by the British in the first war". Appears to include chapters about camps in India and Burma, from page 141. Use Google Translate

Second World War

The Prisoners-of-war were interned in India in 29 camps forming 6 Groups of camps. In addition, there were two Civil Internment Camps at Dehradun and Deoli and one camp in Delhi for the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.

Some 18,400 Italian prisoners of war (out of 50,000 requested by the Australian Government, to be employed as farm labourers) were transported from India to Australia from 1943. Some of the [Italian?] POWs in India were shipped to South Africa to help build the railway there.[10][11][12]

  • Group I – Bangalore: Camps 1 to 8 - Italian prisoners. There were Camps at Jakkur, Hebbal and Jalahalli.[13]
  • Group II – Bhopal: Camps 9 to 16 – Italian prisoners. Camp 16 was a hospital. Bhopal Bairagarh (Wikipedia)
  • Group III – Ramgarh: Camps 17 to 20 – German Civil Internees and later Italian prisoners. Had a punishment camp for difficult Italian POWs Ramgarh was near Hazaribagh. It was used as a POW camp up to May 1942 when the POWs were moved out and the United States Chinese Training Command was established there.
  • Group IV - Clement Town (Dehra Dun): Camps 21 to 24 – Separated in Wings 1: pro-Nazi, 2: anti-Nazi, 3: Italians. One of the camps was a *Central Internment Camp.
  • Group V – YOL: Camps 25 to 28 – Italian prisoners. Yol was situated near Dharamsala
  • Group VI – Bikaner: Camp 29 – Japanese prisoners. It was also a punishment camps for difficult Italian POWs.Bikaner (Wikipedia)
  • Central Internment Camp (Dehra Dun / Premnagar): This was mixed civilian internment and prisoner-of-war camp. Italian prisoners of war and German civilian internees housed in separate camps. Wing 1 and Wing 6 held German internees.
  • Delhi – Japanese Camp: Delhi housed the Japanese prisoners captured in Burma.
  • Deoli (Ajmer) – Civil Internment Camp: Deoli housed German civilian internees and Japanese civilian internees. It was also a punishment colony for Germans. Deoli (Wikipedia)

The above information is mainly taken from the website Indian Banknote:India: Prisoner-of-War Coupons (archive.org link).

This Wikipedia article lists the following additional camps

  • Deolali from February 1941, later also transferred to Dehra Dun 11 August 1941: Germans.
  • Yercaud for females from Madras Presidency. Summer 1941, closed late 1942.
  • Fort William, Calcutta, army camp, closed early 1940, males were sent to Ahmednagar, females to Katapahar parole camp.
  • Smaller Parole Camps at Naini Tal, Kodaikanal and Katapahar (near Darjeeling), were all closed by late 1942. Inmates transferred to (family reunions) to the camps near Poona: Satara from May 1940, Purandhar (lower Fort), initially for Jewish refugees, later also other Germans, many missionaries with families.

There was an internment camp at Mhow for Germans residing in India.[14]

Catalogue reference BACSA Archive at the British Library India: Italian POW Camps Mss Eur F370/853

There are some catalogue references at the British Library in the series IOR/L/PJ/8/1-76 Collection 101: Aliens ‎ (1931-1950), particularly from OR/L/PJ/8/30A "Coll 101/10A; Treatment of aliens, prisoners of war and civilian internees in India ‎ (Apr 1939-Aug 1943)" onwards, including "Nominal rolls and monthly returns"; "Reports on internment camps in India (excluding Japanese camps) ‎ (Oct 1942-Oct 1945)"; Internees; "Repatriation of civilians" etc.Search for these records in the Archives and Manuscripts catalogue.

External links

German prisoners of war

Italian prisoners of war

ICRC photographs: Bangalore. Group I. Italian prisoners of war camp. ICRC delegate with a group of detainees 3/44; Italian prisoners of war camp. ICRC delegate with italian detainees 10/44; Italian prisoners of war camp. Delegate visiting the cemetery 10/44; Group IV. Italian prisoners of war camp, ICRC's delegates with italian doctors in front of the patient's barrack. WW2.

Japanese internees

Records

British Library

Records include

  • IOR/L/ PJ/8/1-76 Collection 101: Aliens ‎ (1931-1950) which includes sub categories such as IOR/L/ PJ/8/31 Coll 101/10AA; Nominal rolls of internees and parolees in India and IOR/L/ PJ/8/34 Coll 101/10AB; Reports on internment camps in India (excluding Japanese camps) ‎ (Oct 1942-Oct 1945).
  • United Kingdom High Commission files relating to cemeteries IOR/R/4/1-539 1943-1967. Transferred from Indian Public Works Department to the British High Commission, New Delhi, and from there to the India Office Records in 1972-73. As they were originally Public Works Department files, they may not often (if at all) refer to individuals.
    • File 18/3/1 General correspondence on prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/102 Dec 1947-Feb 1951
    • File 18/3/2 General correspondence on prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/103 Feb 1951-Jul 1965
    • File 18/3a Lucknow Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/104 Mar 1951-Jul 1952
    • File 18/3b Bombay Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/105 Nov 1948-May 1953
    • File 18/3c Nasik Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/106 Nov 1948-Jul 1952
    • File 18/3d Calcutta Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/107 Nov 1948-May 1953
    • File 18/3e Nagpur Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/108 Oct 1951-Dec 1953
    • File 18/3f Punjab Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/109 Jul 1948-May 1953
    • File 18/3g Delhi Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/110 May 1949-May 1953
    • File 18/3h Chota-Nagpur Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/111 Jul 1950-Apr 1953
    • File 18/3i Madras Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/112 Nov 1948-Jun 1953
    • File 18/3j Assam Diocese: cemeteries containing prisoner of war graves IOR/R/4/113 Nov 1948-Jun 1949
    • File 18/4/1 Correspondence on German prisoner of war graves in India IOR/R/4/115 Dec 1952-Jul 1953
Note these records are available on FamilySearch (LDS) microfilm[15] where there is more detail provided about the individual items, in the "Film Notes" and is indicated there are at least some lists of prisoner-of-war graves. As an example “R/4/102-103 Correspondence regarding prisoner-of-war graves (frames 1213-1222, 1325-1327, 1339, 1358, 1397, 1401-1402 include a list of prisoner-of-war graves, as well as 33rd Duke of Wellington's Regiment. Also includes list of cemeteries that include German, Boer, Italian, and Turkish graves), ca. 1947-1954”

The National Archives

References

  1. Boer Boy: Memoirs of an Anglo-Boer War Youth by Chris Schoeman 2011. Biography of Charles du Preez, POW at Umballa and Solon, where he was the youngest inmate. Amazon.com.
  2. List of Places of Internment Naval & Military Press reprint edition.
  3. gmark. India- WWI POW camps Civil Censorship Study Group Forum 11 December 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  4. seaforths Foreign Office Files on POWs (FO 383) Great War Forum 12 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  5. kjharris. Concentration Camp Deolali Great War Forum 23 January 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  6. stiletto_33853 18th Rifle Brigade Great War Forum 30 May 2006 et al. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  7. Huw (Guest PJI777). Kirkee India April 1919 Great War Forum 4 January 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  8. kjharris. Kirkee India April 1919 Great War Forum 2 November 2011, Retrieved 7 November 2019.
  9. Image of tobacco tin inscribed Prisoners of War Camp Kirkee India 1914-1918 A V Lawes 62515 8th Welch Pioneers. Retrieved 15 January 2015, but no longer available.
  10. Italian POWs helped grow Australia 26 August 2013 SBS News [Special Broadcasting Service] Television and Radio, Australia, quoting Gianfranco Cresciani, author of The Italians in Australia
  11. Francesco Barbera was an Italian POW captured in North Africa in 1941, who spent a few years In India. He was sent to Australia in 1943 where he spent time in POW camps in Liverpool, Cowra, Tumut and St Ives, now a suburb of Sydney. Article in the Sydney suburban newspaper North Shore Times 25 April 2014, page 11, (previously available online).
  12. Part II: Administration of Enemy Prisoners of War File from army.gov.au, now an archived webpage
  13. Pensioner’s Paradise or POW Camp ? by Aliyeh Rizvi, July 7, 2011
  14. Page 25 A Soldier's Life in War and Peace by Maj.Gen A. S. Naravane Google Books ISBN 81-7648-437-7
  15. FamilySearch microfilm catalogue entry British High Commission cemetery records, ca. 1870-1967. See FamilySearch Centres for details about microfilm/digitised microfilm.