POW Camps in India: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with "Prisoner of War Camps in India ==Boer War== In India, there were Boer prisoners of war camps at *Kakool (Kakul) near Abbottabad *Ahmadnagar *Bellary *Bhim Tal, near ..." |
|||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
*[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 | *[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 | ||
*[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://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://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 | |||
==First World War== | ==First World War== |
Revision as of 05:10, 18 February 2012
Prisoner of War Camps in India
Boer War
In India, there were Boer prisoners of war camps at
- Kakool (Kakul) near Abbottabad
- Ahmadnagar
- Bellary
- Bhim Tal, near Nainital
- Dagshai and Solon
- 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.
- Satara
- Shahjahanpur
- Sialkot
- Trichinopoly
- Umballa
- Upper Topa, near Murree
(Information mainly from the Anglo Boer War Museum website)
External links
- Prisoner of War Camps in the Boer War in India , Ceylon and St Helena with a map from Anglo Boer War Museum. This website includes a Prisoners of War database search
- Boers,( ancestry24.com) includes a section “Boer Prisoners of War – Camps” (scroll down) including general mention of the camps in 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).
- 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” html version, original pdf
- 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 html version, original pdf
- Article "India and the Anglo-Boer War" by E S Reddy 29 July 1999 html version, original pdf not available; version from mkgandhi.org,without footnotes
- 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".
- Boer prisoner of war art Extract of article by Fransjohan Pretorius in History Today 1 March 2006
- 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"
- Photograph of Boer prisoners held by the British army at Kakul, India (now in Pakistan) during the Second Boer War, 1902. Getty Images