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Ilag

Ilag is an abbreviation of the German word Internierungslager. They were internment camps established by the German Army in World War II to hold Allied civilians, caught in areas that were occupied by the German Army. They included United States citizens caught in Europe by surprise when war was declared in December 1941 and citizens of the British Commonwealth caught in areas engulfed by the Blitzkrieg.

Amongst the internees were British born citizens who were resident in the Channel Islands. In October 1941, Adolf Hitler ordered the internment of 8,000 British, in retaliation for the internment by the British Army of 800 Germans living in Iran. The order was not carried out until it was reissued by Hitler in September 1942. The German commander of the islands, based in Jersey, was ordered to deport to camps in Germany all British citizens not born in the islands. The numbers were reduced, with around 2,200 men, women and children being deported.

Internment camps in Austria edit

Internment camps in Czechoslovakia edit

  • Ilag IV Eisenberg

Internment camps in France 1940–1944 edit

There were 219 internment camps in France during the Second World War. Several Ilags were set up in France by the German Army to hold citizens of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth countries that were caught by the rapid advance during the Battle of France. The main camps were:

Besançon edit

The camp at Besançon was called Frontstalag 142, or Caserne Vauban. At the end of 1940, 2,400 women, mostly British, were interned in the Vauban barracks and another 500 old and sick in the St. Jacques hospital close by. In early 1941 many of them were released; the rest were transferred to Vittel.

Saint-Denis edit

The camp was located in the old barracks built in the middle of the 19th century at Saint-Denis, close to Paris. The camp was opened June 1940 and existed until liberated by the United States Army in August 1944. Part of the grounds were surrounded by barbed wire to provide open space for exercise. In early 1942, there were more than 1,000 male British internees in the camp. The meagre food rations were augmented by the International Red Cross packages, so that, overall, their diet was satisfactory. Life was tolerable because there was a good library and recreation was provided by sports activities and theatre.[1]

Vittel edit

Also called Frontstalag 121,[2] this was one of the more hospitable internment camps as it was located in requisitioned hotels in this spa near Epinal in the Department Vosges. Most of the British families and single women were transferred here from St. Denis and Besançon.[2]

In early 1942, women over 60, men over 75 and children under 16 were released. The overall population was thus reduced to about 2,400. The inmates included a number of American families and women. Provisions for recreation included a local theatre and a park with seven tennis courts.

A young New Zealander and two British women escaped in August 1941 and made their way to England.[2]

Other camps in France edit

Internment camps in Germany World War II edit

Ilag V Liebenau edit

 
Propaganda photograph showing internees at Liebenau camp with Red Cross care packages, c.1940

A camp in Liebenau [de], near Meckenbeuren in Württemberg, on Lake Constance, opened in 1940 and operated until 1945. It was in a castle and four adjacent buildings. Previously it had been a mental hospital run by nuns. On Adolf Hitler's orders about 700 of the patients were exterminated by injection under a program retrospectively named Aktion T4.[3]

The first internees were about 300 British citizens from Poland. More British were brought in 1941 from Belgium, Greece, the Netherlands and other countries. Red Cross packages augmented the food rations. The guards were older German veterans of World War I and treated the internees well. Several had been prisoners of war in British camps where they had been treated well. In January 1943 many of the married women were transferred to Vittel (see above).

Ilag V-B Biberach edit

Built in 1939 as barracks, this camp became an Ilag accommodating Channel Island families interned as a reprisal for the deportation of German nationals from the Kingdom of Iran to Camp 10 in Loveday, South Australia.[4] The camp was located on a plateau northwest of Biberach an der Riß in southeastern Baden-Württemberg. It consisted of 23 concrete huts that had previously served as Oflag V-B for officers who were prisoner of war. Initially, the camp was administered by the German Army, but in the spring of 1943 the administration was transferred to the Interior Ministry; this caused a worsening of food rations. Otherwise, the International Red Cross considered conditions in the camp to be satisfactory.

In January 1943, the camp held 1,011 internees: 429 men, 437 women, and 145 children.[5]: 52–55 

20 Channel Island civilians died in Biberach.

Ilag V-C Wurzach edit

This camp also held Channel Island families. It was located in the town of Bad Wurzach and southeastern Baden-Württemberg. Previously, it had been used as an oflag housing French officers. Conditions were less satisfactory because it was located in a three-story 18th-century castle that had recently been a monastery, and the rooms were dark and damp.[5]: 75–76  618 internees arrived at the end of October 1942, all of them families.[5]: 71–75  In late 1944 72 Dutch Jews arrived from Bergen-Belsen. Most appeared to have English grandparents.[6]: 37  The deportees now learned first hand about conditions elsewhere.[7]: 90 

12 Channel Island civilians died in Wurzach.

Ilag VII Laufen and Tittmoning edit

 
Memorial plate for the internees who died in ILAG VII during WW II. You find the plate at the old cemetery in Laufen.

British and American citizens were interned in Laufen and Tittmoning in Bavaria, on the border with Austria. In September 1942, British single men from the Channel Islands were sent here, where they found some Americans in residence.[8]: 74–82  In 1943, the younger men over 16 who had parents in Biberach or Wurzach were moved to Laufen to release space. These two camps were always administered by the German Army.[citation needed]

Frank Stroobant, the camp senior, was invited in April 1943 to attend an inspection in the forest of Katyn in Russia where a massacre of 22,000, mainly Polish army and police officers, by Soviet forces had been uncovered. He was the only civilian witness at the event[8]: 118–145  From June 1943 the camp senior became Ambrose Sherwill.

Boredom was a major problem. Some internees were permitted to undertake paid work outside camp.[9]: 195  The moral view of whether work should be done was strongly debated in the camp, but as everyone was a private individual, it was up to each person to make their own decision.[8]: 82 

In April 1944, Laufen held 459 British internees (417 Channel Islanders) and 120 Americans, including Josef Nassy.[citation needed] 10 Channel Island internees died in Laufen during internment.[9]

Other camps in Germany edit

Internment camps in the Netherlands edit

Internment camps in Poland edit

Repatriation edit

  • At least one small group of internees returned from Laufen to Jersey prior to D-Day in 1944.[10]
  • A small number of Guernsey internees, considered too ill to remain in Laufen, were repatriated individually as the occasion arose accompanied by a couple of German soldiers and a Guernsey internee in his capacity as Red Cross representative. The route taken was across occupied France to St Malo where they would embark by boat to Guernsey; the accompanying party would return after a few days.
  • After lengthy negotiations in Switzerland, 900 British internees, mostly elderly or ill, were exchanged in Lisbon for a similar number of Germans interned in South Africa in July 1944.
  • In September 1944, 125 elderly and infirm Channel Islanders were repatriated on the SS Drottningholm via Sweden to the UK. Following a three-day January trip by the Laufen senior, Ambrose Sherwill to Berlin to meet the Swiss delegation, 24 from Laufen were included in a further 212 being repatriated in April 1945.[5]: 172–9 
  • The remainder of the Channel Islanders were repatriated after the camps were liberated by the French Army (Biberach) on 22 April 1945.[5]: 70–1  Wurzach was liberated on 28 April 1945 by a French Moroccan armoured unit who were unaware of the internees.[7]: 118  Laufen was liberated on 4 May 1945, by Americans of 40th Armoured Division.[8]: 152–7 

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ New Zealand report p.146
  2. ^ a b c New Zealand report on civilian camps, p.95
  3. ^ "AAngela Maranian's Story - Internment Camps in Germany and France - Part 1". WW2 People's War. BBC Online. 4 June 2005.
  4. ^ Adler, Reinhold (2002). Das war nicht nur "Karneval im August" : Das Internierungslager Biberach an der Riß 1942-1945 [It was not just "Carnival in August": The internment camp of Biberach an der Riss 1942-1945]. Biberach: Biberach an der Riß Städtische Archive. ISBN 3-9806818-2-3.
  5. ^ a b c d e Harris, Roger E. Islanders deported part 1. ISBN 978-0902633636.
  6. ^ Fowler, Will (2016). The Last Raid: The Commandos, Channel Islands and Final Nazi Raid. The History Press. ISBN 978-0750966375.
  7. ^ a b Coles, Joan (1985). Three years behind barbed wire. La Haule Books. ISBN 086120-008-X.
  8. ^ a b c d Stroobant, Frank. One Man's War. Guernsey Press 1967.
  9. ^ a b Sherwill, Ambrose (April 2007). A fair and honest book. Lulu Enterprises. ISBN 978-1847531490.
  10. ^ See references in THE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF JERSEY: THE WARTIME DIARY OF LESLIE SINEL, and also the identity card of Frank Renouf Clements (ref D/S/A/3/A256), held in the Jersey Archive

Sources edit

  • Commonwealth citizens interned in France p.94
  • Conditions in Ilags, p.439
  • Story of Armenian woman living in Holland, interned in Libenau, etc
  • Das war nicht nur "Karneval im August - by Adler, Reinhold. Biberach 2002 (ISBN 3-9806818-2-3) - in German.
  • Das Wurzacher Schloss 1940 - 1945 - by Rothenhäusler, Gisela. Lindenberg 2008 (ISBN 978-3-89870-502-8) - in German
  • Channel Island internees who died during internment

External links edit

  • Ilag Wurzach
  • List of Ilags in German


ilag, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, abbreviati. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ilag is an abbreviation of the German word Internierungslager They were internment camps established by the German Army in World War II to hold Allied civilians caught in areas that were occupied by the German Army They included United States citizens caught in Europe by surprise when war was declared in December 1941 and citizens of the British Commonwealth caught in areas engulfed by the Blitzkrieg Amongst the internees were British born citizens who were resident in the Channel Islands In October 1941 Adolf Hitler ordered the internment of 8 000 British in retaliation for the internment by the British Army of 800 Germans living in Iran The order was not carried out until it was reissued by Hitler in September 1942 The German commander of the islands based in Jersey was ordered to deport to camps in Germany all British citizens not born in the islands The numbers were reduced with around 2 200 men women and children being deported Contents 1 Internment camps in Austria 2 Internment camps in Czechoslovakia 3 Internment camps in France 1940 1944 3 1 Besancon 3 2 Saint Denis 3 3 Vittel 3 4 Other camps in France 4 Internment camps in Germany World War II 4 1 Ilag V Liebenau 4 2 Ilag V B Biberach 4 3 Ilag V C Wurzach 4 4 Ilag VII Laufen and Tittmoning 4 5 Other camps in Germany 5 Internment camps in the Netherlands 6 Internment camps in Poland 7 Repatriation 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksInternment camps in Austria editIlag XVIII SpittalInternment camps in Czechoslovakia editIlag IV EisenbergInternment camps in France 1940 1944 editFurther information Internment camps in France There were 219 internment camps in France during the Second World War Several Ilags were set up in France by the German Army to hold citizens of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth countries that were caught by the rapid advance during the Battle of France The main camps were Besancon edit The camp at Besancon was called Frontstalag 142 or Caserne Vauban At the end of 1940 2 400 women mostly British were interned in the Vauban barracks and another 500 old and sick in the St Jacques hospital close by In early 1941 many of them were released the rest were transferred to Vittel Saint Denis edit The camp was located in the old barracks built in the middle of the 19th century at Saint Denis close to Paris The camp was opened June 1940 and existed until liberated by the United States Army in August 1944 Part of the grounds were surrounded by barbed wire to provide open space for exercise In early 1942 there were more than 1 000 male British internees in the camp The meagre food rations were augmented by the International Red Cross packages so that overall their diet was satisfactory Life was tolerable because there was a good library and recreation was provided by sports activities and theatre 1 Vittel edit Also called Frontstalag 121 2 this was one of the more hospitable internment camps as it was located in requisitioned hotels in this spa near Epinal in the Department Vosges Most of the British families and single women were transferred here from St Denis and Besancon 2 In early 1942 women over 60 men over 75 and children under 16 were released The overall population was thus reduced to about 2 400 The inmates included a number of American families and women Provisions for recreation included a local theatre and a park with seven tennis courts A young New Zealander and two British women escaped in August 1941 and made their way to England 2 Other camps in France edit Ilag Clermont Ilag Compiegne Ilag Drancy Ilag Giromagny Ilag RouenInternment camps in Germany World War II editIlag V Liebenau edit nbsp Propaganda photograph showing internees at Liebenau camp with Red Cross care packages c 1940A camp in Liebenau de near Meckenbeuren in Wurttemberg on Lake Constance opened in 1940 and operated until 1945 It was in a castle and four adjacent buildings Previously it had been a mental hospital run by nuns On Adolf Hitler s orders about 700 of the patients were exterminated by injection under a program retrospectively named Aktion T4 3 The first internees were about 300 British citizens from Poland More British were brought in 1941 from Belgium Greece the Netherlands and other countries Red Cross packages augmented the food rations The guards were older German veterans of World War I and treated the internees well Several had been prisoners of war in British camps where they had been treated well In January 1943 many of the married women were transferred to Vittel see above Ilag V B Biberach edit Built in 1939 as barracks this camp became an Ilag accommodating Channel Island families interned as a reprisal for the deportation of German nationals from the Kingdom of Iran to Camp 10 in Loveday South Australia 4 The camp was located on a plateau northwest of Biberach an der Riss in southeastern Baden Wurttemberg It consisted of 23 concrete huts that had previously served as Oflag V B for officers who were prisoner of war Initially the camp was administered by the German Army but in the spring of 1943 the administration was transferred to the Interior Ministry this caused a worsening of food rations Otherwise the International Red Cross considered conditions in the camp to be satisfactory In January 1943 the camp held 1 011 internees 429 men 437 women and 145 children 5 52 55 20 Channel Island civilians died in Biberach Ilag V C Wurzach edit This camp also held Channel Island families It was located in the town of Bad Wurzach and southeastern Baden Wurttemberg Previously it had been used as an oflag housing French officers Conditions were less satisfactory because it was located in a three story 18th century castle that had recently been a monastery and the rooms were dark and damp 5 75 76 618 internees arrived at the end of October 1942 all of them families 5 71 75 In late 1944 72 Dutch Jews arrived from Bergen Belsen Most appeared to have English grandparents 6 37 The deportees now learned first hand about conditions elsewhere 7 90 12 Channel Island civilians died in Wurzach Ilag VII Laufen and Tittmoning edit nbsp Memorial plate for the internees who died in ILAG VII during WW II You find the plate at the old cemetery in Laufen British and American citizens were interned in Laufen and Tittmoning in Bavaria on the border with Austria In September 1942 British single men from the Channel Islands were sent here where they found some Americans in residence 8 74 82 In 1943 the younger men over 16 who had parents in Biberach or Wurzach were moved to Laufen to release space These two camps were always administered by the German Army citation needed Frank Stroobant the camp senior was invited in April 1943 to attend an inspection in the forest of Katyn in Russia where a massacre of 22 000 mainly Polish army and police officers by Soviet forces had been uncovered He was the only civilian witness at the event 8 118 145 From June 1943 the camp senior became Ambrose Sherwill Boredom was a major problem Some internees were permitted to undertake paid work outside camp 9 195 The moral view of whether work should be done was strongly debated in the camp but as everyone was a private individual it was up to each person to make their own decision 8 82 In April 1944 Laufen held 459 British internees 417 Channel Islanders and 120 Americans including Josef Nassy citation needed 10 Channel Island internees died in Laufen during internment 9 Other camps in Germany edit Ilag 6 Bad Godesberg Ilag Bad Neuenahr Ilag Buchenwald Ilag Dachau Ilag 6 Dorsten Ilag 10 Sandbostel Ilag VII Z Tittmoning Ilag 3 Treuenbrietzen Ilag XIII WulzburgInternment camps in the Netherlands editIlag Haaren North Brabant Ilag Sint Michielsgestel North BrabantInternment camps in Poland editIlag 21 Chludowo Ilag Oflag 6 Kreuzburg Ilag Stalag 344 Kreuzburg Ilag VIII Z Kreuzburg Ilag Tost Ilag VIII Tost Ilag VIII H TostRepatriation editAt least one small group of internees returned from Laufen to Jersey prior to D Day in 1944 10 A small number of Guernsey internees considered too ill to remain in Laufen were repatriated individually as the occasion arose accompanied by a couple of German soldiers and a Guernsey internee in his capacity as Red Cross representative The route taken was across occupied France to St Malo where they would embark by boat to Guernsey the accompanying party would return after a few days After lengthy negotiations in Switzerland 900 British internees mostly elderly or ill were exchanged in Lisbon for a similar number of Germans interned in South Africa in July 1944 In September 1944 125 elderly and infirm Channel Islanders were repatriated on the SS Drottningholm via Sweden to the UK Following a three day January trip by the Laufen senior Ambrose Sherwill to Berlin to meet the Swiss delegation 24 from Laufen were included in a further 212 being repatriated in April 1945 5 172 9 The remainder of the Channel Islanders were repatriated after the camps were liberated by the French Army Biberach on 22 April 1945 5 70 1 Wurzach was liberated on 28 April 1945 by a French Moroccan armoured unit who were unaware of the internees 7 118 Laufen was liberated on 4 May 1945 by Americans of 40th Armoured Division 8 152 7 See also editInternment Internment of Japanese Americans List of concentration and internment camps Deportations from the German occupied Channel IslandsReferences edit New Zealand report p 146 a b c New Zealand report on civilian camps p 95 AAngela Maranian s Story Internment Camps in Germany and France Part 1 WW2 People s War BBC Online 4 June 2005 Adler Reinhold 2002 Das war nicht nur Karneval im August Das Internierungslager Biberach an der Riss 1942 1945 It was not just Carnival in August The internment camp of Biberach an der Riss 1942 1945 Biberach Biberach an der Riss Stadtische Archive ISBN 3 9806818 2 3 a b c d e Harris Roger E Islanders deported part 1 ISBN 978 0902633636 Fowler Will 2016 The Last Raid The Commandos Channel Islands and Final Nazi Raid The History Press ISBN 978 0750966375 a b Coles Joan 1985 Three years behind barbed wire La Haule Books ISBN 086120 008 X a b c d Stroobant Frank One Man s War Guernsey Press 1967 a b Sherwill Ambrose April 2007 A fair and honest book Lulu Enterprises ISBN 978 1847531490 See references in THE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF JERSEY THE WARTIME DIARY OF LESLIE SINEL and also the identity card of Frank Renouf Clements ref D S A 3 A256 held in the Jersey ArchiveSources editDeportation from Channel Islands Commonwealth citizens interned in France p 94 Conditions in Ilags p 439 Story of Armenian woman living in Holland interned in Libenau etc Das war nicht nur Karneval im August by Adler Reinhold Biberach 2002 ISBN 3 9806818 2 3 in German Das Wurzacher Schloss 1940 1945 by Rothenhausler Gisela Lindenberg 2008 ISBN 978 3 89870 502 8 in German Channel Island internees who died during internmentExternal links editIlag Wurzach List of Ilags in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ilag amp oldid 1208832839, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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