东线战场俘虏逃离俄国俘虏(1914年8月—1917年2月)

A. Miodowski
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引用次数: 0

摘要

第一次世界大战期间,有200多万同盟国军队的俘虏被囚禁在俄国。这些士兵大多是在1914年至1916年间被俘的。除了在战斗中受伤和被俘的人之外,这群战俘还包括逃兵和那些在战场上有意识地决定向俄国人投降的人。最初,俄罗斯军事当局试图在远离大城市和铁路线的地方建立战俘营。然而,囚犯人数的增加和建造新营地所需的财政资源的短缺迫使原计划发生改变。因此,新的囚犯群体被引导到城市,安置在现有的建筑中,迅速适应他们的需求。这些情况有利于逃跑。然而,离开西伯利亚或中亚并不容易。因此,作出这种努力的人所占的百分比,相对于被关押在乌拉尔山远端的战俘总数来说,是很低的。根据俄罗斯官方数据,每个月只有几百名战俘从战俘营中逃脱。其中只有少数到达瑞典、波斯或中国。直到1918年3月的布列斯特-里托夫斯克条约才允许从俄罗斯遣返200万囚犯。在第一次世界大战结束一百周年之际,历史学家重新发起的学术研究应该更广泛地考虑战俘的主题,特别是那些在东部和高加索前线被俘的人。本文试图解决这一需要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Escapes from Russian Captivity by Prisoners of War Taken on the Eastern Front (August 1914 – February 1917)
ABSTRACT During the Great War, more than 2 million prisoners from the armies of the Central Powers found themselves in Russian captivity. Most of those soldiers were captured between 1914 and 1916. Apart from the wounded and those taken prisoner in combat, the group of POWs also included deserters and those who had consciously decided to surrender to the Russians on the battlefield. Initially, Russian military authorities attempted to establish POW camps far from large cities and railway lines. However, the growing number of prisoners and the shortage of the financial resources necessary for the construction of new camps forced a change in the original plans. Therefore, new groups of prisoners were directed to cities to be accommodated in existing buildings, hastily adapted for their needs. These circumstances were conducive to escapes. However, getting out of Siberia or Central Asia was not easy. Consequently, the percentage of those who made that effort, in relation to the overall number of prisoners of war kept on the far side of the Urals, was low. According to official Russian data, only several hundred POWs escaped from their camps every month. Of those, only few would reach Sweden, Persia, or China. It was only the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918 that allowed the mass of 2 million prisoners to be repatriated from Russia. The scholarly research initiated anew by historians on the centenary of the end of the Great War should take a broader account of the subject matter of prisoners of war, particularly with regard to those captured on the Eastern and Caucasian Fronts. The present article seeks to address this need.
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