Stalag X-B
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Stalag X-B was a World War II German Prisoner-of-war camp located near Sandbostel in north-western Germany. Sandbostel lies 9 km south of Bremervörde, 43 km northeast of Bremen. Placed on swampy ground,with a damp, cold climate, it is one of the most notorious POW camps. Between 1939 and 1945 1 million POWs of 46 nations passed through. Nearly 50,000 died here of hunger, disease, or just simply murdered[1].
Marlag und Milag Nord, the camps for captured Navy personnel and civilian sailors respectively, were originally in two separate enclosures at the Sandbostel camp. They were moved to a different location closer to Cuxhaven, to Westertimke, in 1942.
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[edit] Timeline
- The camp was built in 1933 as a Nazi internment camp for undesirables,
- In September 1939 it was used to house British civilian internees and Polish prisoners from the German September 1939 offensive. For lack of huts they were mostly housed in tents.
- June 1940 French and Belgian soldiers taken prisoner during the Battle of France arrive.
- May 1941 more prisoners arrived from the Balkans Campaign, mostly British and Yugoslavian.
- In July 1941 they were followed by Soviet prisoners from Operation Barbarossa housed in the open in a separate enclosure.
- On 1 December 1941 the prisoner count was: 1664 Poles, 18,210 French, 2,871 Belgian, 2,459 British, 5,361 Yugoslavs, 9,271 Soviets[2].
- September 1943 Italians interned after the capitulation of Badolgio arrived. Like the Soviets they were not accorded the protection of the Third Geneva Convention and were housed next to them.
- October 1944 soldiers from the Polish Warsaw Rising came, including over 1,000 women soldiers and officers.
- On 1 November 1944 the prisoner count was: 4,895 Poles, 11,337 French, 1,732 Belgian, 3,040 Yugoslavian, 20,169 Soviets, 9,453 Italians[3].
- March and April 1945, about 8,000 Concentration camp prisoners are brought here from Neuengamme and placed in the enclosure that had been Marlag
- The camp was liberated by British troops on 29 April 1945.