Sliven prisoner of war camp
Sliven | |
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Serbians, Greeks |
Sliven was a Bulgarian prisoner-of-war camp established in Sliven in 1915 with the intent of housing Serbian troops captured during the course of World War I. Over time Greek and Serbian civilians joined their ranks reaching 19,000 at its peak. From 1916 until its dissolution in 1918, the camp served as a punitive institution. Internees suffered from the lack of proper housing conditions, typhus, malnutrition and ill treatment from their guards. This led to the deaths of over 6,000 prisoners.
Background
The 28 June 1914
In 1913, Serbia, Greece, Romania and the Ottoman Empire defeated Bulgaria in the
After the victory of the Serbian army in the
On 17 August 1916, in the
During the course of the Balkan Wars Bulgaria had captured a relatively small number of prisoners, therefore their internment was limited to cities. Bulgaria entered the First World War, having no previous experience of running prisoner of war camps. Arrangements were improvised on the spot, causing major logistical issues. A document titled "Regulations for Prisoners of War" was issued on 9 October 1915, it officially endorsed the
Camp

The Sliven prisoner-of-war camp was established in 1915 with the intent of housing captured Serbian troops. Starting from 1916, its population was bolstered with Serbian civilians who were held in mixed groups with the military personnel. At its peak 19,000 prisoners were assigned to Sliven, being the largest Bulgarian administered POW camp. However 1,800 at most resided within the camp, the rest being house near their place of employment.[11] At the same time the camp was transformed into a punitive institution. In July 1917, it began receiving Greek civilians from the occupied Western Thrace region, the Greeks were treated the same way as the Serbs. A parallel influx of Serbian civilians from Morava necessitated the construction of a lesser camp, numbering 28 barracks. Each barrack held 80 to 100 internees while its intended capacity was 20. The prisoners slept on the floor, it did not contain bed, hay or blankets or windows. The faulty construction meant that water often leaked in. The barrack had no toilets and sanitation and disinfection were rare, prisoners still defecated within them as those who attempted to venture outside the barracks during the night were shot or beaten. The prisoners held there were fed 300 to 800 grams of black bread per day, a pepper soup three times per week and meat once per week. The prisoners grew increasingly hungry eating grass and stealing hay from the cattle. The internees were held without clothes, shoes or underwear. On average only 20 people per barrack survived until the end of the war. Between August and December 1917, 2,709 deaths were recorded of them 1,490 were from malnutrition. [12]
In the winter of 1917, the camp was struck by an epidemic of typhus. In January 1918, a quarantine was put in place by the three prisoner of war doctors practicing at the camp. Of the 5,036 prisoner, 1,548 were declared unfit for work, 314 were sick, 2,379 were working outside the camp and 623 were held as regular prisoners. An inspection by major general Mitiev in the same month led to the enactment of a 21-day incubation period in barracks where a sick prisoner was found. From then on the healthy prisoners were separated from the sick by an armed guard. Mitiev's inspection also uncovered the deaths of 99 and 66 prisoners in December 1917 and January 1918 at the camp's Yambol depot. The depot's commander second lieutenant Hristozov had not filled the necessary forms properly and claimed to be oblivious to the cause of the deaths, while having taken no precautionary measures against the epidemic. When threatened with a court-martial Hristozov emphatically dismissed the warning.[13] A post war Inter–Allied War Commission estimated that 4,142 Serbian nationals died in the camp and 2,000 more died while performing hard labor outside its limits. [14] On 21 May 1921, Sliven's local council lamented the condition of the camp's graveyard, which held the remains of Serbian prisoners of war and interned civilians.[15]
Aftermath
The
Footnotes
- ^ Albertini 1953, p. 36.
- ^ Fischer 1967, p. 73.
- ^ Christopoulos & Bastias 1977, pp. 215–254.
- ^ Willmott 2003, pp. 11–15.
- ^ Pissari 2013, pp. 366–372.
- ^ Falls 1933, pp. 1–22.
- ^ Falls 1933, pp. 22–50.
- ^ Falls 1933, pp. 152–184, 208–230, 348–362.
- ^ Falls 1935, pp. 246–253.
- ^ Tripos 2012, pp. 7–11.
- ^ Tripos 2012, pp. 15.
- ^ Pissari 2013, pp. 382–383.
- ^ Tripos 2012, pp. 32–34.
- ^ Pissari 2013, pp. 383–385.
- ^ Tripos 2012, p. 58.
- ^ Pissari 2013, pp. 363–364.
References
- OCLC 168712.
- Christopoulos, Georgios; Bastias, Ioannis (1977). Ιστορία του Ελληνικού Εθνους: Νεώτερος Ελληνισμός απο το 1881 ως 1913 [History of the Greek Nation: Modern Greece from 1881 until 1913] (in Greek). Vol. XIV. Athens: Ekdotiki Athinon.
- Falls, C. (1996) [1933]. Military Operations Macedonia: From the Outbreak of War to the Spring of 1917. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. I (Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed.). London: ISBN 0-89839-242-X.
- Fischer, Fritz (1967). Germany's Aims in the First World War. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-09798-6.
- ISBN 0-89839-243-8.
- Pissari, Milovan (2013). "Bulgarian Crimes against Civilians in Occupied Serbia during the First World War" (PDF). Balcanica (44). Institute for Balkan Studies: 357–390. . Retrieved 8 May 2016.
- Willmott, H. P. (2003). World War I. New York: Dorling Kindersley. OCLC 52541937.
- Tripos (2012). "Prisoners of War in Bulgaria during the First World War" (PDF). University of Cambridge Tripos. University of Cambridge: 1–83. Retrieved 8 May 2017.