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Luftwaffe -run prisoner-of-war (POW) camp
- Stalag Luft III (German: Stammlager Luft III; literally "Main Camp, Air, III"; SL III) was a Luftwaffe -run prisoner-of-war (POW) camp during the Second World War, which held captured Western Allied air force personnel.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalag_Luft_III
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What was Stalag Luft III?
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Where was the first wooden horse escape from Stalag Luft III?
Why was Stalag Luft III a good place to escape?
Stalag Luft III (German: Stammlager Luft III; literally "Main Camp, Air, III"; SL III) was a Luftwaffe-run prisoner-of-war (POW) camp during the Second World War, which held captured Western Allied air force personnel.
Nov 23, 2021 · Although the German Luftwaffe designed the Stalag Luft III camp to be escape-proof, the audacious, real-life prison break immortalized in the 1963 movie The Great Escape proved otherwise.
The Stalag Luft III murders were war crimes perpetrated by members of the Gestapo following the "Great Escape" of Allied prisoners of war from the German Air Force prison camp known as Stalag Luft III on March 25, 1944.
NameOfficeFateAbsalon, GuntherDied in Soviet prison in May 1948BaatzPrematurely released from Red Army campBoschert, HeinrichSentenced to death on 3 September 1947, ...Breithaupt, WalterSentenced to life imprisonment on 3 ...Stalag Luft III was one of nine prisoner-of-war camps (Kriegsgefangenenlagers in German) run by the Luftwaffe to house downed allied airmen, who nicknamed themselves 'Kriegies'.
Jan 26, 2010 · What was so memorable about Stalag Luft III? Any cinema goer knows it well, as the setting of two evergreen war films, The Wooden Horse (jolly dashed British) and The Great Escape...
- Alan Hamilton
The famous wooden horse escape took place from the east compound in the evening of 19 October 1943, you can read about this escape at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalag_Luft_III#First_escape_ (1943). Prisoners built a wooden vaulting horse out of plywood from red cross parcels.
Stalag Luft III was a German POW camp situated deep within Nazi-occupied Poland, some 100 miles southeast of Berlin. The camp held thousands of captured Allied airmen during WW2 and was considered one of the hardest to escape from.