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  2. French prisoners of war in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_prisoners_of_war_in...

    French prisoners of war being marched away from the front, May 1940. Although no precise estimates exist, the number of French soldiers captured by Nazi Germany during the Battle of France between May and June 1940 is generally recognised around 1.8 million, equivalent to around 10 percent of the total adult male population of France at the time.

  3. Category:French war casualties - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:French_war_casualties

    French prisoners of war (6 C, ... 3 P) French casualties of World War II (2 C, 1 P) Pages in category "French war casualties"

  4. Chasselay massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chasselay_massacre

    The Chasselay massacre was the mass killing of French prisoners of war by German Army and Waffen-SS soldiers during the Battle of France in World War II.After capturing non-white French POWs during the capture of Lyon on 19 June 1940, German troops took approximately 50 black soldiers to a field near Chasselay, and used two tanks to murder them.

  5. Prisoners of war in World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoners_of_war_in_World...

    In total numbers, the deaths included 478,000 Austro-Hungarian prisoners, 122,000 Germans, 38,963 French in Germany. [7] [8] 411,000 prisoners died in Russia (the majority of them Austro-Hungarian), [9] and more than 100,000 Italian prisoners out of 350,000 in Austria-Hungary. [10] About 8% of Russians imprisoned by the Central Powers died. [11]

  6. Prisoners of war in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoners_of_war_in_World...

    Italian soldiers taken prisoner by the Allies during Operation Compass (1941). Most prisoners, after being captured, spent the war in the prisoner of war camps.In the early phases of the war, following German occupation of much of Europe, Germany also found itself unprepared for the number of POWs it held.

  7. Genocides in history (World War I through World War II)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocides_in_history...

    The report of Philimoshin lists the deaths of civilian forced laborers in Germany as totaling 2,164,313. G. I. Krivosheev in the report on military casualties gives a total of 1,103,300 dead POWs. The total of these two figures is 3,267,613, which is close to estimates by western historians of about 3 million deaths of prisoners in German ...

  8. Internment camps in France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internment_camps_in_France

    Numerous internment camps and concentration camps were located in France before, during and after World War II. Beside the camps created during World War I to intern German, Austrian and Ottoman civilian prisoners, the Third Republic (1871–1940) opened various internment camps for the Spanish refugees fleeing the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939).

  9. Paris between the Wars (1918–1939) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_between_the_Wars...

    Les Halles street market in 1920. Continuing, The population of Paris had been 2,888,107 in 1911, before the war. It grew to 2,906,472 in 1921, its historic high. [6] Many young Parisians were killed in the First World War, though a smaller proportion than from the rest of France, but this ended the steady population growth Paris had had before the war, and caused an imbalance in the ...