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Colditz Castle
Colditz Castle is located in the town of Colditz in Saxony, Germany. For
more than 100 years, it was used as a workhouse and a mental institution
but gained its notoriety as the Allied POW camp Oflag IV-C. Usually
referred to as Colditz, Oflag IV-C was a POW camp for officers and the
Germans sent prisoners here from other camps who had made repeated
attempts to escape.
The first British prisoners arrived in 1940 and by Christmas 1940, there
were POWs from Poland, Belgium, France and Britain. A French officer
became the first POW to escape in April 1941. Prisoners from various
countries continued to arrived until May 1943 when the Germans decided
that Colditz would be exclusively for American and British/Commonwealth
POWs. However, as the war continued, more and more prisoners were moved
to Colditz. Oflag IV-C, Colditz Castle was liberated by the US Army on
16th April 1945.
There were a number of famous inmates of Colditz as well as relatives of
VIPs who the Germans referred to “Prominente” (German for
‘celebrities’). British fighter ace Douglas Bader (pictured), future MP
Airey Neave, Charles Upham who won the Victoria Cross twice and Sir
David Stirling, founder of the SAS. The Prominente included Giles
Romilly, a journalist who was also nephew to Winston Churchill’s wife.
George Haig was the son of WWI Field Marshall Haig, Viscount George
Lascelles was a nephew of King George VI. However, not all VIPs were
given the status "Prominente". Lord John Arundell, the 16th Baron
Arundell of Wardour was an aristocrat held at Colditz but he was not
awarded "Prominente" status. On 13th April 1945 as the Allies advanced
to the area, the "Prominente" were moved. Fellow prisoners were
concerned that the SS would use them as bargaining chips or even kill
them out of spite. The prisoners persuaded the leader of the guards,
Obergruppenfuhrer Gottlob Berger to surrender (in secret to avoid SS
vengence). In the end and despite Hitler's orders, Berger refused to
kill the "Prominente" and in 1951, his 25 year sentence handed down at
the Nuremberg War Trials was reduced to 10 years.
Given the history of it’s inmates, it is hardly a surprise that Colditz
became synonymous with inventive escape attempts. Field Marshall Herman
Goering even declared Colditz “escape proof”. Duplicate keys and maps,
false documents and escape tools were all acquired. Prisoners used items
from their Red Cross parcels to trade with guards and townsfolk. Douglas
Bader was permitted to visit the town by guards. One of the more
outrageous escape ideas came from Lt Tony Rolt who came up with the idea
of building a glider which he intended to launch from the roof and fly
across the River Mulde below. Colditz was liberated before the glider
was completed. In total 32 men escaped from Colditz and of those, 15
made it home.
Tours for 2010
A visit to Colditz Castle is part of the itinerary for a number of
escorted tours during 2010. Please call on 0208 816 8789 or visit
the ‘Contact Us’ page to
request more information, availability and prices for this or any of our
other tours.
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