「prisoner of war」の共起表現一覧(2語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 59件
It functioned as a | prisoner-of-war camp, a departure area for about a millio |
rld War, and spent some time in a fascist | prisoner-of-war camp after being captured, although they |
Gitterman was interned in a | prisoner-of-war camp and returned to Warsaw in April 1940 |
Bulge, he escaped six months later from a | prisoner-of-war camp and rejoined advancing U.S. forces. |
return of some 6,800 French experts from | prisoner-of-war camps, and ease on the restrictions betwe |
lps an Englishman to escape from a German | prisoner-of-war camp as the Second World War nears its en |
of Singapore, the Japanese established a | prisoner-of-war camp at Kranji and a hospital nearby at W |
and spent the next three years in an Axis | prisoner-of-war camp before being released at the end of |
s requisitioned and modified for use as a | prisoner-of-war camp, but no prisoners were ever held the |
and spent four and a half years in German | prisoner-of-war camps, but escaped in January 1945 and we |
portance; it was also the site of a major | prisoner-of-war camp, Camp Morton, and was at once threat |
Elmira Prison was a | prisoner-of-war camp constructed by the Union Army in Elm |
nd, most of which was written in a German | prisoner-of-war camp during World War Two. |
s the Hansards and Jenisons, and became a | prisoner-of-war camp during World War II and then a girls |
an American Revolutionary War officer and | prisoner-of-war, Daniel Everett Wade, was born in Cincinn |
During World War I a | prisoner-of-war camp existed in Feldbach. |
Albemarle Barracks was a | prisoner-of-war camp for British prisoners during the Ame |
He was held as a | prisoner-of-war in Fort Delaware until June 1, 1865. |
ch and Indian War, acted as a spy while a | prisoner-of-war at Fort Duquesne. |
a "special Olympics" called International | Prisoner-of-War Olympic Games. |
From 1942 to 1945 he was a | prisoner-of-war in German custody. |
Lucas was transferred to | prisoner-of-war duties, guarding Italian and German priso |
n end, the commandant of the Blood Island | prisoner-of-war camp has let it be known that should Japa |
rds, he was taken prisoner and remained a | prisoner-of-war until his exchange to Holland in June 191 |
Dale Holloway and author and World War II | prisoner-of-war Carl Holloway (Happy the Pow: A Short Sto |
Spice Island Slaves: History of Japanese | Prisoner-of-war Camps in Eastern Indonesia May 1943-Augus |
e Street Camp was a Japanese World War II | Prisoner-of-war camp in Kowloon, Hong Kong which primaril |
ended World War II, he was interned in a | prisoner-of-war camp in the Soviet Union for seven years. |
san operations in Belarus and guarded the | prisoner-of-war camps in the coal mines of Stalino and Ma |
Birch spent World War I in a | prisoner-of-war camp in the Netherlands, alongside Harry |
th Point Camp was a Japanese World War II | Prisoner-of-war camp in North Point, Hong Kong which prim |
ned as an enemy alien for four years in a | prisoner-of-war camp in Ruhleben. |
He suggested the construction of a | prisoner-of-war camp in southern Georgia, a location thou |
he Resistance Training Laboratory, a mock | prisoner-of-war camp in which special force soldiers are |
ter of 'Captain Dickie Chapman', a fellow | prisoner-of-war (POW) in Colditz during World War II, in |
ation forms a part of ongoing research on | prisoner-of-war deaths in Finland and people handed over |
three and a half years in various German | prisoner-of-war camps, initially in Italy; after the conf |
ary Prison at Florence, was a Confederate | prisoner-of-war camp located on the outskirts of Florence |
mander of the United Nations-administered | prisoner-of-war camps on Koje Island during the Korean Wa |
s shot down and he was held as a Japanese | prisoner-of-war at Osaka POW Camp #4 Ikuno in Japan Follo |
thority of the defendant Berger, chief of | Prisoner-of-War Affairs, resulted in great privation and |
3 in Tunisia [and] murdered in Camp Aiken | prisoner-of-war camp, South Carolina" United States. |
he sinking of NRP Vega the crew was taken | Prisoner-of-war on the shore. |
Thomas was a | prisoner-of-war during the Japanese occupation of Singapo |
At the end of WW II, he was a | prisoner-of-war of the French, where he worked as a trans |
He was soon a | prisoner-of-war of the Japanese, first in Changi and late |
rg on 30 December 1942, where he sat as a | prisoner-of-war until the camp was liberated. |
He served in Malaya and was a | prisoner-of-war for three years. |
also contained numerous forced-labor and | prisoner-of-war camps to supply workers for the factory. |
defeated and captured, and escorted as a | prisoner-of-war back to Daming. |
Following the surrender, he served as a | prisoner-of-war in Turkey until his escape, which eventua |
territory, they spend several months in a | prisoner-of-war camp until they escape back to their side |
A German | prisoner-of-war camp was built here during WWII. |
A | prisoner-of-war canteen was established within the compou |
used for storing aircraft engines while a | prisoner-of-war camp was built in the park. |
The | prisoner-of-war camp was located near Tullahoma, Tennesse |
was taken prisoner and placed in a German | prisoner-of-war camp, where he produced and acted in play |
Yol was the location of a | Prisoner-of-war camp which hosted German soldiers in the |
War I Royal Flying Corps pilot and double | prisoner-of-war escapee who wrote the 1926 novel "The Esc |
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