Ōfuna prisoner-of-war camp - definition. What is Ōfuna prisoner-of-war camp
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Ōfuna prisoner-of-war camp         
  • An example of Japanese P.O.W. propaganda
The was an Imperial Japanese Navy installation located in Kamakura, outside Yokohama, Japan during World War II, where high-value enlisted and officers, particularly pilots and submariner prisoners of war were incarcerated and interrogated by Japanese naval intelligence. Richard O'Kane, Louis Zamperini and Gregory Boyington were among the prisoners held at Ōfuna.
Prisoner-of-war camp         
  • Ireland]] to an Irish prisoner of war in Japanese-occupied Malaya. The mail is covered with Irish, British and Japanese censorship.
  • [[Union Army]] soldier on his release from a confederate prison around 1865.
  • Ekenäs]] in 1918 after the [[Finnish Civil War]]
  • Bloemfontein concentration camp
  • Map of North Vietnamese Army POW camps, along with descriptions.
SITE FOR THE CONTAINMENT OF COMBATANTS CAPTURED BY THEIR ENEMY IN TIME OF WAR
POW camp; Prisoner of war camp; POW camps; POW Camp; Pow camp; Prisoner of war camps; Prisoner of War camp; Prisoner of War Camps
A prisoner-of-war camp (often abbreviated as POW camp) is a site for the containment of enemy fighters captured by a belligerent power in time of war.
Bandō prisoner-of-war camp         
  • Plan of the camp in 1917
  • German Bridge, built by the prisoners of Bandō during their captivity
JAPANESE CAMP FOR GERMAN PRISONERS DURING WORLD WAR I
Bandō POW camp; Bando Prisoner of War camp; Bandō Prisoner of War camp; Bando prisoner-of-war camp; Toyohisa Matsue
The was a prisoner-of-war camp during World War I in what is now Naruto, Tokushima Prefecture, Shikoku Island, Japan. From April 1917 until January 1920, just under a thousand of the 3,900 soldiers of the Imperial German Army, Navy, and Marine Corps who had been captured at the Siege of Tsingtao in November 1914 were imprisoned at the camp.