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  1. Colditz Castle, German prisoner-of-war camp in World War II, the site of many daring escape attempts by Allied officers. The castle sits on a steep hill overlooking the Mulde River as it flows through the small Saxon town of Colditz, about 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Leipzig. A former residence.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. The government turned Colditz Castle into a prison for local criminals. Later, the castle was a home for the aged and a nursing home , as well as a hospital and psychiatric clinic. For many years after the war, forgotten hiding places and tunnels were found by repairmen, including a radio room established by the French POWs, which was then ...

  3. Mar 4, 2023 · With its numerous isolation cells, Colditz Castle was considered to be the ultimate military prison, or a super-prison. It was the Alcatraz of the Third Reich for prisoners-of-war (POWs)....

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Oflag_IV-COflag IV-C - Wikipedia

    Oflag IV-C, often referred to by its location at Colditz Castle, overlooking Colditz, Saxony, was one of the most noted German Army prisoner-of-war camps for captured enemy officers during World War II; Oflag is a shortening of Offizierslager, meaning "officers' camp". Colditz Castle.

  5. Nov 21, 2022 · Rob Attar. Published: November 21, 2022 at 4:24 PM. Colditz: in context. Early in the Second World War, the medieval Colditz Castle was converted into a prisoner of war camp, intended to hold those Allied officers deemed most likely to escape or cause trouble for their German army captors.

    • Rob Attar
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  7. Apr 27, 2022 · For many, Colditz Castle is infamous for being the site of Oflag IV-C, a prisoner of war camp that housed Allied officers during World War II. In 1933, the German government converted the property into a political prison for Jewish people, Communists, homosexuals and others they deemed to be “undesirable.”

  8. Sep 12, 2022 · Colditz is the most symbolic, famous, notorious wartime prison camp in history — it’s buried in our national mythology. It’s absolutely central to it. I grew up watching the black-and-white TV series about Colditz. I grew up playing the board game of Colditz. And so along with that kind of heavy symbolism comes a lot of mythology.

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