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Soviet Prisoners of War in Romanian Camps in 1941–1944

https://doi.org/10.56654/ROPI-2025-1(14)-91-106

Abstract

The article deals with basic aspects of the problem that involves the process of the stay of Soviet prisoners of war in Romanian camps during Second World War. The research was carried out on the basis of the archival documents. A part of the materials was included in science use for the first time. The largest Romanian camps for Soviet prisoners of war represented in the paper. The issue about incarceration conditions, feed of the inmates touched in the research. Generally, the position of prisoners of war in the camp was hard. Partly it happened because of seriously dependency of the guide Romanian army from the rulers of Hitler Germany. However, the permission in some camps of the representatives of the International Red Cross led to relief of the conditions of stay of inmates. After transition of Romania to party of the USSR and anti-Hitler coalition the Soviet prisoners of war were free. For the first time in research the front biographies of servicemen from Udmurtia who captured by Romanians were analyzed in the paper. The majority survived, joined the Red Army and returned to Udmurtia. The author determined that mortality of Soviet prisoners of war in Romanian camps was lesser than in German or Finnish.

About the Author

D. V. Perevoshchikov
Udmurt Institute of History, Language and Literature of Udmurt Federal Research Center of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Federation

Dmitry V. Perevoshchikov, CandSc (Hist.), Researcher of Department of Historical Research of Udmurt Institute of History, Language and Literature

Izhevsk 



References

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3. Zemskov, V.N. (2012), Soviet Prisoners of War in 1941–1945: Problems of Establishing Total Numbers and the Scale of Their Mortality. Russian Historical Collection. V. 4. Moscow: Kimmerskiy Center. 328 p. (In Russian)

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5. Nepomnyashchaya, N.N. (2022), The Tragedy of the Crimean Front. On the Issue of the Fates of Soviet Military Personnel in Romanian Captivity (Based on Archival Documents). Military-Historical Readings. Materials of the X All-Russian Scientific-Practical Conference with International Participation. Simferopol. pp. 81–98. (In Russian)

6. Polyanskiy, P.M. (2016), Soviet Prisoners of War: How Many Were There and How Many Returned? Demographic Review. V. 3. No. 2. pp. 43–68. (In Russian)


Review

For citations:


Perevoshchikov D.V. Soviet Prisoners of War in Romanian Camps in 1941–1944. Russia: Society, Politics, History. 2025;(1(14)):91-106. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.56654/ROPI-2025-1(14)-91-106

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ISSN 2949-1142 (Print)
ISSN 2782-621X (Online)