HORRORS OF THE REICH

Chilling World War 2 photos reveal gruesome fate that awaited thousands of British and Allied prisoners at the hands of the Nazis

Captured women in northern Germany appear to dig their own graves, among a series of photos collated by author and historian Phillip Chinnery

CHILLING photographs reveal the gruesome fate that awaited hundreds of British and Allied prisoners of war during World War Two.

Women were pictured digging out what appeared to be graves at the Ravensbruck concentration camp in Germany, before at least 92,000 of them died during the war.

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: "Tens of thousands of Allied prisoners of war died at the hands of the Nazis and their Italian allies. This book is for them.

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"To those who still believe that the Germans abided by the Geneva Convention and that acts of ill-treatment were the fault of individual guards rather than Nazi government policy, I invite you to read this book and remember its contents – lest you forget."

MASS MURDER

One picture shows dozens of captured Brit prisoners at an Italian camp.

They were grouped together, standing in bitter conditions in front of several Nazi soldiers who were preparing to shoot at them randomly in an unprovoked attack.

Other prisoners captured in Tobruk, Libya were passed over to the Italians who kept them in barbed-wire concentration camps until they could be shipped over to permanent prison camps in Italy.

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Many lived in fear, in case they would be killed at random by soldiers.

Unprovoked and arbitrary killings seemed to dominate the Nazi regime, with men suspected of being resistance fighters in Ukraine pictured lined up in a field moments before they are shot in the head.

In another example of the lack of dignity the Nazis accorded to fallen Allied soldiers, the bodies of dead Americans after D-Day were pictured lined up next to each other, with nothing but a thin white sheet of cloth to cover the faces.

The publication also contains images of some of the famous Royal Marine Cockleshell Heroes who canoed almost 100 miles behind enemy lines to blow up ships in a daring World War II raid.

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Captured British soldiers and airmen assemble at an Italian prisoner-of-war camp in December 1941Credit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
The execution of men suspected of being resistance fighters in Ukraine in September 1941Credit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
War crimes on both sides: German soldiers being executed by American troops outside Dachau, southern Germany, after the concentration camp was liberatedCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
British prisoners captured during the fall of Tobruk, Libya are escorted away by members of the Afrika Korps under the beating sunCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
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Phillip Chinnery’s book, ‘Hitler’s Atrocities Against Allied PoWs’Credit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
Fifty of the Allied airmen who tunnelled out of Stalag Luft 3 in the Great Escape were executed in chilling scenes like thisCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
Faces of the Cockleshell Heroes, who took part in a daring raid behind enemy lines. Only two of them returned from the mission alive, but two others also survived as they were ruled out of the mission at the 11th hour because of damage to their boatCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
A group of prisoners captured following this assault were mown down with machine gun fire whilst being transported in the back of a lorryCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
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The former leaders of the Nazi regime in the dock at Nuremburg with Hitler’s former deputy Rudolf Hess, second from far left, who would go on to serve life imprisonment in Spandau JailCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
A German paratroop patrol passes by dead Allied soldiers in Greece in 1942Credit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
Joseph Hartgens, a German air-raid warden and the leader of the civilians who murdered the captured American troops in Rüsselsheim was hanged for the crime on 10 November 1945Credit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
Bodies of the murdered soldiers of the Royal Norfolk Regiment, still lying next to the barn where they had been shotCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books
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The Royal Marine Cockleshell Heroes who canoed almost 100 miles behind enemy lines to blow up ships in a daring World War II raidCredit: Mediadrumimages/Phillip Chinnery/Pen and Sword Books


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