Academic literature on the topic 'Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the lists of relevant articles, books, theses, conference reports, and other scholarly sources on the topic 'Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Journal articles on the topic "Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie"
Carpentier, Vincent, and Benoît Labbey. "Archéologie de la Seconde Guerre mondiale." Revue d'archéologie contemporaine N° 2, no. 1 (October 23, 2023): 113–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/raco.002.0113.
Full textDebons, Delphine. "Les prisonniers de guerre allemands. France, 1944-1949." Critique internationale N° 69, no. 4 (2015): 179. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/crii.069.0179.
Full textMabon, Armelle. "Les prisonniers de guerre coloniaux durant l'Occupation en France." Hommes et Migrations 1228, no. 1 (2000): 15–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/homig.2000.3595.
Full textd'Abzac-Epezy, Claude. "La france face au rapatriement des prisonniers de guerre allemands." Guerres mondiales et conflits contemporains 233, no. 1 (2009): 93. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/gmcc.233.0093.
Full textVacheron, Simon. "La Normandie, première région textile de France pendant la Grande Guerre." Études Normandes 9, no. 1 (2019): 60–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/etnor.2019.3894.
Full textJennings, Eric T. "Les prisonniers de guerre allemands. France, 1944–1949 by Fabien ThéofilakisLes prisonniers de guerre allemands. France, 1944–1949, by Fabien Théofilakis. Paris, Fayard, 2014. 800 pp. 32.00 € (paper)." Canadian Journal of History 51, no. 3 (November 2016): 612–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.ach.51.3.rev24.
Full textSiassia, Amarillys. "« Maintenir les liens » en temps de captivité. Transmission et circulation de l’information entre la France et l’Allemagne durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale." Histoire, Europe et relations internationales N° 3, no. 1 (November 30, 2023): 119–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/heri.003.0119.
Full textDiamond, Hanna. "Fabien Théofilakis.Les prisonniers de guerre allemands, France, 1944–1949: Une captivité de guerre en temps de paix." American Historical Review 120, no. 4 (October 2015): 1554–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ahr/120.4.1554.
Full textGuillot, Hélène. "L’image officielle du soldat allemand pendant la Grande Guerre." Revue Historique des Armées 269, no. 4 (December 1, 2012): 36–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rha.269.0036.
Full textAbraham, Nicolas. "Le Cotentin sous domination anglaise (1418-1450)." Études Normandes 5, no. 1 (2018): 52–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/etnor.2018.3708.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie"
Schneider, Valentin. "La présence allemande en Normandie (1940-1948) : Approche croisée d'une cohabitation franco-allemande forcée." Caen, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013CAEN1680.
Full textNormandy experiences a massive German presence between June 1940 and December 1948. After the military defeat of France in June 1940, numerous German troops occupy the region over four years, first to prepare an invasion of England, then to protect the coast from an allied landing. Whereas 6 June 1944 marks the beginning of the end of the occupation regime, it also conditions the continuity of the presence of German soldiers in the region. Initially placed under the authority of the Allies, the German soldiers in Normandy become prisoners of war used as labour during the pursuit of the war against Germany. Transferred to French custody from 1945, they are then employed within the civil economy. Whereas the contacts between French and Germans have never been as numerous as during the Second World War, this period is often presented as the paroxysm of a Franco-German antagonism born during the 19th century. Based upon a crossed reading of French and German sources, this study investigates the nature and the evolution of the relations between natives and foreigners during this forced cohabitation of more than eight years. The detailed analysis of the quantitative and structural aspects of the German presence, very heterogeneous in space and time, should allow us to gauge to zones of contact between both groups and to distinguish between, on one side, the public opinion and the collective behaviours, generally hostile to the Germans, and, on the other side, the individual attitudes towards the other within the private sphere, much more nuanced
Gandeboeuf, Luc. "Prisonniers et prisons royales en Normandie à la fin du Moyen Age (14e-15e siècles)." Paris 4, 1995. http://www.theses.fr/1995PA040161.
Full textIn the middle ages, the royal power had not allowed any specific budget, either for the prisons themselves or for their running. Jails were thus settled in various kinds of buildings (in castles, in tower basements, in high walls or simply in town houses). Furthermore, there were many rooms within jails, each of the having a specific use. Among the prisoners, some could not support themselves and their costs was borne by the king. They got very little bread and water. Living conditions were harsh but at the time, people were not deemed to die in jail ; they were there as preventive. Dreadful criminals were put in chains or deep pits. Nevertheless escaping were a common occurrence. The number of capital executions, which was high all through the middle ages, would have come down in the late 15th century, prisoners being banished or sent away rather sentenced to death. Imprisonment became a real sentence
Houmeau, Didier. "Les prisonniers de guerre britanniques de Napoléon 1er." Thesis, Tours, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011TOUR2010.
Full textAfter the breaking off of the Peace of Amiens, the Premier Consul keeps the British who were present on the French ground as hostages as a reply to the British Government who keeps also French prisoners. But the true reason is more economical. The British prisoners are treated differently from prisoners of war and are only used in what is useful, such as spinning factories.Having a precise census of the British population in the depots was difficult: the documents are incomplete and the transfers from depot to depot too often. There were four depots at the beginning but it went to twelve in 1810 and 15 by the end of the war.Social life is organized and the prisoners tend to recreate the “British way of life” with much rejoicing in the various depots. But money games bring quarrels and debts. Escapes arises hunger in the French War Ministry. Exchanges are seldom and wounded and disabled men are part of these exchanges. Health remains a major problem and food is of poor quality. Death rate is severe. Except weddings and births, they have not left anything as they did not build but remembrance is still there
Gayme, Évelyne. "L'image des prisonniers de guerre français de la Seconde guerre mondiale : 1940-2000." Paris 10, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002PA100127.
Full textContrarily to World War One prisoners of war, those of World War Two have never been forgotten. Owing to the movie La Grande Illusion, which came out in 1937 and again in 1946, prisoners were in all minds, especially as every family knew a prisoner personally. A basic image spread, in which the French people recognized themselves : prisoners were victims, average Frenchmen. This image was created during the war and carried on, owing to movies, literature and the self-censored witnesses who agreed with the existing image. As prisoners of war feared they had to justify themselves for the French defeat, censored themselves and selected the tales they chose to tell. However the public opinion's view was only negative during summer and autumn of 1945, on account of the Pétain trial. But prisoners of war were officially proclaimed fighting men as from 1949. This image, though constantly present in society, did not alter much and at that only with the abilities of identification and the expectations of the French people. The prisoner of war was an ordinary man facing the gaullien resistant during the Sixties. He hated war while decolonization took place. He proved that the enemy could be human even when the Cold War demonized the Other. During the Fifties, a minority among senior prisoners rose against this image, which did not show their private sufferings and the values in which they believed. The prisoners chose the Seventies to reestablish a more realistic picture of what they had lived through and enlightered the dark hours of World War Two. Unsuccessfully : the French people being unable to identify with too specific an image. Nowadays, senior prisoners argue that each one of their experience was so unique that no one image can reflect the diversity or their traumas
Rouanet, David. "Les prisonniers de guerre étrangers dans le nord-est de la France (1803-1814)." Paris 4, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA040256.
Full textFew studies on foreigners prisoners of war made by Napoleon's troops from 1803 to 1814 existed. The captives from countries coalized against french Empire were sent in the north-east of ancient France, politically safe. They experimented the change of war customs during these eleven years of conflict, announcing the XXth century's long and hard captivities. This thesis, after explaining the legal condition of the prisoners of war in the earlier XIXth century, attempt to evaluate their number interned in the north-east of France. The beginnings of the captivity, the transfer of pow to french Empire, their settlement in dump cities between the Marne and the Rhine rivers, their reactions face this long time captivity and finally their liberation will be successively analysed. This thesis shows that it is better to talk internment than confinement for the major part of Napoleon's captives
Laliberté, René. "La France et la gestion des prisonniers de guerre pendant la guerre de Sept Ans (1756-1763) : trois échelles du système de captivité militaire." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/69906.
Full textTaking the Seven Years’ War as a case study, this research argues that the detention of prisoners of war in France generates the connexion of multiple components of the French state, driven by the objective of administrating captivity and proceeding to the prisoners’ exchanges. A non-instated war captivity system is at work, with the Secretary of State for War at its head. Here, the system is macro analysed through the lens of three of its scales. First, the normative scale explores the ideal conceptions of war captivity, their evolution in practice and in theory. Follows the prisoners’ scale, where the direct administration of the prisoner’s captivity is explored from their entrance in the system to their exit. Finally, the state’s scale embraces the main captivity system’s aspects that engage the France as a whole.
Cochet, François. "Retour et réinsertion des prisonniers, déportés et rapatriés : l'exemple des champenois (1945-1954)." Reims, 1990. http://www.theses.fr/1990REIML001.
Full textThéofilakis, Fabien. "Les prisonniers de guerre allemands en mains françaises (1944-1949) : captivité en France, rapatriement en Allemagne." Thesis, Paris 10, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA100184/document.
Full textBetween the end of 1944 and the end of 1948, almost one million German prisoners of war were detained in metropolitan France by the new authorities. As hated figures of the German occupation and the Nazi defeat, Hitler’s soldiers, henceforth vanquished, became a main issue of how to get out of the war, which involved a large number of actors. The authorities of the provisional government of the French republic were immediately confronted with a huge logistical challenge: to take care of a mass of prisoners, whereas France at the time of Liberation already had some difficulties to provide for its own population. Whereas German prisoners had been claimed and kept above all as labor to rebuild France. From being military in nature, the German captivity in French hands became an economic phenomenon and posed the question of the maintenance of this labor force. Removing the prisoners from camps presented some solutions, but spread progressively the management to the whole society: employers, mayors, but also local populations and public opinions who came in contact with this new German presence. The “German POWs question” became an issue of domestic policy, which made the conflicting diversity of war experiences resonate: Where is the line between the economically profitable treatment, but politically not so patriotic? Who must have priority in the allocation of POW labor? Must the work of this latter be due to the employer or to benefit the whole nation? Answers to these problems defined a certain idea of the reconstruction. This question of the treatment of POWs exceeds the national framework to become an issue of the Franco-American relationships in the after-war period and, de facto, of German policy - decided by two allies with such unequal status: 70% of the prisoners managed by the French had been transferred by the Americans who wanted to keep the responsibility as the detaining power. With the end of the conflict, then the beginning of the Cold War, which changed American priorities, the management of the German POWs at the international scale gives the opportunity to observe how the transatlantic bilateralism was progressively integrated into the European framework which set its own agenda. How could the French authorities meet the claims for liberation from 1946 without thwarting the Monnet plan?
Durand, Yves. "Opinion et pouvoirs dans les années quarante : le Loiret, Vichy, les prisonniers de guerre, la reconstruction." Paris 10, 1987. http://www.theses.fr/1987PA100101.
Full textThe thesis includes a collection of studies on the period of the fourties. Published works: -"Vichy, 1940-1944"; -"Liberation in the Loire valley countries"; - "Loiret in war-time"; - "Captivity; a history of the french prisoners of war, 1939-1945"; - "The daily life of the prisoners of war, 1939-1945". Articles and other publications : - "Vichy policy at work in the provinces : the "Departement du Loiret" as an exemple", in "Le Gouvernement de Vichy, 1940-1942"; -"The regional policy of Vichy at work : the regional "prefecture" of Orleans", in "Regions et regionalismes"; - "Political collaboration in the countries of central Loire", in revue d'histoire de la deuxième guerre mondiale, juillet 1973 "Reconstruction and urban projects on the ruins of juin 1940 : the bombed out cities of the loiret as an exemple" (in rev. D'hist. De la deux. Guerre mond. , juillet 1970). - "Modernisation and reconstruction : conclusions drawn from the study of the rebuilding of Orleans. " in the symposium on France getting modernized (fondation nationale des sciences politiques, 1981). - "The Organisations of former prisoners of war" in "war's memory" (universite of metz). All these works are dealing with a common theme, that of the relationships between opinion and the "authorities", in France, between 1939 and 1949. They aim at understanding better : -how war, the occupation and the liberation of France together with its aftermath, have been lived through by French populations. -how, at bottom level, populations have reacted to the problems arising from those events; - how those reactions interacted with the position related to the same events and problems which were taken by the successive local and central authorities, during those troubled times
Moreau, Jean-Bernard. "Attitudes, moral et opinions des officiers français prisonniers de guerre en Allemagne (1940-1945)." Paris 4, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2000PA040279.
Full textBooks on the topic "Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie"
Pessereau, Georges. Prisonniers sans capture. Paris: Editions Hervas, 1994.
Find full textBasse-Normandie, Conseil regional de, ed. La répression nazie en Basse-Normandie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale: Actes du colloque du 25 avril 2004. Caen: Centre de recherche d'histoire quantitative, 2005.
Find full textBénet, Jacques. Historique de la création et des activités du Rassemblement national des prisonniers de guerre (R.N.P.G.), mouvement de résistance et l'une des trois branches constitutives du mouvement de résistance plus ample, issu de la fusion du 12 mars 1944 et dénommé Mouvement national des prisonniers de guerre et déportés (M.N.P.G.D.). [S.l: s.n., 1986.
Find full textBacque, James. Der geplante Tod: Deutsche Kriegsgefangene in amerikanischen und französischen Lagern, 1945-1946. 9th ed. [Frankfurt a.M.] [etc.]: Ullstein, 2002.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-Day: The battle for Normandy. London: Viking, 2012.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-day: The Battle for Normandy. New York: Viking, 2009.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-day: The battle for Normandy. Waterville, ME: Thorndike Press, 2009.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-day: The Battle for Normandy. New York: Viking, 2009.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-Day. New York: Penguin USA, Inc., 2009.
Find full textBeevor, Antony. D-day: The Battle for Normandy. New York: Viking, 2009.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Prisonniers de guerre – France – Normandie"
Murphy, Neil, and Graeme Small. "Town and Crown in Late 15th-Century France: Rouen after the Réduction, c. 1449-1493." In La guerre en Normandie (XIe-XVe siècle), 309–31. Presses universitaires de Caen, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.puc.11917.
Full textMorieux, Renaud. "Patriotisme humanitaire et prisonniers de guerre en France et en Grande-Bretagne pendant la Révolution française et l’Empire." In La politique par les armes, 299–314. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.50198.
Full textBoudon, Jacques-Olivier. "Chapitre 1. Prisonniers de guerre et forçats napolitains en France au lendemain de la conquête du royaume de Naples (1806-1815)." In Le royaume de Naples à l'heure française, 31–52. Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.septentrion.26580.
Full text"Rapport du combat fait entre les Français et les Anglais. Des Français emmenés prisonniers à Gaspé. Retour de nos gens de guerre. Continuation de la disette des vivres. Chomina, fidèle ami des Français, promet [de] les avertir de toutes les menées des sauvages. Comme[nt] l’auteur l’entretient." In Derniers récits De voyages en nouvelle-France et autres écrits, 1620-1632, 131–39. Les Presses de l’Université de Laval, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9782763710495-022.
Full text