Definition of Halbmondlager. Meaning of Halbmondlager. Synonyms of Halbmondlager

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Halbmondlager. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Halbmondlager and, of course, Halbmondlager synonyms and on the right images related to the word Halbmondlager.

Definition of Halbmondlager

No result for Halbmondlager. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Halbmondlager from wikipedia

- The Halbmondlager was a prisoner-of-war camp in Wünsdorf (now part of Zossen), Germany, during the First World War. The name literally translates as Half-Moon...
- prisoner-of-war camp named "Half Moon" (Halbmondlager) in Zossen-Wünsdorf near Berlin. As its name suggests, the Halbmondlager was specifically intended for Muslim...
- The Wünsdorf Mosque, at the Halbmondlager POW camp, was Germany's first mosque, built in 1915; it was demolished between 1925 and 1926....
- site of several prisoner-of-war camps, including the "crescent camp" (Halbmondlager for Muslims who had fought for the Triple Entente), where the first...
- standing mosque in Germany—the Wünsdorf Mosque, built in 1915 at the Halbmondlager POW camp, was Germany's first, but it was demolished in 1925–26. Berlin...
- propaganda directed at Indian PoWs in German camps, particularly the Halbmondlager. Soon branches sprang up in Amsterdam, Stockholm, and Washington, as...
- initially held as a prisoner of war at Zerbst in Germany and later at the Halbmondlager POW camp where he and Douglas Grant were the only Australian aboriginal...
- 400 Tatars were buried. In the city, there was also a war camp called Halbmondlager. During his time at the camp, Idris was a reporter of multiple magazines...
- Venice Biennale. In 1916, he created a sensation when he visited the Halbmondlager, near Zossen, to paint six prisoners of war from North Africa. He died...
- supplies for the large number of Indian and African prisoners held at the Halbmondlager prisoner-of-war camp for coloured soldiers, near Zossen. Grant wrote...