- 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...