Exploring Central European History: A Wirth Institute Podcast with Joseph F. Patrouch
Wirth Institute
6 episodes
9 months ago
Starting in the 1890’s, countries around the world, including Spain, the US, and the British Empire, began a policy of interning populations considered potentially dangerous. Professor Patrouch outlines this context before concentrating on the internment camp system set up in Canada during the First World War in which thousands of men (and some women and children) from Austria-Hungary were incarcerated.
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Starting in the 1890’s, countries around the world, including Spain, the US, and the British Empire, began a policy of interning populations considered potentially dangerous. Professor Patrouch outlines this context before concentrating on the internment camp system set up in Canada during the First World War in which thousands of men (and some women and children) from Austria-Hungary were incarcerated.
Austro-Hungarians in Canada’s Internment Camps, 1914-1920: Part of a Worldwide Story
Exploring Central European History: A Wirth Institute Podcast with Joseph F. Patrouch
36 minutes
5 years ago
Austro-Hungarians in Canada’s Internment Camps, 1914-1920: Part of a Worldwide Story
Starting in the 1890’s, countries around the world, including Spain, the US, and the British Empire, began a policy of interning populations considered potentially dangerous. Professor Patrouch outlines this context before concentrating on the internment camp system set up in Canada during the First World War in which thousands of men (and some women and children) from Austria-Hungary were incarcerated.
Exploring Central European History: A Wirth Institute Podcast with Joseph F. Patrouch
Starting in the 1890’s, countries around the world, including Spain, the US, and the British Empire, began a policy of interning populations considered potentially dangerous. Professor Patrouch outlines this context before concentrating on the internment camp system set up in Canada during the First World War in which thousands of men (and some women and children) from Austria-Hungary were incarcerated.