The Potsdam Conference (officially known as the "Berlin Conference"), was held from 17 July to 2 August 1945 at Cecilienhof Palace, the home of Crown Prince Wilhelm, in Brandenburg, and saw the leaders of the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and the United States, gathered together to decide how to demilitarize, denazify, decentralize, and administer Germany, which had agreed to unconditional surrender on 8 May (VE Day).
They determined that the remaining German populations in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary - both the ethnic (Sudeten) and the more recent arrivals (as part of the long-term plan for the domination of Eastern Europe) - should to be transferred to Germany, but despite an undertaking that these would be effected in an orderly and humane manner, the expulsions were carried out in a ruthless and often brutal manner.
Land was seized with farms and houses expropriated; the occupants placed into camps prior to mass expulsion from the country. Many of these were labor camps already occupied by Jews who had survived the concentration camps, where they were equally unwelcome.
Further cleansing was carried out in Romania and Yugoslavia, and by 1950, an estimated 11.5 million German people had been removed from Eastern Europe with up to three million dead. The number of ethnic Germans killed during the ‘cleansing’ period is suggested at 500,000, but in 1958, Statistisches Bundesamt (the Federal Statistical Office of Germany) published a report which gave the figure of 1.6 million relating to expulsion-related population losses in Poland alone. Further investigation may in due course provide a more accurate figure to avoid the accusation of sensationalism.
Author(s): Peter C. Brown
Publisher: Pen and Sword History
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 208
City: Barnsley
Cover
Book Title
Copyright
Contents
Introduction
Chapter One Hitler’s Final Solution
The Euthanasia Programme
Bottled Gas
Gas Vans
Observation Stations
Chapter Two The Nazi Camps
Coded Language of Gassing
Chapter Three The Death Marches
Chapter Four Czechoslovakia
Plate section
The Prague Uprising
Czechoslovak Radio
The Internment Camps
Forced Expulsions
Reprisals
The Death Marches
Chapter Five Hungary
The Phases of Expulsion
Chapter Six Poland
The Katyn Massacre
Kidnapped Children
Deportations
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
Flight and Expulsions
Chapter Seven The Removal of Germans from Eastern Europe
Chapter Eight Germany
The Berlin Airlift
The Holocaust Trains
The Yalta Conference
The Nuremberg Trials
The Red Cross
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Endnotes
Index
Back Cover