Scotland travel: Edinburgh Castle Prisoners of War
Scotland travel: Edinburgh Castle Prisoners of War exhibition. In the late 18th and 19th centuries, parts of the castle were used as a jail to hold captured sailors of many nationalities. Among them were citizens of the newly independant USA, still seen as rebels by the British...[this] experience in the castle vaults vividly recalls the conditions the captives endured. (From the guide to Edinburgh Castle pamphlet.) We know that the dungeon of Dalhousie Castle housed it's fair share of prisoners, and Culzean Castle probably held captives in it's cliffside caves. Real People having Real Fun! You can view this video & other travel videos in full screen near-DVD quality, slideshows & more, all with NO ADS, at jpmeyer.com. UK and France travel with von Essen Hotels, vonessenhotels.com and with Celtic Castles, CelticCastles.com.
The prison of War in the Edinburgh's castle
April, 2012
Community archaeology at the Second World War Cultybraggan PoW camp, Scotland
Suzie Thomas of the University of Helsinki presents the community archaeology project at the Second World War Cultybraggan PoW camp, Scotland, in the summer 2017. The research was organized jointly by the Helsinki and Glasgow universities. With thanks to Mousehole Films.
Credits:
Video and sound: Mousehole Films
Photos: Suzie Thomas, Iain Banks, SA-kuva
Edit: Suzie Thomas, Wesa Perttola
World War II: Prisoners of War - Full Documentary
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During World War II, captured service personnel of the axis and allied forces found themselves incarcerated as prisoners of war.
This fascinating documentary outlines the treatment and personal experiences of the many millions that were taken captive during the conflict.
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Edinburgh's war
It is a story of bravery, ingenuity and fortitude that is being widely told for the first time - how the ordinary people of one city helped win a war.
A new online archive which chronicles Edinburgh's contribution to the First World War effort has been coordinated by the University of Edinburgh's Centre for the Study of The Two World Wars.
Researchers from the University of Edinburgh have been working with Edinburgh City Libraries, historians and community groups to compile the archive.
UK EP#13 Edinburgh Castle United Kingdom ปราสาทเอดินบะระ สก๊อตแลนด์
UK Dream destinations is come true : EP#13 Edinburgh Castle
ฝันให้ไกลไปให้ถึง สหราชอาณาจักร ตอนที่ 13
ปราสาท เอดินบะระ สก็อตแลนด์
Part of The Old and New Towns of Edinburgh World Heritage Site and standing majestically on top of a 340 million year-old extinct volcanic rock, the castle is a powerful national symbol.
Castle Highlights:
The Honours of Scotland, the Stone of Destiny, One o'clock Gun, Mons Meg, Great Hall, Prison of War Exhibition, St Margaret's Chapel, Royal Palace, Scottish National War Memorial, National War Museum Scotland, Royal Scots Regimental Museum, The Regimental Museum of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards
Youtube :
Location : Castlehill, Edinburgh EH1 2NG, Scotland, UK.
Tel : +44 131 225 9846
Website : edinburghcastle.gov.uk
Google Map :
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UK Dream destinations is come true !
Click :
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EP#01 Bath ::
EP#02 Salisbury ::
EP#03 Salisbury Cathedral ::
EP#04 Salisbury City tour ::
EP#05 Stonehenge & Old Sarum ::
EP#06 Salisbury to York ::
EP#07 The Royal York Hotel ::
EP#08 How to use shower tap in Royal York Hotel, UK ::
EP#09 Sightseeing in York beautiful city in England, UK ::
EP#10 Museum of Science and Industry, Manchester ::
EP#11 Travel from York to Edinburgh by First Class Train ::
EP#12 National Museum of Scotland ::
EP#13 Edinburgh Castle United Kingdom ::
EP#14 Palace of Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh ::
EP#15 Holyrood Park, Salisbury Crags, Edinburgh
EP#16 Seabird Seafari, The Harbour, North Berwick
EP#17 Discovery Dundee, Scotland.
EP#18 Discovery Dundee By Dji Osmo Film Maker
EP#19 Take a train back from Edinburgh to London.
EP#20 Dinner at Four Seasons in London
EP#21 Advertising breaks Thule
EP#22 pod Point Charging Car
EP#23 Night Walk in Chinatown, London
EP#24 Dinner at Little Four Seasons in Chinatown, London
EP#25 Big Ben's clock tower, London
EP#26 City Cruises Westminster Pier in London
EP#27 Oxford Street London
EP#28 Buckingham Palace,
EP#29 Harrods is a luxury department store in London.
EP#30 Let's Fly Home, bye bye London, UK
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ตะลุยตามตะวัน ตือ เว็บท่องเที่ยว รีวิวที่เที่ยว ที่พัก รีสอร์ทและสปา อาหารการกิน ทั้งในและต่างประเทศ ตลอดจน การถ่ายภาพ ถ่ายวีดิทัศน์ และรีวิว แนะนำ อุปกรณ์ถ่ายภาพ ถ่ายวีดิทัศน์ และอุปกรณ์ที่จำเป็น สำหรับการเดินทางท่องโลก เพราะ ชีวิตคือการเดินทาง Life is Journey
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What is Talui Tamtawan 's show ?
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We are TaluiTamtawan, dream destination & journey around the world to take photos and videos. Including providing travel guide & review for you so that you can travel on your own.
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PRISONER AT THE CASTLE!! | EDINBURGH SCOTLAND | TRAVEL VLOG
A bit on the upload. Weekend trip up north to Scotland! Explored most of the city by foot and ate really great food! Links below!
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10 Amazing Ways the Allies Aided Escaped WWII Prisoners of War
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10. They provided escape maps of the European continent
9. Getting maps and other gear to prisoners of war was a different challenge
8. Maps in Monopoly sets
7. Gramophone records contained hidden messages to the prisoners
6. The Germans unwittingly made distribution of escape gear easier
5. MI9 sent tools to the prisoners as well, disguised as recreational items
4. Cigarette packs contained several escape support materials
3. Educating the troops became a critical part of the escape aids program
2. Many civilians were aware of the program and actively supported its mission
1. The program, despite so many being involved, was never detected
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Pt 3 of 5 US Sub Rescue of Australian and British POW's The Crossing
This video, The Crossing, explains the details involving the Sept 15, 1944 rescue of over 150 Australian and British POW's in the South China Sea, by US Submarines after the sinking of a couple of Japanese POW HellShips.
Unfortunately, these ships had not been properly marked with any Red Cross flags, and had been sunk by the American Submarines 3 days before. The American Submarine Sailors were totally unaware of the precious cargo that they had sunk 3 days previous.
This Video has two of the rescued POW's reuniting with some of the Sub Sailors that pulled them from the ocean that day.
The dramatic video from the rescue was shot by the Communication Officer of the USS Sealion II, Lt (jg) (ss) Joe (Shorty) Bates.
Special thanks to Joes son Bob Bates
Unfortunately, out of a total of 2,200 men on the two un-marked tansports that were sunk, 1,400 Perished.
Most of the survivors were unfortunately picked up by the Japanese and remained prisoners/slaves on the Mainland untill being rescued by the American Occupation Forces at Karasaki POW camp, in Sept 1945.
For a first hand narrative from a Pampanito Crewmember go here:
To Read a 1st hand narrative of a Survivor who was picked up by the Japanese go here:
For another account of the Sinking Go Here:
Another good Narrative of the incident that includes names and adresses of Survivors:
Pampanitos WW2 War Record, 6 battle Stars:
This Mighty US Warship is now a US Maritime Museum in San Francisco teaching future Bubbleheads the perils, dangers, excitement and satisfaction of being a US Sub Sailor.
Victory March Of The 51st Highland Division (1945) | British Pathé
This footage from 1945 shows Scotland's 51st Highland Division marching through Bremerhaven, Germany with bagpipes blaring after the allied victory of World War II.
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(FILM ID:1155.05)
Full title reads: VICTORY MARCH OF THE 51st.
Bremerhaven, Germany.
Several long shots of the Scottish pipe band of the 51st Highland Division, followed by the troops, marching past in Bremerhaven.
Various shots of the Lieutenant General Sir Brian Horrocks taking the salute.
Bagpipe band standing in the square of Bremerhaven. Close up shot of a bearded piper playing pipes. More shots of the Highlanders marching
(Mute & Track Negs.)
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Edinburgh Castle
Scotland's Edinburgh Castle is the county's most visited tourist attraction. It was once the home of Mary Queen of Scots and the birthplace of her son King James VI who went on to become King James I of the United Kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland. The castle is the site of the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo. Scottish regimental pipe and drum units and bands from around the world are invited to perform each night in August. The castle is also the home of Scotland's National War Memorial.
PRISONERS OF WAR WERE LOCKED UP HERE | UK CASTLES
Although these castles look beautiful from the outside, prisoners of war used to be locked up in here for months, even years. It's crazy to see the places they slept, ate, and bathed. The Prison Chamber...
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The Darien Venture: The Colony that Bankrupted Scotland
If a Nation’s wealth and power were to be measured in stubbornness, resilience, and inventiveness, rather than GDP, Scotland would be a top-5 Superpower. The people that brought to you televisions, refrigerators, penicillin, and gin & tonic have gone through many a rough patch throughout their history. Very often, hard times were related to their rocky relationship with their Southern neighbours, the English.
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CultyBraggan German P. O. W. Camp, Scotland from the Air.
Built in 1941, PoW camp No 21 at Cultybraggan was designed to hold some 4,000 Category A prisoners. Considered to be the toughest, most committed and fanatical Nazi PoWs, these men had been classified as 'Black' by the British authorities. Many had been captured from the SS and the Afrika Corps. The camp had five separate compounds; one each for the Army, Navy, Air Force and SS prisoners, and one for officers. There was an associated camp two miles away at Cowden, now a housing development in Comrie. (Wikipedia)
HMP Edinburgh
Prisoners Week
Cultybraggan World War II POW Camp Comrie Perthshire Scotland
Tour Scotland video of Cultybraggan prisoner of war ( PoW ) camp located near Comrie, Perthshire. Named PoW camp No 21, built in 1941 to house 4,000 Category A prisoners, Cultybraggan was a ' black camp ', holding those considered the most committed and fanatical Nazi PoWs, mainly young Waffen-SS, Fallschirmjäger and U-boat crew. Army, Navy, Air Force and SS prisoners were held in separate compounds, as were the officers. Following the war, in 1949, Cultybraggan was opened as a training camp. It was used by the Regular Army, the Territorial Army and was popular with Cadet units for their annual camps. Cultybraggan is one of the three best preserved purpose-built WWII prisoner of war camps in Britain. A former Nazi soldier has left £384,000 in his will to the Perthshire village where he was held as a prisoner of war during World War Two. Heinrich Steinmeyer was 19 when he was captured in France and held in the PoW camp at Cultybraggan by Comrie.
My visit to Edinburgh Castle part:2 เที่ยวปราสาท เอดินบะระ สะก๊อตแลนด์
Edinburgh Castle is situated on Castle Rock in the city of Edinburgh, Scotland. Castle Rock formed after a volcano erupted over 340 million years ago. The first castle that existed on the rock was known as “The Castle of the Maidens”. According to legend, the castle had been a shrine to the “Nine Maidens”, one of whom was Morgan le Fay.
Castle Rock had been a military base and royal residence for centuries. However, the edifice that is known as Edinburgh Castle was built during the 12th century by David I, son of Saint Margaret of Scotland.
The tensions between the English and Scottish monarchies nearly always centred on Edinburgh Castle. He who held the castle held rule over the city of Edinburgh and, therefore, over all of Scotland. Consequently, the castle was almost constantly under siege.
The first major battle the castle witnessed was during the late 13th century when Edward I of England attempted to seize the then vacant Scottish throne. From 1296 to 1341, the castle bounced from English to Scottish hands several times during the First and Second Wars of Scottish Independence.
After the Wars of Independence, the castle was in great need of repairs. Most of the construction was overseen by David II. In his honour, David’s Tower was erected.
In 1571, English forces laid siege to the city of Edinburgh in an attempt to capture Mary, Queen of Scots. The siege, which lasted for two years, became known as the “long” or “Lang” siege. By February of 1573, all of Mary’s supporters had surrendered to the English. During the Lang Siege, David’s Tower was destroyed.
The castle, again, witnessed strife when, in 1650, Oliver Cromwell executed Charles I and led an invasion of Scotland. In August of that year, Edinburgh Castle fell into English hands.
During the Jacobite Risings (1688-1746), the Scots attempted, several times, to recapture their castle. Unfortunately, they were never able to overpower the English. The final attempt was in 1745 when the Jacobite army was led by Charles Edward Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie). Although the Scots were able to capture the city, they were never able to lay siege to the castle. In November of that year, the Jacobites were forced to retreat.
From the late 18th century to the early 19th, Edinburgh Castle was used to hold military prisoners from England’s many wars. The castle became a national monument in 1814 after a mass prison break proved that the castle could not hold prisoners. During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the castle was slowly restored. Military ceremonies began to be held there and, in 1927, part of the castle was turned into the Scottish National War Memorial.
Edinburgh Castle is now one of the most popular tourist attractions in Scotland. The more than one million people who visit the castle each year witness military ceremonies, historical re-enactments, and can visit sites such as St. Margaret’s Chapel and the Great Hall of King James IV.
Timeline
350 million B.C.E. – Castle Rock forms after volcanic eruption
900 B.C.E. – Castle Rock is inhabited by humans for the first time
638 C.E. – The city of Din Eidyn is captured by the English and renamed Edinburgh
c. 1070 C.E. – Malcolm III marries an English princess later known as Saint Margaret of Scotland
1130 C.E. – Margaret's son, David I, builds on Castle Rock the edifice that is still standing to this day
1286 C.E. – Alexander III dies without a successor. Edward I of England declares himself feudal overlord of Scotland
1296 C.E. – Edinburgh Castle is captured by the English under the command of Edward I
1313 C.E. – Castle is recaptured by the Scots
1334 C.E. – Castle is, again, captured by the British
1341 C.E. – Castle is, once again, recaptured by the Scots
1356 C.E. – David II rebuilds the castle; David’s Tower is named in his honor
1511 C.E. – James IV builds the great hall that can still be seen to this day
1573 C.E. – The Lang Siege takes place and destroys David’s Tower
1578 C.E. – Castle is rebuilt
1633 C.E. – Charles I becomes the last Scottish monarch to inhabit Edinburgh Castle
1650 C.E. – Oliver Cromwell executes Charles I and captures the castle
1689 C.E. – Members of the first Jacobite Rising attempt, and fail, to recapture the castle
1745 C.E. – Bonnie Prince Charlie and the members of the fifth Jacobite Rising, once again, attempt and fail to recapture the castle
1757 C.E. – Edinburgh Castle is turned into a prison and holds thousands of military prisoners from the Seven Years War, the American Revolution, and the Napoleonic Wars
1822 C.E. – George IV of England becomes the first ruling monarch to visit the castle in nearly two hundred years
1927 C.E. – Part of the castle is turned into the Scottish National War Memorial
1945 C.E. – Edinburgh Castle survives World War II
1999 C.E. – Edinburgh Castle becomes one of the most popular tourist attractions in Scotland
Present Day – Edinburgh Castle has over one million visitors each year
Sethukarnan's Scotland Tour Edinburg Castle 31 July 2018
Edinburgh Castle is a historic fortress which dominates the skyline of the city of Edinburgh, Scotland. From its vantage position on the Castle Rock, It offers panoramic views of the city of Edinburgh.
Perched on a volcanic plug estimated to have formed some 350 million years ago, Edinburgh Castle remains an active military base. Millions of visitors climb the Castlehill every year to explore this mighty fortress and former royal residence, now a major part of the Old and New Towns of Edinburgh UNESCO World Heritage Site. Scotland’s crown jewels are among the national treasures on display within the castle walls.
Most of the buildings of Edinburgh Castle date from the 12th century to the 18th Century. Through the ages the castle has been used as a royal residence, a prison, and an army garrison.
Being the most important castle in Scotland it has been at the center of numerous wars, having been attacked and besieged many times.
Edinburgh castle has a complex building history. The oldest part, St Margaret's Chapel, dates from the 12th century; the Great Hall was erected by James IV around 1510; the Half Moon Battery by the Regent Morton in the late 16th century; and the Scottish National War Memorial after the First World War.
The castle houses the Honours (Crown Jewels) of Scotland, the Stone of Destiny, the famous 15th century gun Mons Meg, the One O' Clock Gun and the National War Museum of Scotland.
The One O’Clock Gun is a time signal, fired every day at precisely 13:00, excepting Sunday, Good Friday and Christmas Day. The ‘Time Gun’ was established in 1861 as a time signal for ships in the harbour of Leith and the Firth of Forth, 3 kilometers (1.8 miles) away.
The Prisons of War Exhibition, located in the Edinburgh Castle’s dungeons, offers a glimpse of life for the prisoners of many nationalities who languished here. They came from as far apart as France, America, Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland, Italy, Denmark and Poland.
An annual highlight is the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo, held on Castle Esplanade every August. Scotland’s number one paid-for tourist attraction.
Prisoner of War Diary
My Grandfather was a prisoner of war in WWII. He wrote a diary during his year long captivity. My father and I donated the diary to the 8th Air Force Museum in Savannah Ga.
Penang Reoccupied (1945)
Unissued / unused material.
Newsreel item from Indian News Parade.
Title reads: Penang Reoccupied.
Royal Marines land at Penang, Malaya, after the Japanese have surrendered. M/S Japanese officers lined up on the quayside. Various shots Captain Hilton DSO (naval officer in charge) coming ashore. Various shots of flag hoisting ceremony - Union Jack flag is raised, military band plays. Various shots liberated Malayan population rejoicing. Sailors and Marines drive through streets in military vehicles - lots of waving and flags, carnival atmosphere. Japanese prisoners of war are marched through the street. British officers inspect the captured Japanese seaplane base.
FILM ID:2054.05
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