Deportations from East Prussia during World War I
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In 1914–1915, the Russian Empire forcibly deported local inhabitants from Russian-occupied areas of East Prussia to more remote areas of the empire, particularly Siberia. The official rationale was to reduce espionage and other resistance behind the Russian front lines.[1] As many as 13,600 people, including children and the elderly, were deported.[2] Due to difficult living conditions, the mortality rates were high, and only 8,300 people returned home after the war.[2]
The deportations had not received much attention from scholars, as they were overshadowed by the much larger refugee crisis in the Russian Empire[3] and the expulsion of Germans after World War II.[4]
Military action began on the Eastern Front on 17 August 1914 with the Battle of Stallupönen during the Russian invasion of East Prussia.[5] As the German army was concentrated on the Western Front, Russians occupied about two-thirds of East Prussia[3] and stood just 40 kilometres (25 mi) away from Königsberg. It was the only German Empire territory, apart from Alsace-Lorraine on the Western Front, that saw direct military actions during the war.[4] The Russians were defeated in the Battle of Tannenberg and retreated, but counterattacked in October 1914. This time, they captured about one-fifth of East Prussia.[3] The front stabilized until February 1915 when the Russians were driven out during the Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes.[4] These two waves of Russian attacks were accompanied by two mass population movements in different directions: locals evacuating deeper into Germany and deportations into Siberia. Contemporary estimates put the number of refugees into Germany at 870,000 in August and 300,000 in October.[4] For comparison, the 1910 German census recorded a total population of 2,064,175 in East Prussia.[6]
Russians deeply distrusted the German population. Even before battles began, MVD issued an order to treat every male citizen of the German Empire and Austria-Hungary between ages 18 and 45 as a civilian prisoner of war. Supposedly to prevent espionage, such people were deported out of European Russia.[7] Such policies resulted in the deportation of some 200,000 Germans from Volhynia and Bessarabia.[8] Generally, the internment of civilians of enemy nationality became a common practice among the warring states.[9]