As soon as the First World War started, thousands of refugees poured into Holland. Belgian civilians, British marines, German deserters, and Russians escaped from German POW camps were sheltered there. As a neutral country, the Dutch government was obliged by law to detain soldiers of belligerent nations. Thus, 35,000 military men spent the war (or part of it) in Dutch prison camps behind barbed wire.
The civilians among the refugees - for the most part Belgians (ca. 100,000) - were housed in tents and camps spread throughout the country. Former prisoners of war and deserters (thousands of Russians and Germans) lived in cheap hotels and boarding-houses in Rotterdam.
The repatriation of all these refugees was a giant operation that would only finish in the course of 1919. Several monuments and names of streets (such as "Engelse Kamp" in Groningen) still remind us of this episode. Also, many newspapers and newsletters that were written, illustrated, and published by the refugees themselves have been preserved in the collections of the IISH and the Press Museum.
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