Sheet by: Isabella Insolvibile
General data
Town: Brindisi
Province: Brindisi
Region: Puglia
Location/Address: Tuturano - Brindisi
Type of camp: Transit camp; Sorting camp; Quarantine camp
Number: 85
Italian military mail service number: 3450
Intended to: NCOs – Troops
Local jurisdiction: IX Army Corps
Railroad station: Brindisi
Accommodation: tents, huts
Capacity: 6500, including 50 officers
Operating: from 05/1941 to 07/1943
Commanding Officer: Col. Evaristo Armani (April – August 1941); Captain. Giuseppe Favia (February – May 1942); Lt. Col. Angelo Albanese (June 1942 – summer 1943)
Brief chronology:
Spring 1941: the first Allied PoWs were assigned to the camp.
March 1943: first inspection by the neutral delegates.
Spring 1943: many PoWs were assigned to work outside the camp.
18 May 1943: PoW Phini, assigned to a detachment, was killed by a carabiniere.
9 August 1943: PoW Madalane, assigned to a detachment, was killed by a sentry.
1 September 1943: the camp was closed.
Allied prisoners in the Brindisi camp
Date | Generals | Officers | NCOs | Troops | TOT |
1.3.1942 | 52 | 726 | 778 | ||
1.4.1942 | 110 | 1452 | 1562 | ||
1.5.1942 | 109 | 1443 | 1552 | ||
1.6.1942 | 33 | 348 | 381 | ||
1.7.1942 | 4 | 87 | 922 | 1013 | |
1.8.1942 | 260 | 3366 | 3626 | ||
1.9.1942 | 7 | 200 | 1858 | 2065 | |
30.9.1942 | 14 | 158 | 172 | ||
31.10.1942 | 9 | 118 | 127 | ||
30.11.1942 | 221 | 2678 | 2899 | ||
31.12.1942 | 293 | 3291 | 3584 | ||
31.1.1943 | 291 | 3259 | 3550 | ||
28.2.1943 | 291 | 3254 | 3545 | ||
31.3.1943 | 514 | 4305 | 4819[1] | ||
30.4.1943 | 465 | 4557 | 5022 | ||
31.5.1943 | 313 | 3838 | 4151 | ||
30.6.1943 | 357 | 3625 | 3982 |
Camp’s overview
PG 85 Tuturano was established in the Tuturano district of Brindisi, near the Paticchi farm («masseria»), in the spring of 1941. International inspectors were able to visit the camp only in 1943, and therefore the documentation on this camp is limited. Nonetheless, it is apparent that conditions in PG 85 violated the international laws on the fair treatment of PoWs. Many of them requested, in April 1942, an increase in their daily ration of at least 100%, the installation of warm baths, pest control services, a military shop, payment for their work, inspections by representatives of the International Red Cross Committee, and the delivery of Red Cross parcels. These requests confirm the very precarious living conditions in the camp, as the PoWs were deprived of essential services. A PoW, transferred to Tuturano in mid-July 1942, noted that:
Despite the efforts of the PoWs, the situation did not improve in the following months. Hygienic conditions, for example, remained critical. Moreover, the camp was located in an area where malaria was endemic. The food situation was also difficult, as the PoWs could often eat only what they received in the Red Cross parcels, which were not delivered regularly. These issues were compounded by the behaviour of the guards, who, according to some witnesses, seemed «to take pleasure in annoying the prisoners» . Punishments were often disproportionate and violent. A former PoW recalled that:
Lt. Pappi, the interpreter, was among those responsible for mistreating the PoWs. Despite a long list of denunciations, Pappi was never put on trial or investigated. Moreover, his first name is still unknown as it was not reported in the Italian or British documents (only his surname was registered). Pappi was responsible for various acts of violence and torture against the PoWs, as testified by Sergeant Boult, who was the camp leader for a while:
In March 1943, finally, neutral inspectors were allowed into the camp. By this point, PG 85 was no longer a transit camp but a base camp for several work detachments (between 13 to 23) located in the surrounding farmlands in the provinces of Lecce and Brindisi (in the farms duca Battista Guerrini in Serrano, ammiraglio Granafei in Castel Acquano, Colosso brothers in Ugento, principe Dentice di Frasso in Carovigno, conte Balsamo Giovanni in Cellino S. Marco). Some PoWs still in the camp were housed in wooden huts, but most were in tents. Living conditions were still poor, as the camp lacked lighting and the ground was muddy. The delegates of the Protecting Power also noticed these violations of the Geneva conventions. Nonetheless, the Italian authorities decided, from 1942, not to build more huts (the few already built housed up to 600-700 PoWs) and to leave the PoWs in tents. This decision was motivated by two factors: the Bari military command disliked the idea of building permanent structures near the city, and tents allowed for a much larger number of PoWs to be housed in the camp.
The PoWs’ health conditions were concerning; many were malnourished, and others got sick because of the cold. Moreover, malaria was not appropriately treated, as the camp lacked a proper supply of quinine. Between December 1942 and January 1943, seven PoWs died from malaria infections.
Clothing was another issue, as the PoWs did not have any spare clothes and remained in their worn-out summer battle dresses, which they wore when captured.
In the spring of 1943, many PoWs were assigned to work detachments in the countryside, but many were also used as roadbuilders and in the Foggia airport. In June 1943, some 300 PoWs were sent to San Pancrazio Salentino to work at the local airport. This was, evidently, a job supporting the Italian war effort (and therefore prohibited), but it was possibly ordered by the Germans (the sources are discordant), while the Italians provided the surveillance. In San Pancrazio, the PoWs often quarrelled with their captors: they went on strike and sabotaged the place in order to fight against being forced to help their enemies. Meanwhile, the guards systematically pilfered the Red Cross parcels delivered to the PoWs. The PoWs also worked at the airport and seaplane base in Brindisi, San Vito dei Normanni (Brindisi), and Grottaglie (Taranto).
On 18 May 1943, South African Private Johannes (or Joseph) Madalane of the Native Military Corps was killed in a detachment. The soldier was queuing, with others, for a pair of boots, but a sentry, annoyed at the PoWs pushing at the camp’s gates, fired into the crowd, wounding Madalane, who died a few hours later. After the war, there was no investigation, as the British authorities believed the Italian version of the events: that the guard had fired in self-defence.
Another incident happened before the camp’s closure. On 9 August 1943, South African PoW George Phini, who worked in a detachment, was killed by a carabiniere. According to the Italian sources, he was standing, with other people, in a vineyard at the limit of the Brindisi seaplane base. The carabiniere, who was guarding the base, thought he had the «duty of guarding the nearby private properties as well» and supposed they were there to steal grapes; he ordered the PoW (only him) to join his comrades, who were eating their lunch nearby. Apparently, Phini refused rudely, threatening the carabiniere. The two fought until «facing the rebellious negro», and in self-defence, the carabiniere «shot […] from two metres away […] against the PoW, and the madman fell to the ground». Phini arrived at the hospital already dead. The Italian investigation ended with the usual conclusions: «the carabiniere acts were more than legal considering the threatening attitude of the PoW, who belonged to an inferior race, meaning that the carabiniere almost had the duty to protect the Corps’ honour and demonstrate its authority» [ACS, MG, CGCC, Miscellanea, scatola 1]. After the war, carabiniere Giovanni De Vito, who killed Phini, was put on trial and acquitted thanks to a fellow carabiniere who testified in his favour, claiming the PoW had attacked him.
The general behaviour of the guards in Tuturano was also investigated regarding the mistreatment of the PoWs, some specific episodes of violence, and the forbidden work in the San Pancrazio Salentino airport. A different investigation was opened on the theft of the Red Cross parcels by Italian officers. The Court of Inquiry opened in Lecce between 7 and 10 July 1944, proved that in November 1943, the Allied troops had found, inside the former camp and in the houses of its personnel, a grand total of 2,100 Red Cross parcels containing food, clothes, cigarettes and leisure goods such as musical instruments. Evidently, these goods had been taken away from the PoWs who lived in the camp. Commander Albanese was convicted for this, but there is no information on what kind of sentence was imposed on him.
In August 1943, the camp became a transit camp run by the Wehrmacht, and many PoWs were transferred elsewhere. It was officially closed on 1 September 1943. After the Armistice, it was occupied by British troops who used it to house German PoWs. The Italian commander, Col. Angelo Albanese, remained in charge until the camp was finally closed at the beginning of November.
Today, only a few ruins remain, and few traces in the popular memory. The PoWs printed and distributed a newspaper in the camp, the «The Tuturano Times», but its frequency is unknown.
Archival sources
- Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Ministero dell’Interno, Direzione Generale Pubblica Sicurezza, A5G, II GM, bb. 116, 117, 118 e 140, Verbali e Notiziari della Commissione Interministeriale per i Prigionieri di Guerra
- Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Ministero dell’Aeronautica, Gabinetto, b. 70, Verbali e Notiziari della Commissione Interministeriale per i Prigionieri di Guerra
- Archivio Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito, L10, b. 32
- Archivio Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito, H8, b. 79
- The National Archives, WO 224/136
- The National Archives, WO 361/1907
- The National Archives, WO 311/320
- The National Archives, TS 26/95, 715, 875
Bibliography
- Garwood-Cutler J.L., The British war crimes trials of suspected Italian war criminals, 1945-1947, in "International Humanitarian Law: Origins", ed. By J. Carey-W.V. Dunlop-R.J. Pritchard, New York, Transnational Publishers, 2003
- Horn K., Changing Attitudes among South African Prisoners of War towards their Italian Captors during World War II, 1942–1943, in «Scientia Militaria», vol. 40, no 3, 2012 pp. 200-221
- Horn K., In enemy hands. South Africa’s POWs in World War II, Johannesburg & Cape Town, Jonathan Ball Publishers, 2015
- Insolvibile I., I prigionieri alleati in Italia 1940-1943, tesi di dottorato, Dottorato in "Innovazione e Gestione delle Risorse Pubbliche", curriculum “Scienze Umane, Storiche e della Formazione”, Storia Contemporanea, Università degli Studi del Molise, anno accademico 2019-2020,
- Rollings G., Prisoner of war. Voices from behind the wire in the Second World War, London, Ebury, 2008
Online resources
- https://archives.msmtrust.org.uk/?s=tuturano, in archives.msmtrust.org.uk
- http://www.brundarte.it/2016/06/06/tuturano-campo-concentramento-pg-85/ , in brundarte.it
- https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/2076733/G%20PHINI/, in cwgc.org
- https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/2076465/J%20MADALANE/, in cwgc.org
- https://www.dayitalianews.com/tuturano-e-il-campo-di-prigionia-pg85/, in dayitalianews.com
- https://www.notizienazionali.it/notizie/attualita/28667/paesaggi-tuturanesi-il-campo-di-prigionia-pg85-a-masseria-paticchi, in notizienazionali.it
- https://www.senzacolonnenews.it/apertura/item/la-masseria-il-bosco-e-il-campo-di-prigionia-pg85-del-43.html?cn-reloaded=1, in senzacolonnenews.it