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Japanese Prisoners of the Russо-Japanese War in the Arakcheev Barracks of the Novgorod Province

https://doi.org/10.55105/2687-1440-2022-51-122-136

Abstract

The Russo-Japanese War was essentially the first war during which the Hague Convention With Respect to the Laws and Customs of War on Land was tested. At that time, Russia, like Japan, was concerned about the country’s international reputation and sought to create the impression of a civilized power. After the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War, it made great efforts to ensure that the detention of prisoners of war met international requirements. 
There were a little more than 2,000 Japanese prisoners of war in Russia. Most of them were kept in the Arakcheev Barracks of the village of Medved, Novgorod Province. The article shows that the prisoners of war had good financial provision and enjoyed freedom of movement in the village. The Russian side tried to take into account the dietary tastes of the Japanese. The article presents the results of the mission of the American Vice-Consul Thomas Smith, undertaken to study the situation of the prisoners of war, according to which the treatment of the Japanese POWs did not cause any criticism. 
The author also shows that, today, the memory of the Japanese prisoners of war is carefully preserved by the villagers. There is a permanent museum exposition in the local house of culture, and the tombstones left after the burial of the deceased prisoners of war are part of the memorial in their honor.

About the Author

D. V. Streltsov
MGIMO-University; Institute of China and Contemporary Asia of RAS
Russian Federation

Streltsov Dmitriy V., Doctor of Sciences (History), Professor, Head of Department of Afro-Asian Studies, MGIMO-University; Leading Researcher, Centre for Japanese Studies, Institute of China and Contemporary Asia of RAS

76, Vernadskogo Prospect, Moscow, 119454,

32, Nakhimovsky Avenue, Moscow, 117997



References

1. Hirose, T. (1988). Nichiro sensō ni okeru nihonhei horyo ni tsuite no ikkōsatsu [A Closer Look at the Japanese Prisoners of War in the RussoJapanese War]. Shinshu daigaku jinbun kagaku ronshu [Studies in Humanities], 22, 1988–03, March 15, 143–165. (In Japanese).

2. Ivanov, V. (2018). Lyubimoe selo. Istoricheskiye svedeniya o sele Medved’ i yego zhitelyakh [My Dear Village. Historical Information About the Village of Medved and Its Inhabitants]. https://proza.ru/2018/01/07/2080 (In Russian).

3. Miyanaga, T. (2019). Sankuto Peteruburugu no Futabatei Shimei [The Saint Petersburg of Futabatei Shimei]. Shakai Shirin. Hosei Journal of Sociology and Social Sciences, 2, 1–63. doi/10.15002/00022343. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/233058763.pdf (In Japanese).

4. Shulatov, Ya. A. (2008). Na puti k sotrudnichestvu: rossiisko-yaponskiye otnosheniya v 1905–1914 gg. [On the Way to Cooperation: Russian-Japanese Relations in 1905–1914]. Khabarovsk, Moscow: Institute of Oriental Studies of RAS. (In Russian).

5. Tachikawa, K., Shuku, H. (2009). Seifu oyobi gun to ICRC nado to no kankei. Nisshin sensō kara Taiheiyō sensō made (zenhan). [Relations Between the Government and the Military and the ICRC, etc. From the Japan-China War to the Pacific War (Part 1)]. National Institute for Defense Studies, 11 (2), January 2009, 69–125. http://www.nids.mod.go.jp/publication/kiyo/pdf/bulletin_j11_1_4.pdf (In Japanese).


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For citations:


Streltsov D.V. Japanese Prisoners of the Russо-Japanese War in the Arakcheev Barracks of the Novgorod Province. Yearbook Japan. 2022;51:122--136. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.55105/2687-1440-2022-51-122-136

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ISSN 2687-1432 (Print)
ISSN 2687-1440 (Online)