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In Autoren/Mitwirkende
  • „In wartime, neutral territory beckons as a beacon of safety from the conflict and strife. This was especially true for the neutral Netherlands in the First World War (1914–1918), which was situated within a short distance of the Western Front and was bordered by belligerent Germany and German‐occupied Belgium. The Dutch land border became the country's most important neutrality frontier, functioning as the geographical place where neutrality began and ended, which necessitated increased border security, witnessed new border‐crossing activities, and ensured that life for border residents changed dramatically. This paper illustrates that, once Germany occupied Belgium, the Dutch border region in the south became a fraught zone between ‘war’ and ‘peace.’ But the eastern border with Germany proper also changed in character. The war situation and changing circumstances at the frontier impacted on the relationship between locals and the state (the authority in charge of border security) and changed locals’ understandings about what it meant to be ‘neutral,’ a ‘frontier‐zone resident,’ and ‘Dutch’ in this extraordinary situation.“

Last update from database: 16.09.25, 03:00 (UTC)

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