Thalerhof internment camp

Thalerhof (also transliterated as Talerhof from Cyrillic-based East Slavic texts) was a concentration camp created by the Austro-Hungarian authorities active from 1914 to 1917, in a valley in foothills of the Alps, near Graz, the main city of the province of Styria.

[1] The Austro-Hungarian authorities imprisoned leaders of the Russophile movement among Carpatho-Rusyns, Lemkos, and Galicians (see Galician Russophilia); those who recognized the Russian language as the literary standard form of their own Slavic language varieties and had sympathy for the Russian Empire.

Thus, the captives were forced to abandon their identity as Russians, or sympathies for Russia, and identify as Ukrainian.

[5] On 9 November 1914 an official report of Fieldmarshal Schleer said there were 5,700 Carpatho-Rusyns, Lemkos, and Ukrainians in Talerhof.

The corpses of 1,767 internees were then exhumed and reburied in a mass grave at Feldkirchen bei Graz.

View to the concentration camp
Central Camp Talerhof 1914-1917
Killings in Talerhof