- Swabian children
The Swabian children (German: "Schwabenkinder") were peasant children taken from poor families in the
Alps ofAustria andSwitzerland to work on German farms. They were taken in Spring and brought to the child markets in Germany, mainly inupper Swabia , where they would be purchased by farmers for the season. The use of Swabian children as workers was most popular in the 19th century.The march over the Alps to Germany proved very difficult. The children could often freeze to death or be killed by avalanches. Usually their guide was a priest, who was also responsible for ensuring the children had a warm stable to sleep in.
The marches were not done in small groups, but were large, organised groups of several thousand children, taken over the snow covered mountains often still dressed in rags. It was not uncommon for five and six-year-old children to be taken.
The American press began a campaign in 1908 exposing the Swabian children, describing the child market in
Friedrichshafen as a "barely concealed slave market".The child markets were abolished in 1915, yet the trade of Swabian children did not end completely until compulsory schooling for foreign children was introduced in
Württemberg in 1921.Many immigration certificates from Swabia show surnames typical of
Tyrol and other regions the Swabian children were taken from (eg. "Braxmeier" from "Braxmarer").Film
* "Schwabenkinder", TV film (Erstausstrahlung 2003), director:
Jo Baier , actors:Tobias Moretti ,Vadim Glowna The movie is based on the novel "Die Schwabenkinder - Die Geschichte des Kaspanaze" ("The Swabian Children - The Story of Kaspanaze") by
Elmar Bereuter (ISBN 3-7766-2304-7).Film synopsis: After his mother is killed in an avalanche, the farmer boy Kaspar is sent by his struggling father to work in Swabia. Together with other children from the village, their guide (
Tobias Moretti ) brings the group to the child market atRavensburg . There the miraculous story begins: The brutal treatment of the boy by the farmer, his escape, emigration to theUSA , and final home coming to his village many years later to visit his dying father.
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