@inbook{10.2307/j.ctt1nppqv.10, ISBN = {9780300166606}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1nppqv.10}, abstract = {Wenzel Hrneček was, in the view of those who knew him before the war, a thoroughly unremarkable young man. Like all Czechs of his generation he had been born a subject of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, an entity that had collapsed before he was halfway through his teens. He spent the years of his early adulthood as a citizen of the Czechoslovak Republic in the ethnically mixed city of České Budĕjovice in southern Bohemia, a municipality that under its German name of Budweis had gained a worldwide reputation for the Budweiser beer produced there in vast quantities. Fluent in Czech and}, bookauthor = {R.M. Douglas}, booktitle = {Orderly and Humane: The Expulsion of the Germans after the Second World War}, pages = {130--157}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, title = {The Camps}, year = {2012} }