Misplaced Pages

Mithridate Network

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
French resistance network

The Mithridate resistance network (French: Réseau Mithridate), founded in June 1940 by Pierre Herbinger at the request of the British intelligence service MI6, was one of the most significant resistance networks of World War II. It gathered more than 1,600 agents spread across the entire French territory, Belgium, and northern Italy.

Although a Franco-British network, Mithridate was only attached to the French Central Bureau of Intelligence and Operations (BCRA) in January 1942. It was a military intelligence network responsible for providing the necessary information to the general staffs to precede or accompany wartime operations.

The network remained operational until 1945. It included 1,987 accredited agents, of whom 127 died for France and 208 were deported but returned alive. Four of its members were made Companions of the Liberation: André Aalberg, Laure Diebold, Pierre-Jean Herbinger, and François Binoche.

References

  1. Dornel, Laurent (2018). Passages et frontières en Aquitaine: expériences migratoires & lieux de transit (in French). PUPPA. p. 17. ISBN 978-2-35311-095-7.
  2. Gautier, Rogatien; Fournier, Jacqueline (2003). Agent "number one": réseau Mithridate, 1940-1945 (in French). France-empire. ISBN 978-2-7048-0968-4.
  3. ^ Revue de la France libre (in French). Vol. 3. Fondation de la France libre. p. 1121.
  4. "Réseau Mithridate". www.ordredelaliberation.fr. Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2024-06-16.
Free France    French Resistance
Creation
and control
Free France
Domestic
operations
Underground
media
Free
French
Africa
Liberation
of France
Leaders
Museums and
Memorials


Stub icon

This article about politics in France is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: