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30 April 2025 - 30 April 2025

5:30PM - 6:30PM

Lecture theatre 009, Elvet Hill House, adjacent to the Oriental Museum

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Join us for a free talk given by Canon Professor Michael Snape FBA, Durham University

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Reproduced by kind permission of the Trustees of the Royal Army Chaplains' Museum, Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, Shrivenham

The Korean War (1950-53) is widely billed as a forgotten conflict, and yet it was the scene of the fiercest fighting experienced by the British Army since the Second World War. It also saw the biggest surrender of British troops in the post-war period, with hundreds of soldiers of the First Battalion of the Gloucestershire Regiment (or ‘Glosters’) captured by the Chinese at the Battle of the Imjin River in April 1951.

Though overlooked by religious historians of the Cold War, the fate of the ‘Glosters’ in Communist captivity, and the reception they received on their return, was emblematic of the resilience of British Christianity in the early years of the Cold War. Released after the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, an international showcase for Christian Britain, the ‘Glosters’ were hailed for their staunch refusal to succumb to atheistic Communist indoctrination. Their example stood in contrast to many American POWs (prompting something of a moral panic in the Pentagon) and their Church of England padre, Sam Davies, an alumnus of St Chad's in Durham, was acclaimed for his role in providing religious leadership in captivity. Seventy years after the end of the conflict in Korea, this lecture examines the role of the ‘Glosters’ in redeeming a costly and stalemated war on the other side of the world.

Tickets for this event are free.  Please book via Eventbrite.

This event is part of a project generously supported by the National Museum of Korea. 

Parking and Accessibility

Free parking is available at the Oriental Museum. Additional parking can be found at Elvet Hill which is a large University staff car park available for museum visitors on a weekend. For directions contact the Oriental Museum on 0191 334 5691.

The Oriental Museum is fully accessible. For further information please visit our website

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