William Wain Prior Military person

William Wain Prior (July 18, 1876 – March 9, 1946) was a Danish Generalmajor and the commander-in-chief of the Royal Danish Army from 1939 to 1941.Before the Occupation of Denmark by Germany in 1940, Prior encouraged the Danish government to increase the strength of the army. These requests, however, were not accepted by the majority of the Danish parliament, who feared that increased military strength might provoke Nazi Germany.When Germany invaded Denmark in 1940, he argued that the Danish army should actively defend the country, even when Germany threatened through the dropping the OPROP! leaflets to bomb the capital of Copenhagen. However, the Danish government did not agree to this, due to concerns that major Danish cities like Copenhagen might suffer the same destruction that other cities like Warsaw had just experienced during the German invasion of Poland.Prior continued as Commander-in-Chief of the Danish Army during the early part of the German occupation, and worked actively to prevent the Danish army from becoming involved on the German side during World War II. He resigned as Commander-in-Chief in October 1941.

Personal facts

Birth dateJuly 18, 1876
Birth place
Copenhagen
Date of deathMarch 09, 1946
Place of death
Frederiksberg

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Military person

military operations
World War II
Denmark in World War II
German invasion of Denmark (1940)
military commandCommander in chief of Royal Danish Army 1939–1941
service start1894
service end1941

Topical connections

William Wain Prior on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://www.milhist.dk/leksikon/prior.htm
  2. http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,762950,00.html