In September 1943 the quiet, rural region of Le Marche, in central eastern Italy, was thrown into turmoil by Italy's Armistice with the Allies. The region's prisoner of war camps were holding about 22,000 Allied servicemen who had been captured in North Africa. At the news of Italy's surrender many of the prisoners escaped into the countryside.Hunted by the occupying Germany army and Italian fascists, they were in danger and in desperate need of food and shelter. They threw themselves on the mercy of ordinary people, in the main subsistence farmers, who themselves risked severe punishment, even death, if they were caught offering protection.Through interviews with members of the Italian families who hid escaped prisoners, historian Filippo Ieranò describes the tension and fear that afflicted the region until the Allies arrived to liberate it. He makes clear, too, the sacrifices made by these farming families, known as contadini: though poor, they shared what little they had with their unexpected guests.The Monte San Martino Trust, a British charity, today honours the protagonists in this remarkable story - one of courage and of great generosity in helping former enemies - by granting study bursaries in England to young Italians. The original Italian version of this book, entitled Antigone nella Valle del Tenna, was translated into English by members of the Trust.