There were plenty of concentration camps for World War 2. Auschwitz concentration camp is a very well known camp. Copy and paste this URL and put it into the tool bar. It will take you to a great website. I found out a lot of information on this camp. http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005263 You could also try googling the question you have because they have some pretty good sites to visit.
Please see the related question, too.
The most notorious concentration camp was Auschwitz, located in southern Poland because this is where the most people died and it was the largest.
After that, the most notorious are probably those liberated by the US and Britain, in particular:
Camps that had no or almost no survivors, like Belzec (434,508 killed and only two (!) known survivors) and Chelmno (about 152,000 killed and also only two known survivors) are much less well known.
one infamous camp of ww2 is auswitch in Poland. this was a massive murder concentration camp. here, German Nazis would take children and sickly Jews and gypsies to the 'showers' where they would have them undress, give them a bar of soap, and then, after they all entered, the Nazis would gas the building, killing the people inside. Hitler was a sick, disgusting person.
There was Bergen-Belsen, and Auswitz, Buchenwald, Dachau and Flossenberg.
Auschwitz, Treblika, Bergen Belsen and Dachau.
Auschwitz. (It was in fact a complex of about three main camps and 35 satellite camps).
Auschwitz in Southern Poland is the most famous concentration camp and was where the majority of people were taken to during the Holocaust
Auschwitz or Dacha.
The Nazi concentration camps were not graded on an academic scale. They were classified and organized based on their purpose and function. Different camps served different purposes, such as forced labor, extermination, or imprisonment. Some of the most infamous camps were Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Dachau.
The women's camps had female guards. Some of them were intensely sadistic.
Key sections of Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Dachau are now museums.
Nazi leaders wanted to keep the existence of extermination camps secret.
The Doctor in Chief of ALL Nazi medical experiments was Dr. Eduard Wirths, who directed most of the experiment done to the prisoners in the concentrations camps during the nazi regime. the most infamous doctor at Auschwitz was Dr. Josef Mengele
The Nazi concentration camps were not graded on an academic scale. They were classified and organized based on their purpose and function. Different camps served different purposes, such as forced labor, extermination, or imprisonment. Some of the most infamous camps were Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Dachau.
because of what was found in them.
The women's camps had female guards. Some of them were intensely sadistic.
Key sections of Auschwitz, Buchenwald and Dachau are now museums.
Some camps, like Auschwitz, are very well known and therefore notorious, while some, such as Maly Trostenets and Belzec are not very well known.
The ending of the Nazi camps came where when the USSR liberated them.
Ghettos, concentration camps and extermination camps.
No, but it had the Mauthausen group of camps.
The Doctor in Chief of ALL Nazi medical experiments was Dr. Eduard Wirths, who directed most of the experiment done to the prisoners in the concentrations camps during the nazi regime. the most infamous doctor at Auschwitz was Dr. Josef Mengele
By Adolf Hilter, He decided to build the Nazi camps but it was people who were going to be in it akak Labout workers who actually built the camps.
Nazi leaders wanted to keep the existence of extermination camps secret.
The Holocaust took place primarily in Europe during World War II, from 1941 to 1945. It occurred in Nazi-occupied territories, including concentration camps, extermination camps, and ghettos. The most infamous extermination camp, Auschwitz, was located in German-occupied Poland.