Yes, but until 1938 Jews were not sent to concentration camps simply for being Jews.
Auschwitz, I think.
The first Nazi Concentration Camp was Dachau Concentration Camp. Since it's called Dachau, it's in Dachau,Germany.
Some did, most didn't.
Dachau was the first permanent Nazi concentration camp and operated from March 1933 till April 1945. However, it was primarily for political oponents of the Nazi regime, not for Jews. In the later stages, however, many Jews from camps in Nazi-occupied Poland were transferred to camps in central and western Germany, including Dachau.
The first (Nazi) concentration camps were established in 1993. Jews were not arrested for being Jewish until incidentally on Nov 9, 1938, and more generally after the start of the war.
the first permanent Nazi concentration camp was built near Munich.
During WW2, Auschwitz Concentration camp in Germany was the place where the most Jews were murdered by the Nazi's.
No, Stutthof was the first concentration camp built outside Germany. (The first camp was Dachau).
The first permanent Nazi concentration camp opened on 22 March 1933 at Dachau.
dachau___Dachau was the first Nazi concentration camp to be founded (March 1933), the first major concentration camp to be found (and liberated) by an Allied army was Majdanek (July 1944).
A number of Jews were sent to concentration camps in 1933, but because they were opponents of the Nazis, not simply for being Jews. (The Nazis were at that stage also obsessed with 'Jews in the media' and Jewish journalists and newspaper proprietors had a very rough time).In November 1938 during the Night of the Broken Glass about 30,000 Jews were sent to concentration camps and by Christmas 1938, 2,000 of these Jews had died.Routine transports of Jews to camps started, at first on a small scale, in 1940; and the wholesale transport of Jews, usually to extermination camps, began in 1941.
Nazi concentration camp at Plaszow, located in the Podgorze district, 10 kilometers outside the city center of Krakow.