Probably about 1 million at Auschwitz. The overall number of Jews killed in the Holocaust is traditionally given as 6 million.
1.1 milion
Auschwitz, located at the intersection of several Polish cities, making it easily accessible from cities in German-occupied Europe. Auschwitz was the worst concentration camp because the goal of the camp was the extermination and elimination of all the prisoners admitted to the camp.
There was 2 main functions of Auschwitz during the second world war. The first won was that part of it was used as a forced labor camp where the fittest people were sent to work in mines and factories. The second half which is most known is the extermination camp. In total, around 1.1 million people died at Auschwitz, majority being from exterminated. The mains ones who ere killed were the woman, children and elderly.
Most people taken into concentration camps were Jewish people. Anyone who hid a Jewish person or who had any contact with a Jewish person was taken to a concentration camp. Sometimes, they would have people who did not obey the military commands.
The number of survivors of Treblinka II (the extermination camp) still alive at the end of World War 2 is given in the Wikipedia article on Treblinka as 40 (forty). (Compare this with the usual estimate of at least 850,000 victims slaughtered). Please see the link below. In addition, there was an older labor camp, Treblinka I, which was mainly intended for non-Jewish Poles who did not "cooperate" with the Nazis. It was a concentration camp (not an extermination camp) and had more survivors. Apparently some prisoners from this camp were drafted for various tasks at Treblinka II, but otherwise the two camps were distinct and separate.
Auschwitz was the biggest Nazi extermination camp. It has been called the largest graveyard in human history and therefore has become a symbol for the Holocaust itself. It is estimated that 1.1 million to 1.6 million died there. ___ Moreover, Auschwitz was a combined extermination camp and group of concentration camps (unlike most other camps, which were either of the one type or the other, but not both). As a result, there were far more survivors from the Auschwitz group of camps than from extermination camps like Treblinka and Sobibor. Some of the survivors gave evidence in postwar trials and some wrote their memoirs.
about 900,000
Auschwitz was a concentration and extermination camp in Poland where at least an estimated 1.1 million people died, mainly Jews. It was named after the nearby town of Oswiemcim (Auschwitz in German). It is not a country with a capital! The nearest major city is Krakow, Poland, about 40 miles east of the former camp.
Auschwitz, located at the intersection of several Polish cities, making it easily accessible from cities in German-occupied Europe. Auschwitz was the worst concentration camp because the goal of the camp was the extermination and elimination of all the prisoners admitted to the camp.
About 965,000 Jews were murdered at Auschwitz.
It's famously remembered because of the 1.2 million jews died in their. Auschwitz was the bloodiest camp during the holocaust
Atleast 140,000 Jews died at Auschwitz I.
There was 2 main functions of Auschwitz during the second world war. The first won was that part of it was used as a forced labor camp where the fittest people were sent to work in mines and factories. The second half which is most known is the extermination camp. In total, around 1.1 million people died at Auschwitz, majority being from exterminated. The mains ones who ere killed were the woman, children and elderly.
Most people taken into concentration camps were Jewish people. Anyone who hid a Jewish person or who had any contact with a Jewish person was taken to a concentration camp. Sometimes, they would have people who did not obey the military commands.
The number of survivors of Treblinka II (the extermination camp) still alive at the end of World War 2 is given in the Wikipedia article on Treblinka as 40 (forty). (Compare this with the usual estimate of at least 850,000 victims slaughtered). Please see the link below. In addition, there was an older labor camp, Treblinka I, which was mainly intended for non-Jewish Poles who did not "cooperate" with the Nazis. It was a concentration camp (not an extermination camp) and had more survivors. Apparently some prisoners from this camp were drafted for various tasks at Treblinka II, but otherwise the two camps were distinct and separate.
Auschwitz was the biggest Nazi extermination camp. It has been called the largest graveyard in human history and therefore has become a symbol for the Holocaust itself. It is estimated that 1.1 million to 1.6 million died there. ___ Moreover, Auschwitz was a combined extermination camp and group of concentration camps (unlike most other camps, which were either of the one type or the other, but not both). As a result, there were far more survivors from the Auschwitz group of camps than from extermination camps like Treblinka and Sobibor. Some of the survivors gave evidence in postwar trials and some wrote their memoirs.
About 190,000 people died in Auschwitz I.
It is very hard to say. Assuming that the killings would have been halted immediately, a singifnicant proportion of the Hungarian Jews and some others would have been saved. (In the summer and auturmn of 1944 the extermination camp at Auschwitz was mainly concerned with killing Hungarian Jews). Assuming that Piper's estimates are correct and that about one million Jews were killed at Auschwitz, an end to the killings on 20 or 21 July might have reduced the total number of Jews killed at Auschwitz by about 100,000-120,000 to about 880,000-900,000. Please bear in mind that these figures are very rough estimates.