In concentration camps that were not officially extermination camps, disease was the primary cause of death. However, the exact numbers are unknown.
1) Work camps, where inmates were payed meager salaries for back breaking work. 2) Standard concentration camps where Jews were worked to death. 3) Death camps where the sole purpose was to destroy as many Jews as possible as quickly as possible.
About 6 miillion
The German occupiers set-up labour, concentration and death camps in occupied Poland. The Nazi created the death camps of Auschwitz II (Auschwitz-Birkenau), Chełmno, Bełżec, Majdanek, Sobibór and Treblinka. The Nazi German also created many concentration camps such as Auschwitz I.
Death camps had the facilities to commit mass murder, they also had limited barracks as they did not house many inmates (Auschwitz was the exception as it was both).
not many, as they caught diseases brought about by malnutrition first.
It was the night of the Kristallench, when the Germans invaded Jews' homes, smashed all their china and crystal, and forced them to go into the death camps
some of them are these:starvationUTI`s ( urinary tract infections)many died from untreatable sicknessesmany got sexually and physically abusedas you can see all of these are quite harsh and most of the soldiers didnt care about the people that were there. many other people called the concentration camps death camps.
3 million
According to research reports, Nazis actually set up 20 000 concentration camps.
The main concentration camps in Germany proper were Esterwegen, Neuengamme, Bergen-Belsen, Ravensbruck, Sachsenhausen, Mittelbau-Dora, Buchenwald, Flossenburg, Dachau, and Grafeneck. Note that while many, many deaths occurred in those camps, they were not built specifically as death camps (except for Grafeneck) - most of the death camps were in Eastern Europe, especially Poland and Czechoslovakia.
They were called concentration camps.