The extermination camps and the camps that also did bizarre medical experiments were the most violent concentration camps. Auschwitz was the worst of them all. You can get your list from the related link below. Thanks.
They were all harsh. There was one that was used for death. Probably the most famous camp. Auschwitz. It was also the largest. Made up of 3 parts it contained: Auschwitz 1, Auschwitz 2 or Birkenau and Auschwitz 3 or Monowitz. The Auschwitz group of camps also had a further 45 sub-camps.
Belzec and Chelmno had only two known survivors each.
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It is likely that camps that were badly run - for example, by commandants who were mainly interested in enriching themselves, like Koch at Buchenwald - were just a little worse than some of the others. Koch was transferred to Majdanek and made very little attempt to control the guards, who sometimes went on killing sprees, clubbing prisoners to death and so on.
Not in order, and not as many as you wanted, but there's
Auschwitz, which was probably the most used, and most known.
Sobibor
Teblinka
Belzec
it varied, some lived for over ten years, others did not survive ten minutes.
about ten thousand, though of those sent to the camps for other crimes many may have been homosexual.
Too much. Millions were killed, including soldiers, unsuspecting families, and those who were slaughtered in the Nazi concentration camps. If you would like exact figures, check wikipedia.com on World War II. And if you would like to know more about the concentration camps, check out Corie Ten Boom's autobiography.
Jack Gruener, (originally Jakob, or more commonly known as Yanek) was a boy who lived through world war two. In the duration of six years, he had been to ten concentration camps. For more info, read "Prisoner B-3087"
6 camps existed
Ravensbruck concentration camp
it varied, some lived for over ten years, others did not survive ten minutes.
about ten thousand, though of those sent to the camps for other crimes many may have been homosexual.
anything from two hours to ten days.
Examples of concentration camps during the holocaust are Bergen- Belsen and Aushwitz. This are the most well known concentration camps. Also in Bergen- Belsen Anne and Margot Frank died. Anne in March of 1945. Margot in eather the end of Febuary or early march 1945. In Aushwitz Mrs. Edith Frank died on January 6th 1945. Only ten days later the camp was liberated.
pitbulls
Corrie ten Boom is well known for surviving the notorious Ravensbruck Concentration Camp, while her sister, Betsie, who was with her in the Camp did not. The family's old watch shop had a secret room. The ten Booms were betrayed and thrown into the brutality of the concentration camps. It was in the watch shop that Corrie helped her father as a hobbie.
a Jew in a concentration camp would live no longer than 3 months as they were worked to death with little food and would then be shot so that they could not escape and tell the rest of the world what was happening. they would then be burnt in huge ovens and other Jews would burn them. ___ It varied. At the extermination camps most Jews were killed as soon as possible after arrival. For those selected for work, 'no longer than 3 months' is not necessarily correct. Some even survived.
Corrie Ten Boom helped hundreds of Jews escape persecution by hiding them in her home. It is estimated that the family saved over 800 Jews. She was the only one of her family who survived the Concentration Camps they were sent to after soldiers discovered the Jews they were hiding.
Too much. Millions were killed, including soldiers, unsuspecting families, and those who were slaughtered in the Nazi concentration camps. If you would like exact figures, check wikipedia.com on World War II. And if you would like to know more about the concentration camps, check out Corie Ten Boom's autobiography.
She died from pernicious anemia, which killed her because the Nazi officials would not allow medications in the concentration camps. She was sick and exhausted, something the disease caused. Also, malnutrition.
That may be impossible to determine with any certainty. Prisoners in the concentration camps died of many causes related to their mistreatment: malnutrition, tuberculosis, septic infections, pneumonia, dysentery, parasites, and numerous infectious diseases.