If one takes the term concentration camp in a general sense (and includes extermination camps) these had only two known survivors each:
Maly Trostinets (near Minsk) had no known survivors at all, not even one.
Among the extermination Chelmno probably had the fewest deaths - 'at least 153,000' according to the Wikipedia article. (See link). However, the death rate was almost 100%. There are only two known survivors.
Some of the very small temporary camps had fewer than 100 deaths, but they are not comparable to the major camps.
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Apparently at Kuhlen, Schleswig-Holstein, which was in operation from 18 July till 27 October 1933 there were no deaths, but it had only 200 inmates ... It was an agricultural labour camp and was not typical. When it was dissolved most of the inmates were freed, but some were transferred to ordinary concentration camps, and some of them were killed there.
Extermination camp: Chelmno - about 152,000 killed. This does not mean, however, that conditions there were better than elsewhere, simply that fewer people were sent there. There were only two (!) known survivors. Majdanek - The function of this camp is not entirely unclear. It seems to have been used as a 'backup' killing centre.
Ordinary concentration camps: There were some small temporary camps (in use for only 2-3 months in 1933) where nobody was killed, but these camps are exceptional.
During the Holocaust, Dachau was a Concentration Camp.
No, Stutthof was the first concentration camp built outside Germany. (The first camp was Dachau).
A commandant is the officer in command of either a prisoner of war camp OR a concentration camp.
Buchenwald concentration camp was in Germany, cleverly hidden in forests about 5 miles from Weimar (Thuringia) - the town which Germans have traditionally regarded as one of the most important centres of German culture!Buchenwald is near Weimar, in Thuringia, in central Germany. It opened as a concentration camp in 1937.
Auschwitz I was the original Auschwitz camp, set up in May 1940, mainly for Polish political prisoners and the Polish elites. It also housed the main administrative offices for the whole complex of camps as well as the blocks where medical experiments were carried out, and execution chambers.
Buchenwald was one of the first concentration camps in Nazi Germany as well as one of the largest. It was not an extermination camp, but still had a large number of prisoner deaths. The approximate number of deaths at the camp was 56,545.
The first Nazi Concentration Camp was Dachau Concentration Camp. Since it's called Dachau, it's in Dachau,Germany.
During the Holocaust, Dachau was a Concentration Camp.
the first permanent Nazi concentration camp was built near Munich.
A commandant was the head of a prisoner of war camp or a concentration camp.
No, Stutthof was the first concentration camp built outside Germany. (The first camp was Dachau).
A commandant is the officer in command of either a prisoner of war camp OR a concentration camp.
Auschwitz, I think.
Stutthof was a Nazi concentration camp near Danzig.
Buchenwald concentration camp was in Germany, cleverly hidden in forests about 5 miles from Weimar (Thuringia) - the town which Germans have traditionally regarded as one of the most important centres of German culture!Buchenwald is near Weimar, in Thuringia, in central Germany. It opened as a concentration camp in 1937.
Auschwitz I was the original Auschwitz camp, set up in May 1940, mainly for Polish political prisoners and the Polish elites. It also housed the main administrative offices for the whole complex of camps as well as the blocks where medical experiments were carried out, and execution chambers.
The first permanent Nazi concentration camp opened on 22 March 1933 at Dachau.