The distance between Westerbork transit camp and Auschwitz concentration camp is 1,099 Kilometers or 683 Miles.
* Dachau - Near Munich, Bavaria. * Auschwitz I - Near Oswiemcim, about 40 miles SW of Krakow, Poland (then under Nazi occupation). * Birkenau was Auschwitz II and about 1 mile from Auschwitz I (see above). * Buchenwald was near Weimar, Thuringia. Dachau, Auschwitz I and Buchenwald also had several sub-camps, some of which was far away from the main camp.
Auschwitz-Birkenau, which was located in Poland. It killed about 1 million of the estimated 6 million prisoners (1/6th).___Some muddle here. About one-sixth of the Jews killed in the Holocaust perished at Auschwitz ... Five-sixths perished elsewhere.
There are actually two prison camps- Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz Birkenau. Auschwitz 1 was formally a soldier barracks, and so looks mildly 'normal' it has rows of houses, streets etc but with walls, barbed wire and towers. However, there is a gas chamber there which is rather horrific. Auschwitz Birkenau was the larger, purpose built camp- it is unbelievably massive. You enter through the main gates and their are literally sheds as far as the eye can see. Blown up gas chambers at the end from where the Germans attempted to hide the evidence.
The distance from Auschwitz, Poland to Herzogenaurach, Germany is approx 498 miles.It would normally take about 7 hours 15 minutes to drive.Longer if you take a break on route.
The distance between Westerbork transit camp and Auschwitz concentration camp is 1,099 Kilometers or 683 Miles.
* Dachau - Near Munich, Bavaria. * Auschwitz I - Near Oswiemcim, about 40 miles SW of Krakow, Poland (then under Nazi occupation). * Birkenau was Auschwitz II and about 1 mile from Auschwitz I (see above). * Buchenwald was near Weimar, Thuringia. Dachau, Auschwitz I and Buchenwald also had several sub-camps, some of which was far away from the main camp.
Auschwitz-Birkenau, which was located in Poland. It killed about 1 million of the estimated 6 million prisoners (1/6th).___Some muddle here. About one-sixth of the Jews killed in the Holocaust perished at Auschwitz ... Five-sixths perished elsewhere.
There are actually two prison camps- Auschwitz 1 and Auschwitz Birkenau. Auschwitz 1 was formally a soldier barracks, and so looks mildly 'normal' it has rows of houses, streets etc but with walls, barbed wire and towers. However, there is a gas chamber there which is rather horrific. Auschwitz Birkenau was the larger, purpose built camp- it is unbelievably massive. You enter through the main gates and their are literally sheds as far as the eye can see. Blown up gas chambers at the end from where the Germans attempted to hide the evidence.
The distance from Auschwitz, Poland to Herzogenaurach, Germany is approx 498 miles.It would normally take about 7 hours 15 minutes to drive.Longer if you take a break on route.
1. Auschwitz was a combined extermination camp (part of Auschwitz II) and a vast complex of concentration camps with 45 sub-camps. The only other dual purpose camp of this kind was Majdanek, which was much smaller.2. The Auschwitz group of camps was the biggest and had the highest death toll of all (about 1.15 million dead).3. Because of its dual role, Auschwitz had more survivors than many other camps. Nearly all the survivors were from Auschwitz I, III and the subcamps.Some people of the Sonderkommando - that is the group of prisoners forced to cremate the corpses after they had been gassed - also survived. (Belzec and Chelmno, for example, which were 'extermination-only' camps and served noother purpose at all, had only two known survivors each at the end of World War 2).4. Auschwitz has acquired an iconic status - if that is the right term - over and above that of any other Nazi camp. Before the term the Holocaust came into widespread use in the late 1970s people sometimes referred simply to Auschwitz. It was a kind of short term for the Holocaust.Now, how far (and in what sense) these things make Auschwitz unique is something you will have to decide.
Gotta be more specific but if you meant Krakow Main market square in Poland then the distance is 67.8 KM's or 42.2 Miles.
About 3 million Polish Jews were murdered, mostly in Poland (especially at Trebkinka, Chelmno, Majdanek, Belzec, Sobibor and Auschwitz). About half of Polish Jews died due to starvation, disease and mass shooting by the Germans. However, the total number of Jews killed in occupied Poland was higher as Jews were deported to Auschwitz and other extermination camps from countries far away from Poland. In particular, Jews from France, Greece, Hungary, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany were killed at Auschwitz. This raises the overall total to over 4 million killed in occupied Poland. The Germans turned Poland into the Nazis biggest killing field.
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 42 miles.
The railroad tracks at Auschwitz were used to transport prisoners to the camp. Trains carrying deportees from various parts of Europe would arrive at the camp, and the prisoners would be unloaded and subjected to the selection process. The tracks were a key infrastructure element in the efficient operation of the Holocaust.
Krakow is 37 miles away from Auschwitz (59.545728 km)