No, Stutthof was the first concentration camp built outside Germany. (The first camp was Dachau).
Buchenwald, though initially it was called Ettersberg (for a couple of weeks or so).
Buchenwald.
Dachau was the first permanent concentration camp. There was another one that was the first place they put prisoners but it WA not an official concentration camp, more like a collecting place until Dachau was built.
The first Nazi concentration camp to open was Dachau on 22 March 1933. It was launched amid much publicity by Himmler at a press conference.~A Concentration Camp refers to a camp in which people are detained ..or...confined, usually under harsh conditions and without regard to legalnorms of arrest and imprisonment that are acceptable in a constitutionaldemocracy.The Nazi concentration camps were originally established to terrorize opponents of the Nazi regime, especially Communists, socialists, liberals and labour leaders.
Dachau was the first concentration camp but the largest was Auschwitz
Buchenwald, though initially it was called Ettersberg (for a couple of weeks or so).
the first permanent Nazi concentration camp was built near Munich.
The Bergen-Belson
I think the first concentration camp was established in Germany, if was used first to hold Germans who disobeyed the Nazi laws, or who said the wrong thing, so it was first used to retrain the Germans, that was before WW2, then they got a new purpose afterwards, as killing chambers.
No, it was the main camp that the Nazis built in Austria.
Buchenwald.
The Buna camp (Monowitz, Auschwitz III) made various plastics for I.-G. Farben. It was the first concentration camp built by private entreprise.
I'm guesing you mean the Russian dictator so I'm just gonna say it. His name was Joseph Stalin. The Soviet Union was the first to build concentration camps.
When I visited Dachau (30 minutes outside Munich), the tour guide said it was the first official concentration camp. It opened as a work camp in around 1933, and slowly converted into a more severe concentration camp. They did eventually build a small gas chamber there.
Dachau was the first permanent concentration camp. There was another one that was the first place they put prisoners but it WA not an official concentration camp, more like a collecting place until Dachau was built.
Bergen Belsen became a concentration camp in 1942 by Heinrich Himmler. It was first used as a camp for exchanging Jews with German captives.
Rollarcoasters first appeared during the 17th century throughout Russia, with a particular concentration in the area of in what would become St. Petersburg.