Dachau was the first concentration camp but the largest was Auschwitz
The term concentration camp (Konzentrationslager) was used already in March 1933.
Buchenwald, though initially it was called Ettersberg (for a couple of weeks or so).
The people captured by the Nazis were sent to concentration camps. If they did not send you to a concentration camp they would send you to a labour camp. Often they were sent to a 'transit camp' first, till there were enough people for a train-load to a concentration camp. You see in the camps you were not allowed to talk about how wrong the Nazis were because, they felt that after getting rid of them they would finally have a perfect world. But what does perfect actually mean? Figure that out.
On 22 March 1933 Dachau was opened amid considerable publicity. In fact, Himmler launched it at a press conference and so it was not secret.
There was no concentration camp called "Belgium". There were, however, concentration camps in Belgium.
The first permanent Nazi concentration camp opened on 22 March 1933 at Dachau.
The first permanent one was Dachau.
Blechhamer was the first concentration camp Jack was in.
The term concentration camp (Konzentrationslager) was used already in March 1933.
Very soon after they were elected in 1933.
It was Hiltler who told them to do that.it was located at Dachau.
The first Nazi Concentration Camp was Dachau Concentration Camp. Since it's called Dachau, it's in Dachau,Germany.
Buchenwald, though initially it was called Ettersberg (for a couple of weeks or so).
It was called the Dachau concentration camp.
Anyone the Germans could capture.
The first Concentration Camp was the Holocaust
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.