Chelmno (Kulmhof) The Birkenau section of Auschwitz Treblinka Majdanek Sobibor Belzec
Most of the European Jews lived in Poland, Ukraine, Belarus and Hungary.
Most, if not all, experiments happened in the concentration camps.
There were many concentration camps established and run by the Nazis during WW2, in various countries. Two of the most familiar names among such camps were Belsen (Bergen-Belsen) and Auschwitz (Auschwitz-Birkenau). A list of Nazi concentration and extermination camps, along with other information and references can be found at Wikipedia, here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_concentration_camps
== == The following are the types of camps that were used in the Holocaust: * "Concentration camps" is the generic term for the prison camps maintained by the Third Reich. * "Labor camps" were those that were maintained for the purpose of exploiting slave labor. * "Extermination camps" were six camps located in Poland where the mass murder of Jews and others took place. Many of the concentration camps were complexes of several camps and some had dual functions. At the Auschwitz complex, for example, most of the genocide took place in a subcamp called Birkenau. There was also a labor camp named Monowitz that was part of the complex where an artificial rubber plant was built. Likewise, Treblinka, another extermination camp, was part of a complex of three camps, two of which were used for slave labor.
This is hard to say because many, if not all, the countries had absolutely no clue what the Nazi Party were doing to the Jews. When they found the extermination camps of course all countries were completely shocked. Even many of the German population had no idea of the extermination camps (that's how well hidden and kept Hitler had made them) and American soldiers would take Germans into the camps to show them the extent of what Adolf Hitler, their leader, had done.
All the main extermination camps were in Nazi-occupied Poland. There were also two in Belarus. Please see the related question.
All the main extermination camps were in Nazi-occupied Poland. There were also two in Belarus. Please see the related question.
The Nazi concentration camps were not graded on an academic scale. They were classified and organized based on their purpose and function. Different camps served different purposes, such as forced labor, extermination, or imprisonment. Some of the most infamous camps were Auschwitz, Treblinka, and Dachau.
Depending on what Nazi Death Camp, Most camps were fully operational in 1941-1942 due to the Wansee Conference and the Final Solution. (Extermination of the Jews)
The Holocaust took place primarily in Europe during World War II, from 1941 to 1945. It occurred in Nazi-occupied territories, including concentration camps, extermination camps, and ghettos. The most infamous extermination camp, Auschwitz, was located in German-occupied Poland.
All Nazi concentration camps and death camps were run by the SS (except in 1933-34).
Horrible, some starved but most died of diesease. The Nazis dropped of trailors full of dead children. ___ In death camps (that is, extermination camps) children were gassed as soon as practical after arrival at the camps - usually within a matter of hours.
They died in the Nazi Concentration camps, death marches between camps or general didn't survive when escaped. Most deaths occurred at the Nazi Concentration camps. There are differnet kinds of camps:Concentration, Death, Extermination, Transition and Labor camps. Each kind of camps has got it's own purpose such as holding people or killing them in mass numbers.
There were only two Nazi camps that combined the functions of a concentration camp and an extermination camp. From about March 1942 onwards, Auschwitz was one of them. (The other was Majdanek). All other camps were either the one kind or the other. _______________________ Most camps carried out 'selections' where they selected those deemed unfit for work, the selcted then being sent to an extermination camp.
There were around 20,000 concentration camps and subcamps established by the Nazis throughout Eastern Europe during World War II. These camps were used for various purposes, including forced labor, mass executions, and extermination. Auschwitz-Birkenau, located in Poland, is one of the most notorious Nazi concentration camps.
The Holocaust was organized in such a way that there were usually relatively few prisoners in death camps (in the strict sense, that is, extermination camps). At some camps - especially, Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor and Chelmno - the idea was to gas most new prisoners soon after arrival and dispose of their corpses quickly. The 'transports' were timetabled in such a way as to avoid flooding the camps was with new arrivals. In practice, things weren't always as smooth as that.
Nearly all the extermination camps were built on Polish territory. Please see the related question.