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Rhode Island
All of Ancient Sumer is in southeast Iraq.
in london england, it is known as one of the greatest lodges of all time and is very well respected in its community
The Mongols mainly came from Mongolia. In smaller numbers the Mongols also came from areas in China, and Russia.
There were many concentration camps all over Europe, but most were concentrated in Poland, Germany and around Yugoslavia. The six extermination camps were all located in Poland, those being Chelmno, Treblinka, Sobibor, Auschwitz, Maidanek and Belzec.
Auschwitz - the most famous Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, T.II, Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Treblinka, and Theresienstadt they are all of them, famous or not they were all terrible
Sobibor, Treblinka, and Belzec were dismantled by the Nazis in 1943. The first camp was liberated by the Russians in 1944. All of the remaining camps would be liberated in the beginning to the middle of 1945.
The camps liberated by Soviet forces included:MajdanekAuschwitz (with all its sub-camps)Gross-RosenRavensbrückStutthofThe Nazis themselves destroyed some of the camps in Eastern Europe before the Soviet Army reached them, for example, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, Chelmno.
* The death camps were all located in Poland (plus one in Belarus). * With the exception of Majdanek, which was in a suburb of Lublin, they were all in remote places. * The whole operation was classified as Top Secret (Geheime Reichssache). * Some of the death camps were destroyed in 1943 (Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec). * The other death camps were destroyed as the Soviet Army approached. * On various levels and in various ways, most people didn't want to know.
Operation Reinhard (almost certainly named after Reinhard Heydrich) involved the (largely successful) extermination of the Polish Jews. Three completely new camps were set up for this: * Treblinka II * Belzec * Sobibor In addition, Majdanek and the Auschwitz group of camps were enlarged and Chelmno was also used. In all, about 3 million of Poland's 3.3 million Jews were murdered.
There were three uprisings, all by the Sonderkommandos at extermination camps * Trelinka II (1943) * Sobibor (1943) * Auschwitz II (1944) The uprisings at Treblinka and Sobibor were mass breakouts. Many of those who broke out were recaptured. About 40 of the prisoners who broke out of Treblinka and 150 of those who broke out of Sobibor were still alive at the end of World War 2. The uprising at Auschwitz-Birkenau was different. Some female prisoners working in the munitions industry smuggled in explosives and the Sonderkommando blew up one of the crematoria.
Operation Reinhard (Aktion Reinhard, Einsatz Reinhard, Aktion Reinhardt or Einsatz Reinhardt in German) was the code name given to the Nazi plan to murder Polish Jews in the General Government, and marked the beginning of the most deadly phase of the Holocaust, the use of extermination camps. During the operation, as many as two million people were murdered in Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka and Majdanek, almost all of them Jews.
Most dangerous campsThe chances of survival were almost nil at the extermination ('death') camps - that is camps built purely for gassing people. These were as follows: Auschwitz II, Treblinka, Majdanek, Chelmno, Sobibor and Belzec. Note that Treblinka had a small labour camp attached to it. If you are looking for a 'record' of sorts, at Belzec 434,508 Jews and an unknown number of gypsies were slaughtered, and there were only two (!) known survivors at the end of the war - Rudolf Reger who emigrated to Canada and Chaim Hirszman, who was murdered by Polish nationalists in 1946.There was also Maly Trostinents, near Minsk, Belarus. It is virtually unknown, except among specialists on the Holocaust. The main reason is said to be that there are no known survivors at all out of about 50,000 victims taken there.
The categories of concentration camps were as follows: * I - for example, Dachau * II - for example, Buchenwald * III - for example, Auschwitz I (original main camp) Obviously, the death toll at all the major camps was very high. Death camps in the sense of extermination camps were off the scale. These camps were: * Auschwitz II (Birkenau) * Belzec (not to be confused with Bergen-Belsen) * Chelmno * Sobibor * Treblinka * Majdanek (a part of which was used as a 'back-up' when other camps couldn't cope with the numbers)
Some of the camps were Dachau, Auschwitz and Stutthof. Auschwitz was the largest of all the concentration camps. Others included: Bergen-Belsen, Bernberg, Buchenwald, Chelmno, Janowska, Jasenovac, Maly Trostenets, Plaszow, Ravensbrück, Sobibor, Tobruk, Treblinka
It had a dual function: it was a concentration and extermination camp. The first means that the inmates were forced to work (often to death), the latter means that parts of it were built to kill the Jews (gas chambers, crematoria). It was also the place where medical experiments were carried out on humans with the leadership of J. Mengele. He experimented on twins and dwarfs.About one and a half million Jews were killed in Auschwitz-Birkenau.More than 20,000 people could be killed with the equipment they had in a single day.