Karl Mummenthey/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Parent topics== | ==Parent topics== | ||
{{r|WVHA}} | {{r|WVHA}} | ||
{{r|WVHA Amtsgruppe W||**}} | {{r|WVHA Amtsgruppe W||**}} | ||
{{r|Pohl Case (NMT)}} | {{r|Pohl Case (NMT)}} |
Revision as of 13:50, 25 June 2024
- See also changes related to Karl Mummenthey, or pages that link to Karl Mummenthey or to this page or whose text contains "Karl Mummenthey".
Parent topics
- WVHA [r]: The economic and administrative organization of Nazi Germany's SS, whose responsibilities included the actual operation of concentration camps [e]
- Pohl Case (NMT) [r]: Dealing with the part of the SS that concerned the economic aspects of the system of concentration camp, labor camps, and extermination camps, the case accused eighteen members of the WVHA with operating concentration camps or economic enterprises of the SS, using slave labor. [e]
Subtopics
- Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke GmbH [r]: (DEST) or German Earth and Stone Works Company; a SS-owned company that ran rock quarries, mines, brick factories, etc. in concentration camps or with slave labor detachments; managed by Karl Mummenthey [e]
- Mauthausen-Gusen Concentration Camp [r]: A large system of concentration camps and subcamps in Austria; Mauthausen was the original camp; many deliberately killed but principally by starvation, overwork, beatings, and hurling into the rock quarry run by the Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke GmbH [e]
- Flossenburg Concentration Camp [r]: A Nazi slave labor camp in which around 30,000 inmates died from malnutrition, overwork, or executions (out of 89,964-100,000 prisoners in all), located in east central Germany on the border with Czechoslovakia. [e]
- Natzweiler Concentration Camp [r]: A fairly small concentration camp, also called Struthof, near the town of Natzweiler, 55 kilomtres south of Strasbourg, France; had quarries and underground factories, and used for Nazi medical experiments. [e]
- Gross Rosen Concentration Camp [r]: Originally a subcamp of Sachsenhausen in lower Silesia, opened 2 August 1940 at the granite quarry of Gross-Rosen; became independent 1 May 1941; operated until mid-February 1945 [e]
- Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp [r]: Third Nazi concentration camp, established in 1936, collecting prisoners, at first primarily political, from the Berlin area; located near Oranienburg, north of Berlin [e]
- Buchenwald Concentration Camp [r]: A Nazi death camp, notorious for medical experiments, in which at least 56,000 inmates died (out of 250,000 prisoners in all), located near the German city of Weimar. [e]