I.G. Farben: Difference between revisions
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'''I.G. Farben''', more formally '''I.G. Farbenindustrie AG''', started as a 1925 merger of German synthetic dye companies a major WWII industrial conglomerate was an integral part of Nazi war production. Executives, 24 of which were indicted in the [[I.G. Farben Case (NMT)]] were deeply involved in the plannng process as well — for example, the [[Auschwitz-Monowitz Concentration Camp]] was built specifically to provide slave labor to nearby Farben plants, especially those producing [[synthetic rubber]]. Farben companies were key parts of German [[explosives]] production. | '''I.G. Farben''', more formally '''I.G. Farbenindustrie AG''', started as a 1925 merger of German synthetic dye companies a major WWII industrial conglomerate was an integral part of Nazi war production. Executives, 24 of which were indicted in the [[I.G. Farben Case (NMT)]] were deeply involved in the plannng process as well — for example, the [[Auschwitz-Monowitz Concentration Camp]] was built specifically to provide slave labor to nearby Farben plants, especially those producing [[synthetic rubber]]. Farben companies were key parts of German [[explosives]] production. They were even part of the production of [[Zyklon B]] used as a killing agent in death camps. | ||
The founding companies, most of which now operate independently, were: | |||
* [[BASF]] | |||
* [[Bayer]] | |||
* [[Hoechst]] | |||
* [[Agfa]] | |||
* Chemische Fabrik Griesheim-Elektron | |||
* Chemische Fabrik vorm. Weiler Ter Meer | |||
Its corporate headquarters complex, the [[IG Farben Building]], was minimally bombed in World War II, and was used until 1995 for Allied and U.S. command offices, and memorials to the victims of slave labor. |
Revision as of 06:01, 1 January 2011
I.G. Farben, more formally I.G. Farbenindustrie AG, started as a 1925 merger of German synthetic dye companies a major WWII industrial conglomerate was an integral part of Nazi war production. Executives, 24 of which were indicted in the I.G. Farben Case (NMT) were deeply involved in the plannng process as well — for example, the Auschwitz-Monowitz Concentration Camp was built specifically to provide slave labor to nearby Farben plants, especially those producing synthetic rubber. Farben companies were key parts of German explosives production. They were even part of the production of Zyklon B used as a killing agent in death camps.
The founding companies, most of which now operate independently, were:
Its corporate headquarters complex, the IG Farben Building, was minimally bombed in World War II, and was used until 1995 for Allied and U.S. command offices, and memorials to the victims of slave labor.