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  1. Film footage of this kind was also taken at other camps liberated by Allied soldiers. This footage served as evidence in the trials of the major Nazi leaders at Nuremberg in 1945 to 1946. They were also used to raise public awareness of Nazi crimes and stand today as important and lasting documentation of the Holocaust. 5

  2. Hace 3 días · Auschwitz, Nazi Germany’s largest concentration camp and extermination camp.Located near the industrial town of Oświęcim in southern Poland (in a portion of the country that was annexed by Germany at the beginning of World War II), Auschwitz was actually three camps in one: a prison camp, an extermination camp, and a slave-labour camp.

  3. US prosecutor Thomas Dodd introduces the film compilation "Nazi Concentration Camps." At the end of the courtroom scene shown here, the lights are dimmed for the screening. The footage, filmed as Allied troops liberated the concentration camps, was presented in the courtroom on November 29, 1945, and entered as evidence in the trial. Item View.

  4. Auschwitz was the largest camp established by the Germans. It was a complex of camps, including a concentration, extermination, and forced-labor camp. It was located at the town of Oswiecim near the prewar German-Polish border in Eastern Upper Silesia, an area annexed to Germany in 1939. Auschwitz I was the main camp and the first camp ...

  5. 22 de oct. de 2018 · A total of 6 million lives were lost as a result of the Holocaust. Here, a pile of human bones and skulls is seen in 1944 at the Majdanek concentration camp in the outskirts of Lublin, Poland ...

  6. Left to right (top to bottom): Concentration camp in Płaszów near Kraków, built by Nazi Germany in 1942 • Inmates of Birkenau returning to barracks, 1944 • Slave labour for the Generalplan Ost, making Lebensraum latifundia • Majdanek concentration camp (June 24, 1944) • Death gate at Stutthof concentration camp • Map of Nazi extermination camps in occupied Poland, marked with ...

  7. A total of ten camps existed, set up in former Nazi concentration camps, former stalags, barracks, or prisons. NKVD special camp Nr. 1 in the former Stalag IV-B near Mühlberg; NKVD special camp Nr. 2 in Buchenwald; NKVD special camp Nr. 3 in Hohenschönhausen (later Stasi-Arbeitslager X) NKVD special camp Nr. 4 in Bautzen (since 1948 Nr. 3)