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Flossenbürg concentration camp

Coordinates: 49°44′08″N 12°21′21″E / 49.73556°N 12.35583°E / 49.73556; 12.35583

Flossenbürg was a Nazi concentration camp built in May 1938 by the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office. Unlike other concentration camps, it was located in a remote area, in the Fichtel Mountains of Bavaria, adjacent to the town of Flossenbürg and near the German border with Czechoslovakia. The camp's initial purpose was to exploit the forced labor of prisoners for the production of granite for Nazi architecture. In 1943, the bulk of prisoners switched to producing Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter planes and other armaments for Germany's war effort. Although originally intended for "criminal" and "asocial" prisoners, after Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union, the camp's numbers swelled with political prisoners from outside Germany. It also developed an extensive subcamp system that eventually outgrew the main camp.

Flossenbürg
Nazi concentration camp
The camp after liberation
LocationFlossenbürg, Germany
Operated byNazi Germany
Commandant
List
Companies involvedGerman Earth and Stone Works, Messerschmitt AG
Operational3 May 1938 – 23 April 1945
InmatesPolitical prisoners, Jews, criminals, antisocials
Number of inmates89,974
Killed30,000
Liberated byUnited States Army
Websitewww.gedenkstaette-flossenbuerg.de/en/home/

Before it was liberated by the United States Army in April 1945, 89,964 to 100,000 prisoners passed through Flossenbürg and its subcamps. Around 30,000 died from malnutrition, overwork, executions, or during the death marches. Some of those responsible for these deaths, including administrators, guards, and others, were tried and convicted in the Flossenbürg trial. The camp was repurposed for other uses before the opening of a memorial and museum in 2007.

Background

During the first half of 1938, the Nazi concentration camp population expanded threefold due to increased arrests by the Schutzstaffel (SS) of individuals deemed undesirable, especially "asocial"[a] and "criminal"[b] prisoners, to create a slave labor force. SS leader Heinrich Himmler ordered the founding of new concentration camps to expand the SS economic empire.[4][5] The SS intended to exploit the slave labor of prisoners to quarry granite, which was in high demand for monumental building projects in the Nazi style.[6][7] This would also profit the SS-owned and -operated company German Earth and Stone Works (DEST),[8][9] which had been founded in April.[10][11]

During the second half of March 1938, a high-ranking SS commission led by Oswald Pohl and Theodor Eicke toured southern Germany, searching for a site for a new camp that would meet the SS' specifications.[12] On 24 March 1938, they chose a site near the small town of Flossenbürg, in the Upper Palatinate, for the establishment of a concentration camp[5] due to the quarries of blue-gray granite located nearby.[12] Unlike all other Nazi concentration camps to date, which were near rail junctions and population centers, the camp was to be located in the remote Upper Palatine Forest near Flossenbürg Castle [de], formerly owned by Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa.[8]

Flossenbürg was a poor rural area, with about 1,200 inhabitants who mostly worked on the quarries, which had existed since the 19th century. The local economy, especially the stone industry, was negatively impacted by the new border with Czechoslovakia after the Treaty of Versailles and the 1930s economic slump. Adolf Hitler's rise to power increased the demand for granite, earning the Nazi Party local support.[13][14] The construction of the camp was funded by a contract with Albert Speer's ministry for the reconstruction of Berlin;[15] it was the first occasion that economic considerations had determined the site of a camp.[16]

Establishment

 
Gate of Flossenbürg with the Nazi slogan Arbeit macht frei ("Work sets you free")[17]

The order for the construction of eight barracks at Flossenbürg went through on 31 March,[18] SS guards arrived in April,[19] and on 3 May 1938, a transport of 100 prisoners arrived from Dachau, establishing the camp.[5] More prisoners arrived from Dachau on 9 and 16 May;[20] Himmler visited the camp on 16 May with Pohl, indicating that the SS considered it an important project.[16] The SS attempted to segregate prisoners incarcerated for criminal offences at Flossenbürg because forced labor in the quarries was considered a particularly harsh punishment.[21] Most of the prisoners at Flossenbürg were classified as criminal, with some "asocial" and a few homosexual prisoners;[c] the criminals quickly took over the prisoner functionary positions.[5]

The new prisoners had to construct the camp themselves, beginning with the barbed wire fence; this was initially the main use of forced labor.[9] While performing this heavy and dangerous work, the prisoners lived in makeshift structures. Simultaneously, hundreds of prisoners had to work in the quarries.[23] The camp's population had increased to 1,500 following arrivals from Dachau, Sachsenhausen, and Buchenwald.[5] In January 1939, the first commandant, Jakob Weiseborn, unexpectedly died.[24][25] He was replaced by a former SS officer at Dachau, Karl Künstler, who presided over an era in which the camp became an economically productive center for granite quarrying,[25] and increasingly deadly for its prisoners.[24] With the first barracks complete, in 1939 work began on an internal jail, guard towers, a washing facility, and a sewer system.[9] In April 1939, the economic productivity of the camp led to Pohl ordering the camp to be expanded to fit 3,000 prisoners. To build additional barracks, terraces had to be cut into the hillsides, an arduous task that led to many injuries.[26]

Fifty-five prisoners died before the outbreak of World War II in September 1939.[27] During mid-1939, Nazi authorities planned to invade Poland. It was decided to stage false flag attacks in order to justify a German declaration of war. Several prisoners from Flossenbürg and other concentration camps were secretly transferred to a Gestapo prison in Breslau, poisoned, and dressed in Polish uniforms. On 31 August 1939, the bodies were dumped at a border post in Hochlinden where they were shot and hacked; photographs were taken as "proof" of a Polish attack on Germany.[28]

Expansion

 
Map of the concentration camp in 1943

In September 1939, the SS transferred 1,000 political prisoners to Flossenbürg from Dachau in order to clear the latter camp to train the first regiment of the Waffen-SS. These prisoners, who were the first political prisoners at Flossenbürg, were moved back to Dachau in March 1940.[29][30] The first foreign prisoners were transferred to the camp by the Gestapo in April, including Czech student protestors and Polish resistance members. The vast majority of the new foreign prisoners were incarcerated due to their opposition to the Nazi regime; a few of them were Jews. Most of the Jewish political prisoners were executed or died shortly after arriving from mistreatment.[31][32] The last twelve surviving Jews were deported to Auschwitz on 19 October 1942, pursuant to Himmler's order to make the Reich Judenrein.[9][32]

The number of Polish prisoners increased sharply in 1941; on 23 January, 600 arrived from Auschwitz.[33] In mid-October 1941, 1,700[34] to 2,000[9][32] Soviet prisoners of war arrived at Flossenbürg as part of a massive transfer of Soviet prisoners to the SS camp system. In poor condition due to their previous mistreatment, they spent several months recovering before they were deemed fit to work. They were accommodated in a special, cordoned-off area.[35]

By February 1943, Flossenbürg had 4,004 prisoners, not including the Soviet prisoners of war.[32] From April 1943, the commandant was Max Koegel, described by American historian Todd Huebner as "a vicious martinet" who lacked the ability to manage the camp during its rapid expansion.[36] Continuing influxes of political prisoners from occupied countries caused Germans to become a minority that same year.[9] During 1944, Flossenbürg's population expanded almost eightfold, from 4,869 to 40,437,[37] due to a high influx of mainly non-German prisoners.[9] This was part of an expansion that applied over the entire Nazi concentration camp system.[38]

By the end of 1943, the number of guards had increased to about 450, including 140 Ukrainian auxiliaries. As with other concentration camps, guards initially consisted of SS men from Germany and Austria, whose ranks were augmented with Volksdeutsche recruits after 1942. The number of guards increased sixfold during 1944 and reached 4,500 by the time the camp was evacuated. Due to manpower shortages, fit young guards were called up for front-line service and many older men, members of the Wehrmacht and five hundred SS women were recruited into the guard force at Flossenbürg.[36]

Subcamps

 
Subcamps shown with pre-World War II and current Czech borders in medium gray and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in dark gray

The expansion of the camp led to the establishment of subcamps, the first of which was established at Stulln in February 1942 to provide forced labor to a mining company. Many of them were located in the Sudetenland or across the border in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Initially, the subcamps were not involved in armaments production, which changed in the second half of 1944 due to a large influx of available prisoners and the activities of the Jägerstab, which sought to increase German aircraft production.[39] The Jägerstab's dispersal of aircraft production spurred the expansion of the subcamp system in 1944[40] and resulted in the establishment of the two largest of the subcamps, at Hersbruck and Leitmeritz.[39] In the second half of 1944, 45 new camps were created, compared to three camps in the previous six months. The staffing of these new camps was increasingly filled by Luftwaffe soldiers, Volksdeutsche SS men (ethnic Germans from outside the Reich), and SS women, for the subcamps containing female prisoners.[41] By April 1945, 80% of the prisoners were at the subcamps.[42]

Forced labor

Quarries

 
Quarry at Flossenbürg

Three quarries were operational by the end of 1938, and a fourth opened in April 1941.[43][44] All four quarries were located near the main camp, and the total planned output was 12,000 cubic metres (420,000 cu ft) annually. The stone was average quality blue-gray and yellow-gray granite, 90% of which was suitable for architectural purposes.[44] Production gradually increased during 1940, but remained constant in 1941.[45] Initially all work was done by manual labor;[46] prisoners worked alongside civilian laborers and performed the most arduous and dangerous tasks. Accidents led to many deaths.[47] Beginning in 1940 and 1941, machines were introduced to increase efficiency.[46] In mid-1939, the quarries became the main use of labor in the camp and the following year they consumed half of the total labor, which was valued at 367,000 Reichsmarks.[48]

From November 1940, some prisoners were trained as stonemasons in a specialized workshop; their numbers reached 1,200 by December 1942.[49][50] The prisoners were instructed by civilian experts in a ten-week course covering both practical and theoretical topics but watched carefully by kapos. Those who failed to advance were sent to work in the quarries, while those whose productivity improved were given cigarettes and extra food. The stone that they cut was used for construction of the camp, the Autobahn, and various SS military projects,[51] but later on it was destined for the monumental German Stadium project and the Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg.[52]

Of the five prewar concentration camps where economic industries were prominent, Flossenbürg was the one that was most significant and consistent in producing income for DEST. For example, it produced 2,898 cubic metres (102,300 cu ft) of stone in 1939, almost three-quarters of the total production that year.[53] The largest buyer of Flossenbürg granite was Albert Speer's office for the reconstruction of Berlin.[8] Within this project the largest and most significant orders were for Wilhelm Kreis' Soldiers' Hall (Soldatenhalle) project, beginning in 1940. Increasing amounts of stone were used for road building; 15% in 1939 but 60% the next year.[54]

The first quarry shut down in May 1943 and its workers were reassigned to arms production,[53] but half of the prisoner labor was still going to the quarries.[55] Although civilian production was being scaled back in order to reorient the economy to total war, DEST managed to secure permission to keep many of its quarries open into 1944.[56] At Flossenbürg, the company maintained strong control over the economic enterprises of the camp, despite the fact that this aspect was supposed to be under the control of the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office (SS-WHVA).[25] In early 1944, 1,000 prisoners were still employed in the quarries.[56]

Aircraft and armaments

 
Aircraft factory at Flossenbürg, photographed after liberation

During 1942, the focus of the SS shifted towards war production, leading to negotiations with arms manufacturers to license their products to DEST.[57] Messerschmitt AG was one of the most important armaments companies that demonstrated interest in acquiring the slave labor of concentration camp prisoners, opening negotiations with DEST via Rüstungskommando [de] Regensburg by the end of 1942 to produce parts for the Messerschmitt Bf 109 aircraft at Flossenbürg. Under the terms of the deal, Messerschmitt would provide skilled technicians, raw materials, and tools, paying DEST 3 Reichsmarks per day for a skilled laborer and 1.5 Reichsmarks per day for an unskilled prisoner. Thus, Messerschmitt could increase its profit margin by reducing labor costs, while DEST could reduce its administrative costs by acting as a manpower agency. In mid-January 1943, DEST accepted the offer;[58] production started in early February.[58][55]

According to Yad Vashem historian Daniel Uziel, the conversion of Flossenbürg to armaments production was especially significant because it had been the most profitable DEST enterprise. The number of prisoners working for Messerschmitt increased greatly after the bombing of Messerschmitt's Regensburg plant on 17 August 1943.[59] That month, 800 prisoners worked for Messerschmitt; a year later, 5,700 prisoners were employed in armaments production.[55] Erla Maschinenwerk [de], a subcontractor of Messerschmitt, established Flossenbürg subcamps to support its production: a subcamp at Johanngeorgenstadt, established in December 1943, to produce tailplanes for the Bf 109, and another subcamp at Mülsen-St. Micheln which produced aircraft wings, in January 1944.[40] Despite strict regulations forbidding contact, the German civilian workers came into contact with prisoners and some helped by providing extra food or other assistance.[60]

The Flossenbürg camp system had become a key supplier of Bf 109 parts by February 1944, when Messerschmitt's Regensburg plant was bombed again during "Big Week". Seven hundred Soviet prisoners who had been working at the Regensburg factory were transferred to Flossenbürg to continue working on Bf 109 production. Increased production at Flossenbürg was essential to restoring production in the aftermath of the attack. Aircraft manufacturer Arado eventually became one of the primary users of slave labor at the subcamps for the Arado Ar 234 jet bomber project, at Freiberg among other locations.[40] Other prisoners in the subcamps were forced to work on synthetic oil production or repairing railways.[41] Before the end of the war, about 18,000 prisoners at Flossenbürg and its subcamps were working on aviation-related projects.[61]

Conditions

 
Barracks at Flossenbürg concentration camp

Ten percent of the deaths at Flossenbürg occurred before 1943. The quarries caused the death rate to be higher at Flossenbürg than at camps with less physically demanding industries, such as brickworks; the switch to armaments production in 1943 led to a decrease in the death rate.[62] Prisoners also suffered from a shortage of fresh water, due to the elevation, and unusually cold and wet weather; their clothing was not adequate for these conditions. The main camp, situated in a narrow valley, had little room for expansion. Originally constructed for only 1,500 prisoners, the population of the main camp increased to between 10,000[9] and 11,000[32] before it was evacuated in April 1945. In order to increase productivity, the prisoners were forced to sleep and work in shifts. This also helped alleviate the chronic overcrowding in the barracks.[9]

The prisoner functionaries at Flossenbürg were unusually brutal and corrupt because the positions had been taken by criminal prisoners even though overall only about 5% of prisoners had been classified as criminal. The final camp elder, Anton Uhl, was beaten to death by prisoners after liberation. Many of the criminal functionaries sexually abused young male prisoners, causing the commandant to isolate teenage boys in separate barracks. The SS hierarchy was also known for corruption and brutality. Prisoners were mistreated in various ways, from being beaten or doused with cold water to being shot by guards during alleged escape attempts.[63]

The prisoners were chronically undernourished and disease was rampant.[36] Conditions differed based on a prisoner's status and race. Polish and Soviet prisoners occupied the lowest rungs on the prisoner hierarchy, being put on the most physically demanding work details and allocated less food than other prisoners.[33] There was an epidemic of dysentery in January 1940 that shut down work at the camp, and typhus epidemics in September 1944 and January 1945 claimed many lives.[36] The total number of prisoners who passed through Flossenbürg and its subcamps has been estimated at 89,964[9] or over 100,000.[64] About 30,000 of the prisoners died at Flossenbürg or during its evacuation,[9][64] the main causes of death were malnutrition and disease.[36] Between 13,000 and 15,000 prisoners died at the main camp and more than 10,000 at the satellite camps.[64] An estimated three-quarters of the deaths occurred in the nine months before liberation.[65]

Executions

 
The Flossenbürg crematorium

Due to increased mortality from the harsh conditions, the SS ordered the construction of an on-site crematorium, which was completed in May 1940.[66] Executions by shooting began at Flossenbürg on 6 February 1941; the first victims were Polish political prisoners. Victims were separated after the evening roll call and read their sentences. After a night in the camp jail, they were shot at the firing range adjacent to the crematorium. After a mass execution of 80 Polish prisoners on 8 September,[67] the execution method was changed to lethal injection due to complaints from local residents of blood and body parts washing up in nearby streams.[68] The primary victims were Polish political prisoners and Soviet prisoners of war.[36]

Doctors who had participated in the Aktion T4 mass killings toured several concentration camps to select ill inmates to be transported to euthanasia centers; they visited Flossenbürg in March 1942.[69] Thousands of prisoners who were worn out by forced labor were sent to death camps such as Majdanek[70] and Auschwitz. One transport from Flossenbürg to Auschwitz arrived on 5 December 1943 with more than 250 of the 948 prisoners dead. By 18 February, only 393 survived.[71] Women unable to work were often deported to Ravensbrück concentration camp.[72]

The rate of executions increased during the final months of the camp. The SS liquidated prisoners who they suspected might try to escape or organize resistance; most of the victims were Russians.[73] Some of them were high-profile prisoners who had been kept alive previously for interrogation. During the last days of the camp's existence, the SS executed thirteen Allied secret agents and seven prominent German anti-Nazis, including former Abwehr head Wilhelm Canaris and the Confessing Church theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer.[74][36] In all, the SS had executed at least 2,500 people at Flossenbürg.[75]

Final months

 
Flossenbürg fence

A total of 12,000 prisoners in seventeen transports arrived at Flossenbürg in late 1944 and early 1945, causing the camp to fall into a state of disarray.[76] The first of these prisoners had been evacuated from Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp in summer 1944.[77] In early 1945, 2,000 prisoners were sent to Flossenbürg during the evacuation of Auschwitz concentration camp.[78] 9,500 prisoners arrived after the evacuation of Gross-Rosen; of 3,000 on one transport, only 1,000 arrived alive.[79] The influx of prisoners caused conditions to worsen and the death rate to increase dramatically: 3,370 prisoners died between mid-January and 13 April.[73]

As there was not enough space in the infirmary for all of the sick prisoners, commandant Max Koegel ordered hundreds of sick prisoners sent to Bergen-Belsen in April. In order to cope with the disorder, he founded a camp police force composed of ethnic German prisoners, mostly criminals. These prisoners mistreated non-German prisoners.[76][80] During the last months of the camp's existence, many of the prisoners were idle because no raw materials for their work had arrived.[81] Because of its location near the border of the Protectorate, Flossenbürg was the destination for evacuation transports from Buchenwald concentration camp when the Allies neared the camp in mid-April. At least 6,000 prisoners from Buchenwald[76] arrived at Flossenbürg between 16 and 20 April; many of the Jews were sent on to the Theresienstadt Ghetto while non-Jewish prisoners remained at Flossenbürg.[82] On 14 April, the population of Flossenbürg and its subcamps was 45,800, including 16,000 women.[76] The main camp's population peaked at between 10,000[9] and 11,000.[32]

Death marches

 
German civilians exhume mass grave at Schwarzenfeld

On 14 April 1945, SS leader Heinrich Himmler ordered all of the camps to be evacuated: "Not a single prisoner must fall alive into enemy hands".[83] As soon as he received the order, Koegel sent some families of SS men away and prepared to evacuate the camp.[76] At 5 am on 16 April, the 1,700 Jewish prisoners at Flossenbürg main camp were separated from the rest and ordered to assemble. Eight SS men guarded each column of 100 prisoners. When they reached the railway station, 4 miles (6.4 km) distant, they were loaded into closed and open freight cars, 60 to 75 each.[84] The train was strafed by United States aircraft soon after setting out, causing the guards to flee temporarily. Many prisoners were injured or killed; others rummaged for food that the SS guards had left behind. After the raid, the guards returned and shot injured prisoners. The total number of deaths was several dozen, increasing in the next two days as the prisoners were not provided with food or water.[85]

The route proceeded by rail through Neunburg vorm Wald, Weiden in der Oberpfalz, Pfreimd, Nabburg, and Schwarzenfeld, where, on 19[86] or 20 April, about 750 of the Jewish prisoners were stranded after another aerial attack disabled the locomotive. The SS murdered any prisoners who were unable to continue the march on foot. After the liberation, 140 corpses were found in a nearby field; some of the victims had been killed in the air raid, while others had been murdered. One prisoner testified that "The SS men joked and laughed during the shooting... the prisoners were led in groups of 15–20, they had to lie on the ground and were shot in the nape".[87] The survivors were divided into columns 100-strong and marched through heavy rain and mud. Many were ill with fever, but anyone unable to keep up was shot on the spot.[88] At Neukirchen-Balbini, the death march joined up with the larger one of non-Jewish prisoners.[89] Another group of Jewish evacuees continued towards Theresienstadt, arriving in early May.[90]

US Army newsreel filmed after liberation

Evacuation of non-Jewish prisoners began on 17 April, when 2,000 prisoners left on foot, arriving at Dachau on 23 April. This group consisted of longtime Flossenbürg prisoners, a group from Ohrdruf concentration camp, and the survivors of the death march from Buchenwald.[84] SS official Kurt Becher, who was involved in negotiations between Himmler and the Allies, visited Flossenbürg on 17 April and attempted to persuade Koegel not to evacuate the camp.[91] A telegram from Himmler the next day repeated the order not to let any prisoner fall into enemy hands.[91][74] On 19 April, some 25,000 to 30,000 remaining prisoners in Flossenbürg and its subcamps were ordered to evacuate to Dachau.[91] About 16,000 prisoners actually set out, and only a few thousand reached their destination.[92] The prisoners were transported by rail to Oberviechtach, where they split into two groups. One of these traveled by foot and in trucks via Külz, Dieterskirchen, and Schwarzhofen, joining the earlier march of Jewish prisoners in Neunburg. Many prisoners remained in the town from 20–22 April, when the SS guards deserted. The United States Army arrived in the area on 23 April and found 2,500 surviving prisoners. Many others were liberated on the road to Cham, 34 kilometres (20 mi) to the southeast.[86]

At many of Flossenbürg's subcamps, the SS massacred sick Jewish prisoners before evacuating. Including these massacres, the death marches cost the lives of about 7,000 prisoners from Flossenbürg and its subcamps.[92] The 90th Infantry Division[93] of the United States Army liberated the main camp on 23 April and found 1,527 ill and weak prisoners in the camp hospital;[36][91] more than 100 prisoners had died in the preceding three days. Despite the efforts of American medics, only 1,208 prisoners survived the immediate aftermath of liberation. Initially, the American authorities ordered the bodies to be burned in the camp crematorium, but after protests from the survivors, held a funeral for 21 former prisoners on 3 May.[64] Some of Flossenbürg's eastern subcamps, located east of the demarcation line, were liberated by the Red Army.[94]

Flossenbürg Trial

 
Father Lelere, a former prisoner, testifies at the Flossenbürg Trial on 21 June 1946.

Investigation of Nazi war criminals at Flossenbürg began on 6 May 1945, when the United States Army appointed eleven investigators.[95] SS- Hauptsturmführer Friedrich Becker, the head of the labor department at Flossenbürg, had signed most of the transport lists and was considered the most important perpetrator by the American prosecutors;[36][41] Koegel had committed suicide by hanging shortly after being captured by the Americans in 1946.[36] After a year of pretrial investigation,[96] the United States charged Becker and fifty other defendants[97] on 14 May 1946.[96] The defendants, who were tried before a United States military court at Dachau between 12 June 1946 and 22 January 1947, all pleaded not guilty.[98] Thirty-three of the defendants were low-ranking SS members, sixteen were former prisoner functionaries, and two were civilians.[97] Charges against seven were dropped and five were found not guilty. Of the remainder of the defendants, fifteen received death sentences, eleven life sentences, and the remainder jail terms of varying length.[99]

After the trial, two of the prosecution witnesses were tried for perjury following a petition by the nephew of a defendant.[100] One was convicted and the other acquitted, leading to judicial review of the charges against the defendants, but a War Crimes Board of Review found that the perjury had not affected the outcome of the trial.[101] Two of the defendants who had received death sentences had their sentences reduced on appeal. The remaining death sentences were carried out on 3 and 15 October 1947 or 1948.[102] Between December 1950 and December 1951, the remaining twenty-six prisoners had their sentences reviewed. Most were commuted to time served or a shorter term. The last prisoner was paroled in 1957 and had his sentence remitted on 11 June 1958.[103]

Commemoration

 
Tal des Todes (Valley of Death) with memorials

After liberation, Flossenbürg was used to hold Axis Disarmed Enemy Forces[104] and later as a displaced persons camp.[105] During the following decades, much of the camp was built over or repurposed.[106][107] For example, the former prisoner laundry and kitchen were used commercially until the 1990s.[108] The Flossenbürg camp quarry is on land owned by the Bavarian state government but is currently leased to a private company. The lease expires in 2024, and the Green Party is attempting to prevent the lease from being renewed so that the quarry can be incorporated into the memorial.[109]

The first memorial on the site was set up in 1946, and the cemetery was added during the 1950s. A small exhibition was opened in 1985, and a permanent museum opened in what had been the laundry room in 2007. A second exhibition has existed since 2010 in the prisoner kitchen.[106] A list of the names of more than 21,000 prisoners who died at the camp is available on the museum's website.[110]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The asocial category was for people who did not "fit into the mythical national community", in the words of historian Nikolaus Wachsmann.[1] Nazi raids targeted homeless people and the mentally ill, as well as the unemployed.[2]
  2. ^ According to SS chief Heinrich Himmler, the "criminal" prisoners at concentration camps needed to be isolated from society because they had committed offenses of a sexual or violent nature. In fact, most of the criminal prisoners were working-class men who had resorted to petty theft to support their families.[3]
  3. ^ Any man suspected of "lewd and lascivious" behavior with another man could be arrested and sent to a concentration camp under Paragraph 175; see persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany.[22]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 252.
  2. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 253–254.
  3. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 295–296.
  4. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 250.
  5. ^ a b c d e Huebner 2009, p. 560.
  6. ^ Jaskot 2002, pp. 1, 12.
  7. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 179, 292.
  8. ^ a b c Jaskot 2002, p. 1.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Huebner 2009, p. 561.
  10. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 12.
  11. ^ Jaskot 2002, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b Wachsmann 2015, p. 292.
  13. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 11.
  14. ^ KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg, Before 1938: Flossenbürg — Site of Granite.
  15. ^ Jaskot 2002, p. 25.
  16. ^ a b Wachsmann 2015, p. 293.
  17. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 182.
  18. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 13.
  19. ^ KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg, 1938: The Founding of the Flossenbürg Camp.
  20. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 16.
  21. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 294.
  22. ^ USHMM 2019.
  23. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 296.
  24. ^ a b Wachsmann 2015, p. 214.
  25. ^ a b c Jaskot 2002, p. 38.
  26. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 20.
  27. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 297.
  28. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 342–343.
  29. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 346.
  30. ^ Huebner 2009, pp. 560–561.
  31. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 25.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Jaskot 2002, p. 40.
  33. ^ a b Skriebeleit 2007, p. 27.
  34. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 504.
  35. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 497, 504.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Huebner 2009, p. 563.
  37. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 809.
  38. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 31.
  39. ^ a b Fritz 2009, p. 567.
  40. ^ a b c Uziel 2011, p. 182.
  41. ^ a b c Fritz 2009, p. 568.
  42. ^ Fritz 2009, p. 569.
  43. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 296, 373.
  44. ^ a b Jaskot 2002, p. 35.
  45. ^ Jaskot 2002, pp. 27, 30.
  46. ^ a b Jaskot 2002, p. 39.
  47. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, pp. 17–18.
  48. ^ Huebner 2009, pp. 561–562.
  49. ^ Jaskot 2002, pp. 28, 41, 75.
  50. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 373–374.
  51. ^ Jaskot 2002, p. 75.
  52. ^ Jaskot 2002, pp. 41, 69, 75.
  53. ^ a b Jaskot 2002, p. 41.
  54. ^ Jaskot 2002, pp. 108–109.
  55. ^ a b c Huebner 2009, p. 562.
  56. ^ a b Jaskot 2002, p. 33.
  57. ^ Jaskot 2002, p. 32.
  58. ^ a b Uziel 2011, p. 180.
  59. ^ Uziel 2011, pp. 56, 180.
  60. ^ Uziel 2011, p. 222.
  61. ^ Uziel 2011, p. 185.
  62. ^ Jaskot 2002, p. 45.
  63. ^ Huebner 2009, pp. 562–563.
  64. ^ a b c d Skriebeleit 2007, p. 51.
  65. ^ Huebner 2009, p. 564.
  66. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 24.
  67. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, pp. 27–28.
  68. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 476–477.
  69. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 440.
  70. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 49.
  71. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 755–756.
  72. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 847.
  73. ^ a b Blatman 2011, p. 131.
  74. ^ a b Wachsmann 2015, p. 1007.
  75. ^ KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg, 1941 and After: Executions and Mass Murder.
  76. ^ a b c d e Blatman 2011, p. 172.
  77. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 969.
  78. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 97.
  79. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 99.
  80. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, pp. 50–51.
  81. ^ Blatman 2011, pp. 172–173.
  82. ^ Blatman 2011, pp. 151–152.
  83. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 154.
  84. ^ a b Blatman 2011, p. 173.
  85. ^ Blatman 2011, pp. 174–175.
  86. ^ a b Mauriello 2017, pp. 87–88.
  87. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 175.
  88. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 176.
  89. ^ Mauriello 2017, p. 87.
  90. ^ Blatman 2011, p. 177.
  91. ^ a b c d Blatman 2011, p. 174.
  92. ^ a b Blatman 2011, p. 178.
  93. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, p. 49.
  94. ^ Uziel 2011, p. 234.
  95. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 586.
  96. ^ a b Riedel 2006, p. 587.
  97. ^ a b Riedel 2006, p. 583.
  98. ^ Riedel 2006, pp. 585, 588.
  99. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 588.
  100. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 595.
  101. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 596.
  102. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 597.
  103. ^ Riedel 2006, p. 598.
  104. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 1100.
  105. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 1103.
  106. ^ a b KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg, A European Place of Remembrance.
  107. ^ Skriebeleit 2007, pp. 53–54.
  108. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 1106.
  109. ^ Muggenthaler 2018.
  110. ^ KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg, Book of the Dead.

Sources

Print sources
  • Blatman, Daniel (2011). The Death Marches. Harvard: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674059191.
  • Fritz, Ulrich (2009). "Flossenbürg Subcamp System". In Megargee, Geoffrey P. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 1. Translated by Pallavicini, Stephen. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 567–569. ISBN 978-0-253-35328-3.
  • Huebner, Todd (2009). "Flossenbürg Main Camp". In Megargee, Geoffrey P. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 1. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 560–565. ISBN 978-0-253-35328-3.
  • Jaskot, Paul B. (2002). The Architecture of Oppression: The SS, Forced Labor and the Nazi Monumental Building Economy. Abingdon-on-Thames: Routledge. ISBN 9781134594610.
  • Mauriello, Christopher E. (2017). Forced Confrontation: The Politics of Dead Bodies in Germany at the End of World War II. Lanham: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-1-4985-4806-9.
  • Riedel, Durwood (2006). "The U.S. War Crimes Tribunals at the Former Dachau Concentration Camp: Lessons for Today". Berkeley Journal of International Law. 24 (2): 554–609. doi:10.15779/Z38FD1G.
  • Skriebeleit, Jörg (2007). "Flossenbürg Hauptlager" [Flossenbürg Main Camp]. In Benz, Wolfgang; Distel, Barbara (eds.). Flossenbürg: das Konzentrationslager Flossenbürg und seine Außenlager [Flossenbürg: Flossenbürg Concentration Camp and its Subcamps] (in German). Munich: C. H. Beck. pp. 11–60. ISBN 9783406562297.
  • Uziel, Daniel (2011). Arming the Luftwaffe: The German Aviation Industry in World War II. Jefferson: McFarland. ISBN 9780786488797.
  • Wachsmann, Nikolaus (2015). KL: A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps. London: Macmillan. ISBN 9780374118259.
Web sources
  • "History". KZ-Gedenkstätte Flossenbürg. Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  • Muggenthaler, Thomas (12 July 2018). "Antwort auf Grünen-Anfrage: KZ-Steinbruch Flossenbürg könnte weiter verpachtet werden". Bayerischer Rundfunk (in German). Retrieved 12 January 2019.
  • "Persecution of Homosexuals". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 19 January 2019.

Further reading

  • Fritz, Ulrich (2009b). Flossenbürg Concentration Camp 1938–1945: Catalogue of the Permanent Exhibition. Göttingen: Wallstein. ISBN 978-3-8353-0584-7.
  • Heigl, Peter; Omont, Bénédicte (1989). Konzentrationslager Flossenbürg in Geschichte und Gegenwart [Flossenbürg concentration camp in history and memory] (in German). Regensburg: Mittelbayerische Druckerei- und Verlags-Gesellschaft. ISBN 978-3-921114-29-2.
  • Siegert, Toni (1979). "Das Konzentrationslager Flossenbürg: Gegründet für sogenannte Asoziale und Kriminelle" [Flossenbürg concentration camp: Founded for so-called anti-socials and criminals]. In Broszat, Martin; Fröhlich, Elke; Wiesemann, Falk (eds.). Bayern in der NS-Zeit [Bavaria in the Nazi State] (in German). Vol. 2. Munich: Oldenbourg. pp. 429–493. ISBN 9783486483611.

External links

  •   Media related to Flossenbürg concentration camp at Wikimedia Commons

flossenbürg, concentration, camp, flossenbürg, redirects, here, town, flossenbürg, bavaria, coordinates, 73556, 35583, 73556, 35583, flossenbürg, nazi, concentration, camp, built, 1938, main, economic, administrative, office, unlike, other, concentration, camp. Flossenburg redirects here For the town see Flossenburg Bavaria Coordinates 49 44 08 N 12 21 21 E 49 73556 N 12 35583 E 49 73556 12 35583 Flossenburg was a Nazi concentration camp built in May 1938 by the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office Unlike other concentration camps it was located in a remote area in the Fichtel Mountains of Bavaria adjacent to the town of Flossenburg and near the German border with Czechoslovakia The camp s initial purpose was to exploit the forced labor of prisoners for the production of granite for Nazi architecture In 1943 the bulk of prisoners switched to producing Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter planes and other armaments for Germany s war effort Although originally intended for criminal and asocial prisoners after Germany s invasion of the Soviet Union the camp s numbers swelled with political prisoners from outside Germany It also developed an extensive subcamp system that eventually outgrew the main camp FlossenburgNazi concentration campThe camp after liberationLocationFlossenburg GermanyOperated byNazi GermanyCommandantList Jakob Weiseborn May 1938 January 1939 Karl Kunstler January 1939 July 1942 Karl Fritzsch July September 1942 Egon Zill September 1942 April 1943 Max Koegel April 1943 April 1945 Companies involvedGerman Earth and Stone Works Messerschmitt AGOperational3 May 1938 23 April 1945InmatesPolitical prisoners Jews criminals antisocialsNumber of inmates89 974Killed30 000Liberated byUnited States ArmyWebsitewww wbr gedenkstaette flossenbuerg wbr de wbr en wbr home wbr Before it was liberated by the United States Army in April 1945 89 964 to 100 000 prisoners passed through Flossenburg and its subcamps Around 30 000 died from malnutrition overwork executions or during the death marches Some of those responsible for these deaths including administrators guards and others were tried and convicted in the Flossenburg trial The camp was repurposed for other uses before the opening of a memorial and museum in 2007 Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment 3 Expansion 3 1 Subcamps 4 Forced labor 4 1 Quarries 4 2 Aircraft and armaments 5 Conditions 6 Executions 7 Final months 8 Death marches 9 Flossenburg Trial 10 Commemoration 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksBackground Edit Albert Speer s plan for Berlin During the first half of 1938 the Nazi concentration camp population expanded threefold due to increased arrests by the Schutzstaffel SS of individuals deemed undesirable especially asocial a and criminal b prisoners to create a slave labor force SS leader Heinrich Himmler ordered the founding of new concentration camps to expand the SS economic empire 4 5 The SS intended to exploit the slave labor of prisoners to quarry granite which was in high demand for monumental building projects in the Nazi style 6 7 This would also profit the SS owned and operated company German Earth and Stone Works DEST 8 9 which had been founded in April 10 11 During the second half of March 1938 a high ranking SS commission led by Oswald Pohl and Theodor Eicke toured southern Germany searching for a site for a new camp that would meet the SS specifications 12 On 24 March 1938 they chose a site near the small town of Flossenburg in the Upper Palatinate for the establishment of a concentration camp 5 due to the quarries of blue gray granite located nearby 12 Unlike all other Nazi concentration camps to date which were near rail junctions and population centers the camp was to be located in the remote Upper Palatine Forest near Flossenburg Castle de formerly owned by Holy Roman Emperor Friedrich Barbarossa 8 Flossenburg was a poor rural area with about 1 200 inhabitants who mostly worked on the quarries which had existed since the 19th century The local economy especially the stone industry was negatively impacted by the new border with Czechoslovakia after the Treaty of Versailles and the 1930s economic slump Adolf Hitler s rise to power increased the demand for granite earning the Nazi Party local support 13 14 The construction of the camp was funded by a contract with Albert Speer s ministry for the reconstruction of Berlin 15 it was the first occasion that economic considerations had determined the site of a camp 16 Establishment Edit Gate of Flossenburg with the Nazi slogan Arbeit macht frei Work sets you free 17 The order for the construction of eight barracks at Flossenburg went through on 31 March 18 SS guards arrived in April 19 and on 3 May 1938 a transport of 100 prisoners arrived from Dachau establishing the camp 5 More prisoners arrived from Dachau on 9 and 16 May 20 Himmler visited the camp on 16 May with Pohl indicating that the SS considered it an important project 16 The SS attempted to segregate prisoners incarcerated for criminal offences at Flossenburg because forced labor in the quarries was considered a particularly harsh punishment 21 Most of the prisoners at Flossenburg were classified as criminal with some asocial and a few homosexual prisoners c the criminals quickly took over the prisoner functionary positions 5 The new prisoners had to construct the camp themselves beginning with the barbed wire fence this was initially the main use of forced labor 9 While performing this heavy and dangerous work the prisoners lived in makeshift structures Simultaneously hundreds of prisoners had to work in the quarries 23 The camp s population had increased to 1 500 following arrivals from Dachau Sachsenhausen and Buchenwald 5 In January 1939 the first commandant Jakob Weiseborn unexpectedly died 24 25 He was replaced by a former SS officer at Dachau Karl Kunstler who presided over an era in which the camp became an economically productive center for granite quarrying 25 and increasingly deadly for its prisoners 24 With the first barracks complete in 1939 work began on an internal jail guard towers a washing facility and a sewer system 9 In April 1939 the economic productivity of the camp led to Pohl ordering the camp to be expanded to fit 3 000 prisoners To build additional barracks terraces had to be cut into the hillsides an arduous task that led to many injuries 26 Fifty five prisoners died before the outbreak of World War II in September 1939 27 During mid 1939 Nazi authorities planned to invade Poland It was decided to stage false flag attacks in order to justify a German declaration of war Several prisoners from Flossenburg and other concentration camps were secretly transferred to a Gestapo prison in Breslau poisoned and dressed in Polish uniforms On 31 August 1939 the bodies were dumped at a border post in Hochlinden where they were shot and hacked photographs were taken as proof of a Polish attack on Germany 28 Expansion Edit Map of the concentration camp in 1943 In September 1939 the SS transferred 1 000 political prisoners to Flossenburg from Dachau in order to clear the latter camp to train the first regiment of the Waffen SS These prisoners who were the first political prisoners at Flossenburg were moved back to Dachau in March 1940 29 30 The first foreign prisoners were transferred to the camp by the Gestapo in April including Czech student protestors and Polish resistance members The vast majority of the new foreign prisoners were incarcerated due to their opposition to the Nazi regime a few of them were Jews Most of the Jewish political prisoners were executed or died shortly after arriving from mistreatment 31 32 The last twelve surviving Jews were deported to Auschwitz on 19 October 1942 pursuant to Himmler s order to make the Reich Judenrein 9 32 The number of Polish prisoners increased sharply in 1941 on 23 January 600 arrived from Auschwitz 33 In mid October 1941 1 700 34 to 2 000 9 32 Soviet prisoners of war arrived at Flossenburg as part of a massive transfer of Soviet prisoners to the SS camp system In poor condition due to their previous mistreatment they spent several months recovering before they were deemed fit to work They were accommodated in a special cordoned off area 35 By February 1943 Flossenburg had 4 004 prisoners not including the Soviet prisoners of war 32 From April 1943 the commandant was Max Koegel described by American historian Todd Huebner as a vicious martinet who lacked the ability to manage the camp during its rapid expansion 36 Continuing influxes of political prisoners from occupied countries caused Germans to become a minority that same year 9 During 1944 Flossenburg s population expanded almost eightfold from 4 869 to 40 437 37 due to a high influx of mainly non German prisoners 9 This was part of an expansion that applied over the entire Nazi concentration camp system 38 By the end of 1943 the number of guards had increased to about 450 including 140 Ukrainian auxiliaries As with other concentration camps guards initially consisted of SS men from Germany and Austria whose ranks were augmented with Volksdeutsche recruits after 1942 The number of guards increased sixfold during 1944 and reached 4 500 by the time the camp was evacuated Due to manpower shortages fit young guards were called up for front line service and many older men members of the Wehrmacht and five hundred SS women were recruited into the guard force at Flossenburg 36 Subcamps Edit Main article List of subcamps of Flossenburg Subcamps shown with pre World War II and current Czech borders in medium gray and the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia in dark gray The expansion of the camp led to the establishment of subcamps the first of which was established at Stulln in February 1942 to provide forced labor to a mining company Many of them were located in the Sudetenland or across the border in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia Initially the subcamps were not involved in armaments production which changed in the second half of 1944 due to a large influx of available prisoners and the activities of the Jagerstab which sought to increase German aircraft production 39 The Jagerstab s dispersal of aircraft production spurred the expansion of the subcamp system in 1944 40 and resulted in the establishment of the two largest of the subcamps at Hersbruck and Leitmeritz 39 In the second half of 1944 45 new camps were created compared to three camps in the previous six months The staffing of these new camps was increasingly filled by Luftwaffe soldiers Volksdeutsche SS men ethnic Germans from outside the Reich and SS women for the subcamps containing female prisoners 41 By April 1945 80 of the prisoners were at the subcamps 42 Forced labor EditSee also DEST Quarries Edit Quarry at Flossenburg Three quarries were operational by the end of 1938 and a fourth opened in April 1941 43 44 All four quarries were located near the main camp and the total planned output was 12 000 cubic metres 420 000 cu ft annually The stone was average quality blue gray and yellow gray granite 90 of which was suitable for architectural purposes 44 Production gradually increased during 1940 but remained constant in 1941 45 Initially all work was done by manual labor 46 prisoners worked alongside civilian laborers and performed the most arduous and dangerous tasks Accidents led to many deaths 47 Beginning in 1940 and 1941 machines were introduced to increase efficiency 46 In mid 1939 the quarries became the main use of labor in the camp and the following year they consumed half of the total labor which was valued at 367 000 Reichsmarks 48 From November 1940 some prisoners were trained as stonemasons in a specialized workshop their numbers reached 1 200 by December 1942 49 50 The prisoners were instructed by civilian experts in a ten week course covering both practical and theoretical topics but watched carefully by kapos Those who failed to advance were sent to work in the quarries while those whose productivity improved were given cigarettes and extra food The stone that they cut was used for construction of the camp the Autobahn and various SS military projects 51 but later on it was destined for the monumental German Stadium project and the Nazi party rally grounds in Nuremberg 52 Of the five prewar concentration camps where economic industries were prominent Flossenburg was the one that was most significant and consistent in producing income for DEST For example it produced 2 898 cubic metres 102 300 cu ft of stone in 1939 almost three quarters of the total production that year 53 The largest buyer of Flossenburg granite was Albert Speer s office for the reconstruction of Berlin 8 Within this project the largest and most significant orders were for Wilhelm Kreis Soldiers Hall Soldatenhalle project beginning in 1940 Increasing amounts of stone were used for road building 15 in 1939 but 60 the next year 54 The first quarry shut down in May 1943 and its workers were reassigned to arms production 53 but half of the prisoner labor was still going to the quarries 55 Although civilian production was being scaled back in order to reorient the economy to total war DEST managed to secure permission to keep many of its quarries open into 1944 56 At Flossenburg the company maintained strong control over the economic enterprises of the camp despite the fact that this aspect was supposed to be under the control of the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office SS WHVA 25 In early 1944 1 000 prisoners were still employed in the quarries 56 Aircraft and armaments Edit See also Jagerstab Aircraft factory at Flossenburg photographed after liberation During 1942 the focus of the SS shifted towards war production leading to negotiations with arms manufacturers to license their products to DEST 57 Messerschmitt AG was one of the most important armaments companies that demonstrated interest in acquiring the slave labor of concentration camp prisoners opening negotiations with DEST via Rustungskommando de Regensburg by the end of 1942 to produce parts for the Messerschmitt Bf 109 aircraft at Flossenburg Under the terms of the deal Messerschmitt would provide skilled technicians raw materials and tools paying DEST 3 Reichsmarks per day for a skilled laborer and 1 5 Reichsmarks per day for an unskilled prisoner Thus Messerschmitt could increase its profit margin by reducing labor costs while DEST could reduce its administrative costs by acting as a manpower agency In mid January 1943 DEST accepted the offer 58 production started in early February 58 55 According to Yad Vashem historian Daniel Uziel the conversion of Flossenburg to armaments production was especially significant because it had been the most profitable DEST enterprise The number of prisoners working for Messerschmitt increased greatly after the bombing of Messerschmitt s Regensburg plant on 17 August 1943 59 That month 800 prisoners worked for Messerschmitt a year later 5 700 prisoners were employed in armaments production 55 Erla Maschinenwerk de a subcontractor of Messerschmitt established Flossenburg subcamps to support its production a subcamp at Johanngeorgenstadt established in December 1943 to produce tailplanes for the Bf 109 and another subcamp at Mulsen St Micheln which produced aircraft wings in January 1944 40 Despite strict regulations forbidding contact the German civilian workers came into contact with prisoners and some helped by providing extra food or other assistance 60 The Flossenburg camp system had become a key supplier of Bf 109 parts by February 1944 when Messerschmitt s Regensburg plant was bombed again during Big Week Seven hundred Soviet prisoners who had been working at the Regensburg factory were transferred to Flossenburg to continue working on Bf 109 production Increased production at Flossenburg was essential to restoring production in the aftermath of the attack Aircraft manufacturer Arado eventually became one of the primary users of slave labor at the subcamps for the Arado Ar 234 jet bomber project at Freiberg among other locations 40 Other prisoners in the subcamps were forced to work on synthetic oil production or repairing railways 41 Before the end of the war about 18 000 prisoners at Flossenburg and its subcamps were working on aviation related projects 61 Conditions Edit Barracks at Flossenburg concentration camp Ten percent of the deaths at Flossenburg occurred before 1943 The quarries caused the death rate to be higher at Flossenburg than at camps with less physically demanding industries such as brickworks the switch to armaments production in 1943 led to a decrease in the death rate 62 Prisoners also suffered from a shortage of fresh water due to the elevation and unusually cold and wet weather their clothing was not adequate for these conditions The main camp situated in a narrow valley had little room for expansion Originally constructed for only 1 500 prisoners the population of the main camp increased to between 10 000 9 and 11 000 32 before it was evacuated in April 1945 In order to increase productivity the prisoners were forced to sleep and work in shifts This also helped alleviate the chronic overcrowding in the barracks 9 The prisoner functionaries at Flossenburg were unusually brutal and corrupt because the positions had been taken by criminal prisoners even though overall only about 5 of prisoners had been classified as criminal The final camp elder Anton Uhl was beaten to death by prisoners after liberation Many of the criminal functionaries sexually abused young male prisoners causing the commandant to isolate teenage boys in separate barracks The SS hierarchy was also known for corruption and brutality Prisoners were mistreated in various ways from being beaten or doused with cold water to being shot by guards during alleged escape attempts 63 The prisoners were chronically undernourished and disease was rampant 36 Conditions differed based on a prisoner s status and race Polish and Soviet prisoners occupied the lowest rungs on the prisoner hierarchy being put on the most physically demanding work details and allocated less food than other prisoners 33 There was an epidemic of dysentery in January 1940 that shut down work at the camp and typhus epidemics in September 1944 and January 1945 claimed many lives 36 The total number of prisoners who passed through Flossenburg and its subcamps has been estimated at 89 964 9 or over 100 000 64 About 30 000 of the prisoners died at Flossenburg or during its evacuation 9 64 the main causes of death were malnutrition and disease 36 Between 13 000 and 15 000 prisoners died at the main camp and more than 10 000 at the satellite camps 64 An estimated three quarters of the deaths occurred in the nine months before liberation 65 Executions Edit The Flossenburg crematorium Due to increased mortality from the harsh conditions the SS ordered the construction of an on site crematorium which was completed in May 1940 66 Executions by shooting began at Flossenburg on 6 February 1941 the first victims were Polish political prisoners Victims were separated after the evening roll call and read their sentences After a night in the camp jail they were shot at the firing range adjacent to the crematorium After a mass execution of 80 Polish prisoners on 8 September 67 the execution method was changed to lethal injection due to complaints from local residents of blood and body parts washing up in nearby streams 68 The primary victims were Polish political prisoners and Soviet prisoners of war 36 Doctors who had participated in the Aktion T4 mass killings toured several concentration camps to select ill inmates to be transported to euthanasia centers they visited Flossenburg in March 1942 69 Thousands of prisoners who were worn out by forced labor were sent to death camps such as Majdanek 70 and Auschwitz One transport from Flossenburg to Auschwitz arrived on 5 December 1943 with more than 250 of the 948 prisoners dead By 18 February only 393 survived 71 Women unable to work were often deported to Ravensbruck concentration camp 72 The rate of executions increased during the final months of the camp The SS liquidated prisoners who they suspected might try to escape or organize resistance most of the victims were Russians 73 Some of them were high profile prisoners who had been kept alive previously for interrogation During the last days of the camp s existence the SS executed thirteen Allied secret agents and seven prominent German anti Nazis including former Abwehr head Wilhelm Canaris and the Confessing Church theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer 74 36 In all the SS had executed at least 2 500 people at Flossenburg 75 Final months Edit Flossenburg fence A total of 12 000 prisoners in seventeen transports arrived at Flossenburg in late 1944 and early 1945 causing the camp to fall into a state of disarray 76 The first of these prisoners had been evacuated from Krakow Plaszow concentration camp in summer 1944 77 In early 1945 2 000 prisoners were sent to Flossenburg during the evacuation of Auschwitz concentration camp 78 9 500 prisoners arrived after the evacuation of Gross Rosen of 3 000 on one transport only 1 000 arrived alive 79 The influx of prisoners caused conditions to worsen and the death rate to increase dramatically 3 370 prisoners died between mid January and 13 April 73 As there was not enough space in the infirmary for all of the sick prisoners commandant Max Koegel ordered hundreds of sick prisoners sent to Bergen Belsen in April In order to cope with the disorder he founded a camp police force composed of ethnic German prisoners mostly criminals These prisoners mistreated non German prisoners 76 80 During the last months of the camp s existence many of the prisoners were idle because no raw materials for their work had arrived 81 Because of its location near the border of the Protectorate Flossenburg was the destination for evacuation transports from Buchenwald concentration camp when the Allies neared the camp in mid April At least 6 000 prisoners from Buchenwald 76 arrived at Flossenburg between 16 and 20 April many of the Jews were sent on to the Theresienstadt Ghetto while non Jewish prisoners remained at Flossenburg 82 On 14 April the population of Flossenburg and its subcamps was 45 800 including 16 000 women 76 The main camp s population peaked at between 10 000 9 and 11 000 32 Death marches Edit German civilians exhume mass grave at Schwarzenfeld On 14 April 1945 SS leader Heinrich Himmler ordered all of the camps to be evacuated Not a single prisoner must fall alive into enemy hands 83 As soon as he received the order Koegel sent some families of SS men away and prepared to evacuate the camp 76 At 5 am on 16 April the 1 700 Jewish prisoners at Flossenburg main camp were separated from the rest and ordered to assemble Eight SS men guarded each column of 100 prisoners When they reached the railway station 4 miles 6 4 km distant they were loaded into closed and open freight cars 60 to 75 each 84 The train was strafed by United States aircraft soon after setting out causing the guards to flee temporarily Many prisoners were injured or killed others rummaged for food that the SS guards had left behind After the raid the guards returned and shot injured prisoners The total number of deaths was several dozen increasing in the next two days as the prisoners were not provided with food or water 85 The route proceeded by rail through Neunburg vorm Wald Weiden in der Oberpfalz Pfreimd Nabburg and Schwarzenfeld where on 19 86 or 20 April about 750 of the Jewish prisoners were stranded after another aerial attack disabled the locomotive The SS murdered any prisoners who were unable to continue the march on foot After the liberation 140 corpses were found in a nearby field some of the victims had been killed in the air raid while others had been murdered One prisoner testified that The SS men joked and laughed during the shooting the prisoners were led in groups of 15 20 they had to lie on the ground and were shot in the nape 87 The survivors were divided into columns 100 strong and marched through heavy rain and mud Many were ill with fever but anyone unable to keep up was shot on the spot 88 At Neukirchen Balbini the death march joined up with the larger one of non Jewish prisoners 89 Another group of Jewish evacuees continued towards Theresienstadt arriving in early May 90 source source source source source source source source source source US Army newsreel filmed after liberation Evacuation of non Jewish prisoners began on 17 April when 2 000 prisoners left on foot arriving at Dachau on 23 April This group consisted of longtime Flossenburg prisoners a group from Ohrdruf concentration camp and the survivors of the death march from Buchenwald 84 SS official Kurt Becher who was involved in negotiations between Himmler and the Allies visited Flossenburg on 17 April and attempted to persuade Koegel not to evacuate the camp 91 A telegram from Himmler the next day repeated the order not to let any prisoner fall into enemy hands 91 74 On 19 April some 25 000 to 30 000 remaining prisoners in Flossenburg and its subcamps were ordered to evacuate to Dachau 91 About 16 000 prisoners actually set out and only a few thousand reached their destination 92 The prisoners were transported by rail to Oberviechtach where they split into two groups One of these traveled by foot and in trucks via Kulz Dieterskirchen and Schwarzhofen joining the earlier march of Jewish prisoners in Neunburg Many prisoners remained in the town from 20 22 April when the SS guards deserted The United States Army arrived in the area on 23 April and found 2 500 surviving prisoners Many others were liberated on the road to Cham 34 kilometres 20 mi to the southeast 86 At many of Flossenburg s subcamps the SS massacred sick Jewish prisoners before evacuating Including these massacres the death marches cost the lives of about 7 000 prisoners from Flossenburg and its subcamps 92 The 90th Infantry Division 93 of the United States Army liberated the main camp on 23 April and found 1 527 ill and weak prisoners in the camp hospital 36 91 more than 100 prisoners had died in the preceding three days Despite the efforts of American medics only 1 208 prisoners survived the immediate aftermath of liberation Initially the American authorities ordered the bodies to be burned in the camp crematorium but after protests from the survivors held a funeral for 21 former prisoners on 3 May 64 Some of Flossenburg s eastern subcamps located east of the demarcation line were liberated by the Red Army 94 Liberation of Flossenburg Former prisoners welcome the United States Army Survivors suffering from typhus German civilians remove corpses from the main camp Funeral for prisoners who died after liberationFlossenburg Trial EditFurther information Dachau trials Father Lelere a former prisoner testifies at the Flossenburg Trial on 21 June 1946 Investigation of Nazi war criminals at Flossenburg began on 6 May 1945 when the United States Army appointed eleven investigators 95 SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Friedrich Becker the head of the labor department at Flossenburg had signed most of the transport lists and was considered the most important perpetrator by the American prosecutors 36 41 Koegel had committed suicide by hanging shortly after being captured by the Americans in 1946 36 After a year of pretrial investigation 96 the United States charged Becker and fifty other defendants 97 on 14 May 1946 96 The defendants who were tried before a United States military court at Dachau between 12 June 1946 and 22 January 1947 all pleaded not guilty 98 Thirty three of the defendants were low ranking SS members sixteen were former prisoner functionaries and two were civilians 97 Charges against seven were dropped and five were found not guilty Of the remainder of the defendants fifteen received death sentences eleven life sentences and the remainder jail terms of varying length 99 After the trial two of the prosecution witnesses were tried for perjury following a petition by the nephew of a defendant 100 One was convicted and the other acquitted leading to judicial review of the charges against the defendants but a War Crimes Board of Review found that the perjury had not affected the outcome of the trial 101 Two of the defendants who had received death sentences had their sentences reduced on appeal The remaining death sentences were carried out on 3 and 15 October 1947 or 1948 102 Between December 1950 and December 1951 the remaining twenty six prisoners had their sentences reviewed Most were commuted to time served or a shorter term The last prisoner was paroled in 1957 and had his sentence remitted on 11 June 1958 103 Commemoration Edit Tal des Todes Valley of Death with memorials After liberation Flossenburg was used to hold Axis Disarmed Enemy Forces 104 and later as a displaced persons camp 105 During the following decades much of the camp was built over or repurposed 106 107 For example the former prisoner laundry and kitchen were used commercially until the 1990s 108 The Flossenburg camp quarry is on land owned by the Bavarian state government but is currently leased to a private company The lease expires in 2024 and the Green Party is attempting to prevent the lease from being renewed so that the quarry can be incorporated into the memorial 109 The first memorial on the site was set up in 1946 and the cemetery was added during the 1950s A small exhibition was opened in 1985 and a permanent museum opened in what had been the laundry room in 2007 A second exhibition has existed since 2010 in the prisoner kitchen 106 A list of the names of more than 21 000 prisoners who died at the camp is available on the museum s website 110 See also Edit Germany portal World War II portalNotes Edit The asocial category was for people who did not fit into the mythical national community in the words of historian Nikolaus Wachsmann 1 Nazi raids targeted homeless people and the mentally ill as well as the unemployed 2 According to SS chief Heinrich Himmler the criminal prisoners at concentration camps needed to be isolated from society because they had committed offenses of a sexual or violent nature In fact most of the criminal prisoners were working class men who had resorted to petty theft to support their families 3 Any man suspected of lewd and lascivious behavior with another man could be arrested and sent to a concentration camp under Paragraph 175 see persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany 22 References EditCitations Edit Wachsmann 2015 p 252 Wachsmann 2015 pp 253 254 Wachsmann 2015 pp 295 296 Wachsmann 2015 p 250 a b c d e Huebner 2009 p 560 Jaskot 2002 pp 1 12 Wachsmann 2015 pp 179 292 a b c Jaskot 2002 p 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l Huebner 2009 p 561 Skriebeleit 2007 p 12 Jaskot 2002 p 12 a b Wachsmann 2015 p 292 Skriebeleit 2007 p 11 KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg Before 1938 Flossenburg Site of Granite Jaskot 2002 p 25 a b Wachsmann 2015 p 293 Wachsmann 2015 p 182 Skriebeleit 2007 p 13 KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg 1938 The Founding of the Flossenburg Camp Skriebeleit 2007 p 16 Wachsmann 2015 p 294 USHMM 2019 Wachsmann 2015 p 296 a b Wachsmann 2015 p 214 a b c Jaskot 2002 p 38 Skriebeleit 2007 p 20 Wachsmann 2015 p 297 Wachsmann 2015 pp 342 343 Wachsmann 2015 p 346 Huebner 2009 pp 560 561 Skriebeleit 2007 p 25 a b c d e f Jaskot 2002 p 40 a b Skriebeleit 2007 p 27 Wachsmann 2015 p 504 Wachsmann 2015 pp 497 504 a b c d e f g h i j Huebner 2009 p 563 Wachsmann 2015 p 809 Blatman 2011 p 31 a b Fritz 2009 p 567 a b c Uziel 2011 p 182 a b c Fritz 2009 p 568 Fritz 2009 p 569 Wachsmann 2015 pp 296 373 a b Jaskot 2002 p 35 Jaskot 2002 pp 27 30 a b Jaskot 2002 p 39 Skriebeleit 2007 pp 17 18 Huebner 2009 pp 561 562 Jaskot 2002 pp 28 41 75 Wachsmann 2015 pp 373 374 Jaskot 2002 p 75 Jaskot 2002 pp 41 69 75 a b Jaskot 2002 p 41 Jaskot 2002 pp 108 109 a b c Huebner 2009 p 562 a b Jaskot 2002 p 33 Jaskot 2002 p 32 a b Uziel 2011 p 180 Uziel 2011 pp 56 180 Uziel 2011 p 222 Uziel 2011 p 185 Jaskot 2002 p 45 Huebner 2009 pp 562 563 a b c d Skriebeleit 2007 p 51 Huebner 2009 p 564 Skriebeleit 2007 p 24 Skriebeleit 2007 pp 27 28 Wachsmann 2015 pp 476 477 Wachsmann 2015 p 440 Blatman 2011 p 49 Wachsmann 2015 pp 755 756 Wachsmann 2015 p 847 a b Blatman 2011 p 131 a b Wachsmann 2015 p 1007 KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg 1941 and After Executions and Mass Murder a b c d e Blatman 2011 p 172 Wachsmann 2015 p 969 Blatman 2011 p 97 Blatman 2011 p 99 Skriebeleit 2007 pp 50 51 Blatman 2011 pp 172 173 Blatman 2011 pp 151 152 Blatman 2011 p 154 a b Blatman 2011 p 173 Blatman 2011 pp 174 175 a b Mauriello 2017 pp 87 88 Blatman 2011 p 175 Blatman 2011 p 176 Mauriello 2017 p 87 Blatman 2011 p 177 a b c d Blatman 2011 p 174 a b Blatman 2011 p 178 Skriebeleit 2007 p 49 Uziel 2011 p 234 Riedel 2006 p 586 a b Riedel 2006 p 587 a b Riedel 2006 p 583 Riedel 2006 pp 585 588 Riedel 2006 p 588 Riedel 2006 p 595 Riedel 2006 p 596 Riedel 2006 p 597 Riedel 2006 p 598 Wachsmann 2015 p 1100 Wachsmann 2015 p 1103 a b KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg A European Place of Remembrance Skriebeleit 2007 pp 53 54 Wachsmann 2015 p 1106 Muggenthaler 2018 KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg Book of the Dead Sources Edit Print sourcesBlatman Daniel 2011 The Death Marches Harvard Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674059191 Fritz Ulrich 2009 Flossenburg Subcamp System In Megargee Geoffrey P ed Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Vol 1 Translated by Pallavicini Stephen Bloomington United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 567 569 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Huebner Todd 2009 Flossenburg Main Camp In Megargee Geoffrey P ed Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Vol 1 Bloomington United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 560 565 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Jaskot Paul B 2002 The Architecture of Oppression The SS Forced Labor and the Nazi Monumental Building Economy Abingdon on Thames Routledge ISBN 9781134594610 Mauriello Christopher E 2017 Forced Confrontation The Politics of Dead Bodies in Germany at the End of World War II Lanham Lexington Books ISBN 978 1 4985 4806 9 Riedel Durwood 2006 The U S War Crimes Tribunals at the Former Dachau Concentration Camp Lessons for Today Berkeley Journal of International Law 24 2 554 609 doi 10 15779 Z38FD1G Skriebeleit Jorg 2007 Flossenburg Hauptlager Flossenburg Main Camp In Benz Wolfgang Distel Barbara eds Flossenburg das Konzentrationslager Flossenburg und seine Aussenlager Flossenburg Flossenburg Concentration Camp and its Subcamps in German Munich C H Beck pp 11 60 ISBN 9783406562297 Uziel Daniel 2011 Arming the Luftwaffe The German Aviation Industry in World War II Jefferson McFarland ISBN 9780786488797 Wachsmann Nikolaus 2015 KL A History of the Nazi Concentration Camps London Macmillan ISBN 9780374118259 Web sources History KZ Gedenkstatte Flossenburg Retrieved 12 January 2019 Muggenthaler Thomas 12 July 2018 Antwort auf Grunen Anfrage KZ Steinbruch Flossenburg konnte weiter verpachtet werden Bayerischer Rundfunk in German Retrieved 12 January 2019 Persecution of Homosexuals United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 19 January 2019 Further reading EditFritz Ulrich 2009b Flossenburg Concentration Camp 1938 1945 Catalogue of the Permanent Exhibition Gottingen Wallstein ISBN 978 3 8353 0584 7 Heigl Peter Omont Benedicte 1989 Konzentrationslager Flossenburg in Geschichte und Gegenwart Flossenburg concentration camp in history and memory in German Regensburg Mittelbayerische Druckerei und Verlags Gesellschaft ISBN 978 3 921114 29 2 Siegert Toni 1979 Das Konzentrationslager Flossenburg Gegrundet fur sogenannte Asoziale und Kriminelle Flossenburg concentration camp Founded for so called anti socials and criminals In Broszat Martin Frohlich Elke Wiesemann Falk eds Bayern in der NS Zeit Bavaria in the Nazi State in German Vol 2 Munich Oldenbourg pp 429 493 ISBN 9783486483611 External links Edit Media related to Flossenburg concentration camp at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flossenburg concentration camp amp oldid 1151277132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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