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Leitmeritz concentration camp

Leitmeritz was the largest subcamp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp, operated by Nazi Germany in Leitmeritz, Reichsgau Sudetenland (now Litoměřice, Czech Republic). Established on 24 March 1944 as part of an effort to disperse and increase war production, its prisoners were forced to work in the caverns Richard I and II, producing Maybach HL230 tank engines for Auto Union (now Audi) and preparing the second site for intended production of tungsten and molybdenum wire and sheet metal by Osram. Of the 18,000 prisoners who passed through the camp, about 4,500 died due to disease, malnutrition, and accidents caused by the disregard for safety by the SS staff who administered the camp. In the last weeks of the war, the camp became a hub for death marches. The camp operated until 8 May 1945, when it was dissolved by the German surrender.

Leitmeritz
subcamp
Former crematorium
LocationLeitmeritz, Reichsgau Sudetenland (now Litoměřice, Czech Republic)
Operated byNazi Germany
Companies involvedAuto Union (now Audi), Osram, others[a]
Operational24 March 1944 – 8 May 1945
InmatesPoles were the largest group
Number of inmates9,000 (maximum, April 1945)
18,000 (total)
Killed4,500
Liberated byGerman surrender
Websitewww.gedenkstaette-flossenbuerg.de/en/history/satellite-camps/pottenstein-1-3-2-14-15

Establishment edit

 
 
Leitmeritz
Location of Leitmeritz in Reichsgau Sudetenland.
 
 
Richard
 
Crematorium
 
Barracks
Leitmeritz and Theresienstadt on opposite sides of the Elbe; Small Fortress is on the right of the Eger; the Main Fortress on the left of the river housed the ghetto.[1]

During the last year of the war, the concentration camp prisoner population reached its peak. The SS deployed hundreds of thousands of prisoners on war-related forced labor projects, including some of the most important to the war effort.[2] In the meantime, many war factories had been bombed by the Allies, leading to the decision to disperse production.[3] In 1943, the Auto Union factory in Chemnitz-Siegmar was ordered to be turned over to the production of Maybach HL230 tank engines, much in demand due to attrition on the Eastern Front. By late 1943, Hermann Göring[4] (head of the Four Year Plan for war production, which involved mass forced labor)[5] was planning to disperse the Maybach production from the Chemnitz plant[4] to an underground factory under Radobýl Mountain just west of the town of Leitmeritz (now Litoměřice in the Czech Republic).[6][7] Although there was an existing quarry,[4] the facility had to be expanded in order to accommodate planned spaces for production and assembly several kilometers long.[7] The site was located in Reichsgau Sudetenland, a territory of Czechoslovakia that had been annexed to Germany in 1938 following the Munich Agreement.[8][9]

The largest subcamp of Flossenbürg concentration camp,[10] Leitmeritz was one of the largest of the subcamps in the Sudetenland, whose remote location was favored for armaments production because it was not easily accessible to Allied bombers.[11] Official names for the camp included "SS Kommando B 5", "Außenkommando Leitmeritz" and "Arbeitslager Leitmeritz".[9] The camp was located west of downtown Leitmeritz, 5 kilometres (3 mi) distant[12][13] from Theresienstadt Ghetto in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, a transit ghetto for Jews.[14]

The camp was established by a transport of 500 men from Dachau concentration camp, who arrived at nearby Theresienstadt Small Fortress on 24[7] or 25 March 1944.[15] Due to the lack of accommodation at the work site, they stayed at the Small Fortress (temporarily a Flossenbürg subcamp) until June. The Small Fortress was 7 kilometres (4 mi) away from the Leitmeritz camp site.[7][9][16] From 27 March, they went each day to work in Leitmeritz.[9] By early April, there were also 740 civilian workers, mostly skilled,[15] and 100 prisoners were sent back to Dachau.[9]

Slave labor edit

In May 1944, the authority SS-Führungsstab (SS Leadership Staff) B 5, under the authority of SS magnate Hans Kammler, was created to oversee the forced labor projects at Leitmeritz. The companies involved, Auto Union and Osram, worked closely with both the SS-Führungsstab B 5 and the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production.[17] The SS shell company, Mineral-Öl – Baugesellschaft m.b.H., set up to subcontract construction tasks, hired many enterprises[a] from Germany, the Sudetenland and the Protectorate for various roles involving the camp.[18][19] There was continual conflict between the SS and the companies because the goal of terrorizing and killing prisoners by extermination through labor was incompatible with the aim of securing the highest production possible.[20][21] Whether they were working on the camp or underground, prisoners were not given appropriate equipment and even the most basic safety precautions were not followed.[18] Many prisoners died in accidents due to these deliberately murderous working conditions. Almost every day, the tunnels suffered collapses; 60 prisoners died in just one such incident in May 1944.[22]

Richard I edit

 
Maybach HL230 tank engine

The estimated cost of establishing Maybach production at Leitmeritz was 10 to 20 million Reichsmarks,[6][23] equivalent to US$2.5–5 million at the time[24] or $43–87 million in 2023 dollars.[25] In early April 1944, the SS' goal was to begin production of the engines by July, which would have required 3,500 prisoners.[15] However, the SS withdrew from the project[15][9]—possibly because it was unwilling to accept the responsibility for a risky project[9]—and it was taken over by Amt des Generalbevollmächtigten für Regelung der Bauwirtschaft (GB-Bau, "Office of General Representative for Regulation of the Construction Industry"), part of the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production.[15] On 30 April, Hitler ordered that the dispersal to Leitmeritz be expedited because the Maybach plant in Friedrichshafen had been bombed by the Royal Air Force on the night of 27–28 April.[26][27] From early May, the SS took over the project again.[17][9]

On 11 September 1944, the Auto Union plant in Chemnitz-Siegmar was bombed. Between 25 September and 30 October, the two most important production lines of components—cylinder heads and crankcases—were transferred to the underground factory at Leitmeritz, comprising 180 machines in total. From 3 November, entire Maybach HL230 engines were manufactured in Leitmeritz; the first was completed on 14 November.[18] The production lines were manned by selected skilled prisoners whose detachment was known as Elsabe AG.[7][28] The lack of air circulation in the underground factory exacerbated the illness and exhaustion of many inmates and rusted the production machines, causing many of the completed products to fail quality control.[7][18] In February, the command made efforts to improve the conditions for Elsabe prisoners in order to reduce death rates. The prisoners were housed separately in a warehouse with washrooms and given increased rations of food, while they did not have to participate in as many roll calls.[29][23] Production at Richard I continued until 5 May 1945.[30]

Richard II edit

On 15 May 1944, the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production decided to use Leitmeritz to expand the production of tungsten and molybdenum wire and sheet metal produced by Osram's Berlin factory.[31][17] For this, 15,000 square metres (160,000 sq ft) of underground floor space was required as well as 300 civilian workers and 600 prisoners.[17] The Hamburg company Robert Kieserling was contracted to construct this space.[18] The cover name of Osram operating in Leitmeritz was Kalkspat K.G., which was responsible for machinery, power, access roads, and accommodation for civilian workers.[19] Production was scheduled to begin by the end of 1944, but none ever took place because Osram executives recognized the hopelessness of the war situation.[18]

Command edit

This first commandant, SS-Hauptscharführer Schreiber, arrived with a contingent of 10 SS men who accompanied the transport. Schreiber was replaced by SS-Hauptscharführer Erich von Berg within a few months. The third commandant, SS-Obersturmführer Völkner, tried to improve conditions for prisoners but was replaced in November by SS-Hauptsturmführer Heiling, who had the most brutal reputation of the SS leaders. From February 1945, SS-Untersturmführer Benno Brückner was the commandant. The Schutzhaftlagerführer of the camp had the greatest control over camp conditions. All three of them—SS-Hauptscharführer Willi Czibulka in 1944, Kurt Panicke through March 1945 and SS-Oberscharführer Karl Opitz—had a reputation for arbitrary cruelty. Supervising prisoners in their barracks was the responsibility of the block leaders, while the Labor Operations Department (commanded by SS-Unterscharführer Tilling and later SS-Unterscharführer Piasek) oversaw labor deployment.[32] The Political Department was headed originally by SS-Rottenführer Willi Bacher and later by SS-Rottenführer Hans Rührmeyer. SS-Unterscharführer Hans Kohn initially commanded the supply department. In 1945, Kohn was put in charge of the prisoners' kitchen and SS-Oberscharführer Günter Schmidt and SS-Scharführer Eduard Schwarz succeeded him.[33]

There was a separate command for SS-Führungsstab B 5, headed first by SS-Obersturmführer Werner Meyer, and from November 1944 SS-Sturmbannführer Alfons Kraft.[23] Initially, the camp was guarded by thirty Luftwaffe guards, who reported to the Fighter Staff command in Nordhausen. The first commander of the guard was Emanuel Fritz, a former prosecutor from Vienna, who was replaced by Hauptmann Jelinek in mid-1944 and SS-Oberscharführer Edmund Johann in November. As the camp expanded, the number of Luftwaffe guards increased to as many as 300, who had been seconded from Vienna, Leipzig and Buchenwald. Guards who shot a prisoner were rewarded with leave and a commendation.[33]

Prisoners edit

By August 1944, there were more than 2,800 prisoners, which increased further to 5,000 by November. In April 1945, the population peaked at 9,000, nearly as many as were held in the Flossenbürg main camp.[7] An estimated 18,000 people passed through the camp.[18] The plurality of prisoners came from Flossenbürg (3,649); large numbers also came from Gross-Rosen (3,253), Auschwitz II-Birkenau (1,995), and Dachau (1,441).[34][35] In March and April 1945, 2,000 people were deported to Leitmeritz from various Flossenbürg subcamps and 800 from subcamps of Buchenwald due to the advance of Allied armies.[36] Leitmeritz began as a male camp, but from February to April 1945, 770 women also were imprisoned at the site,[7] to work for Osram.[36] An unusually high number of the prisoners, about 3,600[11] or 4,000, were Jews, most of whom were from Poland and the first of whom arrived on 9 August 1944.[36] By country of origin, the largest groups were Poles (almost 9,000), Soviet citizens (3,500), Germans (950), Hungarians (850), French (800), Yugoslavs (more than 600) and Czechs (more than 500).[32]

Transports to Leitmeritz, 1944-45[b]
Date of arrival Source Number of deportees Notes
24 March Dachau 500
31 June Gross-Rosen 1,202
25 July Dachau 400 Included many Slovenian partisans[36]
9 August Flossenbürg 1,038 Polish Jews
4 September Flossenbürg 1,296 Poles
17 September Auschwitz II-Birkenau 1,495 Warsaw Uprising detainees
18 October Flossenbürg 300
28 October Auschwitz II-Birkenau 500 Warsaw Uprising detainees
25 November Flossenbürg 248 For Richard I
8 December Flossenbürg 452 For Richard I
6 January Kaufering 835 Jews[36][16]
27 January Dachau 206
14 February Gross-Rosen 2,051 Part of the evacuation of the camp; 68 prisoners died during the transport.[36]
23 February Königstein 565
2 April Zwickau 416
6 April Ravensbrück 300 Women
9 April Buchenwald 1,473
14 April Dresden 200
16 April Chemnitz 370 Women
20 April Gröditz 325

Conditions edit

 
Aerial photograph of the concentration camp barracks, 1945

The camp itself was located in a former Czechoslovak Army base. The SS guards and administrators as well as civilian laborers lived in the original soldiers' quarters, while prisoners were warehoused in the former stables, indoor riding arena, and storage depot, which were surrounded by a double barbed-wire fence and seven watchtowers. During mid-1944, the prisoners renovated the buildings in order to house more prisoners. A kitchen was set up in June 1944 and the infirmary was built around September. Additional barracks were built during the winter of 1944–1945 to accommodate increases in the prisoner population. By April 1945, seven additional barracks had been built for prisoners while an additional two were planned.[9][37] The capacity was 4,300 men—which had already been exceeded[7]—and 1,000 women in the separate women's camp.[37]

Despite the continual increase in the number of prisoners, not enough accommodation was built, resulting in serious overcrowding and major problems with hygiene.[7] Rations of food were completely inadequate.[7][33] The rate of infectious disease, especially tuberculosis, was very high; at the end of 1944 many prisoners were x-rayed, showing that nearly half had the disease.[22] By February 1945, a third of prisoners were incapacitated by disease, preventing sufficient prisoners from being mustered for slave labor. As a result, the companies constantly had to train new prisoners. Initially the prisoners were grouped in quarters based on the transport they arrived in; later they were organized by work group but not nationality as was typical elsewhere.[33]

Prisoners called it the "death factory";[10] about 4,500 prisoners died at the camp.[11] According to records, 150 people died through November 1944 and after that the mortality rate climbed, with 706 deaths in December, 934 in January 1945, and 862 in February.[38] The increase in the death rate coincided with the arrival of Jewish prisoners. The Warsaw Uprising detainees were specifically targeted by the kapos and SS guards; a third did not survive.[36] Victims were first cremated at the Theresienstadt crematorium [cs] at the Small Fortress. Due to the large number of deaths, another crematorium was built at Leitmeritz in April. The remains of 66 others, who had been buried in seven mass graves, were exhumed in 1946; another 723 bodies were found in a 40-metre (130 ft) long anti-tank ditch. After the war, these victims were reburied in the cemetery at Theresienstadt Small Fortress [cs].[39] Before the evacuation of the camp, 3,869 prisoners, primarily those unable to work, were sent to other camps, including 1,657 to Flossenbürg and its subcamps and 1,200 (suffering from typhus and dysentery) to Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.[40][32] Their fate is not known.[32]

Dissolution edit

In the last week of the war, Leitmeritz was a hub for many death marches. Thousands of prisoners arrived at the camp,[21] where there was no space for them. Some prisoners had to sleep outside while others, during the last few days of the war, slept in the tunnels.[23] Prisoners were bundled into almost 100 transports and deported south into Bohemia. The number of deaths during the evacuation is unknown.[21] About 1,222 prisoners, mostly Jewish men[41]—some from Leitmeritz itself, others who had arrived after death marches from elsewhere—ended up in Theresienstadt Ghetto.[42] However, some of them may have been sent there after liberation.[43] Ninety-eight died in Theresienstadt.[44]

After Flossenbürg main camp was liberated by the United States Army on 23 April 1945, Leitmeritz continued to operate, administering nearby concentration camps such as Lobositz.[7] On the afternoon of 5 May, Panicke summoned the prisoners to announce that the war was over and they would be released. Between 6 and 8 May, many prisoners received certificates for their release.[30] The camp was officially dissolved by the German Instrument of Surrender on 8 May.[7] On 9–10 May, 5th Guards Army of the Red Army arrived at the site, finding 1,200 sick prisoners who had been left behind. The Czechoslovak militia guarded the site until 16 May, when it was taken over by the Red Army. Parts of the Soviet and Czech medical missions to Theresienstadt were diverted to Leitmeritz. The last prisoners were repatriated in July 1945.[30]

Aftermath edit

 
Memorial to the victims of the camp, designed by Jiří Sozanský [cs]

The Elsabe production lines were dismantled and shipped to the Soviet Union as war reparations, while the barracks were returned to use by the Czechoslovak Army, and used until 2003.[30] The crematorium is the only part of the former camp open to the public. Nearby,[30] a memorial to the victims of the camp designed by the Czech artist Jiří Sozanský [cs], was unveiled in 1992. The memorial[45] and the surviving archives of the former camp are administered by the Terezín Memorial [cs]. Leitmeritz is known as "one of the most infamous and best researched Flossenbürg subcamps"; the Terezín Memorial has sponsored research into the camp's history.[21] In 2014, Audi (the successor to Auto Union) released a report by Audi historian Martin Kukowski and Chemnitz University of Technology academic Rudolf Boch [de] that it had commissioned into its activity during the Nazi era. According to the report, the company bore "moral responsibility" for the 4,500 deaths that occurred at Leitmeritz.[46][47][48]

In 1946, former Schutzhaftlagerführer Karl Opitz was convicted of responsibility for the execution of thirty prisoners and sentenced to life in prison by a Czechoslovak court.[32] In 1974, former guard Henryk Matuszkowiak was convicted and sentenced to death in Poland for committing fourteen murders at Leitmeritz.[49] In 2001, Julius Viel [de; fr] was convicted by a German court of murdering seven Jewish prisoners in an anti-tank trench in the spring of 1945, despite having claimed to be in Vienna when the murders were committed. The information which led to his conviction was given by a Hungarian-born former SS man, Adalbert Lallier. More than 360 witnesses were interviewed by the prosecutors.[50][51]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Companies involved included Fuchs & Co. Cottbus, Siemens-Schuckertwerke A. G. Teplitz-Schönau, Siemens-Halske A. G. Dresden, Wolfferts & Wittmer Berlin, Fritz Pollems K. G. Berlin, Dyckerhoff & Widmann Dresden, Polensky & Zöllner Driesen Nm., Alwin Böhme & Sohn Leipzig, Oberschlesische Baugesellschaft m.b.H. Kattowitz, Josef Kargel Reichenberg, Ferngas A. G. Teplitz-Schönau, Wiener Baugesellschaft m.b.H. Dniepropetrowsk, Paul Schreck K. G. Halle und Robert Kieserling Hamburg.[18]
  2. ^ Source: Benešová 1995, pp. 233–234 Transports with fewer than 200 prisoners are not listed. Also not listed are evacuation transports that occurred in late April and early May.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Plch & Plch 2018, pp. 79, 82–83.
  2. ^ Kárný 1993, p. 37.
  3. ^ Uziel 2011, pp. 190, 195, 203.
  4. ^ a b c Kárný 1993, pp. 38–39.
  5. ^ "Four-Year Plan" (PDF). Shoah Resource Center. Yad Vashem. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  6. ^ a b Kárný 1993, p. 39.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Skriebeleit 2009, p. 627.
  8. ^ Osterloh 2015, p. 73.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i Langhamerová 2007, p. 169.
  10. ^ a b Skriebeleit 2009, p. 626.
  11. ^ a b c Osterloh 2015, p. 87.
  12. ^ Brenner 2009, p. 607.
  13. ^ Plch & Plch 2018, pp. 82–83.
  14. ^ Plch & Plch 2018, p. 76.
  15. ^ a b c d e Kárný 1993, p. 40.
  16. ^ a b Benešová 1995, p. 233.
  17. ^ a b c d Kárný 1993, p. 41.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h Langhamerová 2007, p. 171.
  19. ^ a b Kárný 1993, pp. 41–42.
  20. ^ Kárný 1993, p. 43.
  21. ^ a b c d Skriebeleit 2009, p. 628.
  22. ^ a b Skriebeleit 2009, pp. 627–628.
  23. ^ a b c d Langhamerová 2007, p. 170.
  24. ^ Foreign Claims Settlement Commission 1968, p. 655.
  25. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  26. ^ Kárný 1993, p. 38.
  27. ^ Levine 2000, p. 37.
  28. ^ Kukowski 2003, p. 31.
  29. ^ Skriebeleit 2009, p. 638.
  30. ^ a b c d e Langhamerová 2007, p. 175.
  31. ^ Langhamerová 2007, pp. 170–171.
  32. ^ a b c d e Langhamerová 2007, p. 173.
  33. ^ a b c d Langhamerová 2007, p. 174.
  34. ^ Langhamerová 2007, pp. 171–172.
  35. ^ Benešová 1995, pp. 233–234.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g Langhamerová 2007, p. 172.
  37. ^ a b Benešová 1995, p. 218.
  38. ^ Benešová 1995, p. 236.
  39. ^ Benešová 1995, pp. 231–232.
  40. ^ Benešová 1995, pp. 235–236.
  41. ^ Poloncarz 1999, pp. 255, 259.
  42. ^ Poloncarz 1999, pp. 243, 248.
  43. ^ Poloncarz 1999, p. 259.
  44. ^ Poloncarz 1999, p. 251.
  45. ^ "Litoměřice Memorial". Information Portal to European Sites of Remembrance. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  46. ^ Le Blond, Josie (26 May 2014). "Slave probe exposes Audi's Nazi past". The Local. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  47. ^ "Auto Union: Historiker legen braune Vergangenheit von Audi offen". Die Welt. AFP. 25 May 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2020.
  48. ^ Schanetzky 2016, p. 186.
  49. ^ "News Brief". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 26 February 1974. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
  50. ^ "German Nazi jailed at 83". BBC News. 3 April 2001.
  51. ^ Eisenthal, Bram (10 April 2001). "Former SS man breaks oath of silence". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 8 January 2020.

Sources edit

  • Benešová, Miroslava (1995). "Das Konzentrationslager in Leitmeritz und seine Häftlinge" [Leitmeritz concentration camp and its prisoners]. Theresienstädter Studien und Dokumente (in German) (2): 217–240. CEEOL 142663.
  • Brenner, Hans (2009). "Hainichen". In Megargee, Geoffrey P. (ed.). Early Camps, Youth Camps, and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945 Volume 1. Translated by Pallavicini, Stephen. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 605–607. ISBN 978-0-253-35328-3.
  • Foreign Claims Settlement Commission (1968). Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the United States: Decisions and Annotations. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. OCLC 1041397012.
  • Kárný, Miroslav (1993). ">>Vernichtung durch Arbeit<< in Leitmeritz. Dei SS-Führungsstäbe in der deutschen Kriegswirtschaft" [Extermination through labor in Leitmeritz. The SS leadership in the German war economy.]. 1999: Zeitschrift für Sozialgeschichte des 20. Und 21. Jahrhunderts (4): 37–61. ISSN 0930-9977.
  • Kukowski, Martin (2003). Die Chemnitzer Auto Union AG und die "Demokratisierung" der Wirtschaft in der Sowjetischen Besatzungszone von 1945 bis 1948 [The Chemnitz Auto Union AG and the "Democratization" of the Economy in the Soviet Occupation Zone from 1945 to 1948] (in German). Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 978-3-515-08059-0.
  • Langhamerová, Miroslava (2007). "Leitmeritz". 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. 169–175. ISBN 9783406562297.
  • Levine, Alan J. (2000). From the Normandy Beaches to the Baltic Sea: The Northwest Europe Campaign, 1944–1945. Westport: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-96920-2.
  • Osterloh, Jörg (2015). "Sudetenland". In Gruner, Wolf; Osterloh, Jörg (eds.). The Greater German Reich and the Jews: Nazi Persecution Policies in the Annexed Territories 1935–1945. War and Genocide. Translated by Heise, Bernard. New York: Berghahn Books. pp. 68–98. ISBN 978-1-78238-444-1.
  • Plch, Milan; Plch, Roman (2018). Tajemná místa nacismu [Mysterious places of Nazism] (in Czech). Brno: Computer Press. ISBN 978-80-264-1900-6.
  • Poloncarz, Marek (1999). "Die Evakuierungstransporte nach Theresienstadt (April – Mai 1945)" [The Evacuation-Transports to Terezin (April–May 1945)]. Theresienstädter Studien und Dokumente (in German) (6): 242–262. CEEOL 69753.
  • Schanetzky, Tim (2016). "Kriegswirtschaft und Arbeitseinsatz bei der Auto Union AG Chemnitz im Zweiten Weltkrieg by Martin Kukowski and Rudolph Boch". German Studies Review. 39 (1): 186–188. doi:10.1353/gsr.2016.0033. S2CID 163393973.
  • Skriebeleit, Jörg (2009). "Leitmeritz". In Megargee, Geoffrey P. (ed.). Early Camps, Youth Camps, and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA). Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. 1. Translated by Pallavicini, Stephen. Bloomington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. pp. 626–628. ISBN 978-0-253-35328-3.
  • Uziel, Daniel (2011). Arming the Luftwaffe: The German Aviation Industry in World War II. Jefferson: McFarland. ISBN 9780786488797.

Further reading edit

  • Adamczyk, A (1980). "Ostatnie dni w szpitalu obozu w Litomierzycach" [The Last Days in the Hospital of the Leitmeritz Camp]. Przeglad Lekarski (in Polish). 37 (1): 184–186. PMID 6988885.
  • Bursíková, Barbora (2017). Konec války, Litoměřice v roce 1945 [The End of the War: Litoměřice in 1945] (Master's thesis) (in Czech). Charles University: Catholic Theological Faculty, Institute of the History of Christian Art.
  • Cziborra, Pascal (2017). KZ Leitmeritz: Frauen für Richard [Leitmeritz Concentration Camp: Women for Richard]. Die Außenlager des KZ Flossenbürg [The Subcamps of Flossenbürg Concentration Camp] (in German). Vol. 12. Bielefeld: Lorbeer-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-938969-53-3.
  • Kukowski, Martin; Boch, Rudolf (2014). Kriegswirtschaft und Arbeitseinsatz bei der Auto Union AG Chemnitz im Zweiten Weltkrieg [War Economy and Employment at Auto Union AG Chemnitz in the Second World War] (in German). Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 978-3-515-10618-4.

External links edit

50°32′28″N 14°06′44″E / 50.54111°N 14.11222°E / 50.54111; 14.11222

leitmeritz, concentration, camp, leitmeritz, largest, subcamp, flossenbürg, concentration, camp, operated, nazi, germany, leitmeritz, reichsgau, sudetenland, litoměřice, czech, republic, established, march, 1944, part, effort, disperse, increase, production, p. Leitmeritz was the largest subcamp of the Flossenburg concentration camp operated by Nazi Germany in Leitmeritz Reichsgau Sudetenland now Litomerice Czech Republic Established on 24 March 1944 as part of an effort to disperse and increase war production its prisoners were forced to work in the caverns Richard I and II producing Maybach HL230 tank engines for Auto Union now Audi and preparing the second site for intended production of tungsten and molybdenum wire and sheet metal by Osram Of the 18 000 prisoners who passed through the camp about 4 500 died due to disease malnutrition and accidents caused by the disregard for safety by the SS staff who administered the camp In the last weeks of the war the camp became a hub for death marches The camp operated until 8 May 1945 when it was dissolved by the German surrender LeitmeritzsubcampFormer crematoriumLocationLeitmeritz Reichsgau Sudetenland now Litomerice Czech Republic Operated byNazi GermanyCompanies involvedAuto Union now Audi Osram others a Operational24 March 1944 8 May 1945InmatesPoles were the largest groupNumber of inmates9 000 maximum April 1945 18 000 total Killed4 500Liberated byGerman surrenderWebsitewww wbr gedenkstaette flossenbuerg wbr de wbr en wbr history wbr satellite camps wbr pottenstein 1 3 2 14 15 Contents 1 Establishment 2 Slave labor 2 1 Richard I 2 2 Richard II 3 Command 4 Prisoners 5 Conditions 6 Dissolution 7 Aftermath 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEstablishment editSee also The Holocaust in the Sudetenland nbsp nbsp LeitmeritzLocation of Leitmeritz in Reichsgau Sudetenland nbsp nbsp Richard nbsp Crematorium nbsp BarracksLeitmeritz and Theresienstadt on opposite sides of the Elbe Small Fortress is on the right of the Eger the Main Fortress on the left of the river housed the ghetto 1 During the last year of the war the concentration camp prisoner population reached its peak The SS deployed hundreds of thousands of prisoners on war related forced labor projects including some of the most important to the war effort 2 In the meantime many war factories had been bombed by the Allies leading to the decision to disperse production 3 In 1943 the Auto Union factory in Chemnitz Siegmar was ordered to be turned over to the production of Maybach HL230 tank engines much in demand due to attrition on the Eastern Front By late 1943 Hermann Goring 4 head of the Four Year Plan for war production which involved mass forced labor 5 was planning to disperse the Maybach production from the Chemnitz plant 4 to an underground factory under Radobyl Mountain just west of the town of Leitmeritz now Litomerice in the Czech Republic 6 7 Although there was an existing quarry 4 the facility had to be expanded in order to accommodate planned spaces for production and assembly several kilometers long 7 The site was located in Reichsgau Sudetenland a territory of Czechoslovakia that had been annexed to Germany in 1938 following the Munich Agreement 8 9 The largest subcamp of Flossenburg concentration camp 10 Leitmeritz was one of the largest of the subcamps in the Sudetenland whose remote location was favored for armaments production because it was not easily accessible to Allied bombers 11 Official names for the camp included SS Kommando B 5 Aussenkommando Leitmeritz and Arbeitslager Leitmeritz 9 The camp was located west of downtown Leitmeritz 5 kilometres 3 mi distant 12 13 from Theresienstadt Ghetto in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a transit ghetto for Jews 14 The camp was established by a transport of 500 men from Dachau concentration camp who arrived at nearby Theresienstadt Small Fortress on 24 7 or 25 March 1944 15 Due to the lack of accommodation at the work site they stayed at the Small Fortress temporarily a Flossenburg subcamp until June The Small Fortress was 7 kilometres 4 mi away from the Leitmeritz camp site 7 9 16 From 27 March they went each day to work in Leitmeritz 9 By early April there were also 740 civilian workers mostly skilled 15 and 100 prisoners were sent back to Dachau 9 Slave labor editIn May 1944 the authority SS Fuhrungsstab SS Leadership Staff B 5 under the authority of SS magnate Hans Kammler was created to oversee the forced labor projects at Leitmeritz The companies involved Auto Union and Osram worked closely with both the SS Fuhrungsstab B 5 and the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production 17 The SS shell company Mineral Ol Baugesellschaft m b H set up to subcontract construction tasks hired many enterprises a from Germany the Sudetenland and the Protectorate for various roles involving the camp 18 19 There was continual conflict between the SS and the companies because the goal of terrorizing and killing prisoners by extermination through labor was incompatible with the aim of securing the highest production possible 20 21 Whether they were working on the camp or underground prisoners were not given appropriate equipment and even the most basic safety precautions were not followed 18 Many prisoners died in accidents due to these deliberately murderous working conditions Almost every day the tunnels suffered collapses 60 prisoners died in just one such incident in May 1944 22 Richard I edit nbsp Maybach HL230 tank engine The estimated cost of establishing Maybach production at Leitmeritz was 10 to 20 million Reichsmarks 6 23 equivalent to US 2 5 5 million at the time 24 or 43 87 million in 2023 dollars 25 In early April 1944 the SS goal was to begin production of the engines by July which would have required 3 500 prisoners 15 However the SS withdrew from the project 15 9 possibly because it was unwilling to accept the responsibility for a risky project 9 and it was taken over by Amt des Generalbevollmachtigten fur Regelung der Bauwirtschaft GB Bau Office of General Representative for Regulation of the Construction Industry part of the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production 15 On 30 April Hitler ordered that the dispersal to Leitmeritz be expedited because the Maybach plant in Friedrichshafen had been bombed by the Royal Air Force on the night of 27 28 April 26 27 From early May the SS took over the project again 17 9 On 11 September 1944 the Auto Union plant in Chemnitz Siegmar was bombed Between 25 September and 30 October the two most important production lines of components cylinder heads and crankcases were transferred to the underground factory at Leitmeritz comprising 180 machines in total From 3 November entire Maybach HL230 engines were manufactured in Leitmeritz the first was completed on 14 November 18 The production lines were manned by selected skilled prisoners whose detachment was known as Elsabe AG 7 28 The lack of air circulation in the underground factory exacerbated the illness and exhaustion of many inmates and rusted the production machines causing many of the completed products to fail quality control 7 18 In February the command made efforts to improve the conditions for Elsabe prisoners in order to reduce death rates The prisoners were housed separately in a warehouse with washrooms and given increased rations of food while they did not have to participate in as many roll calls 29 23 Production at Richard I continued until 5 May 1945 30 Richard II edit On 15 May 1944 the Reich Ministry of Armaments and War Production decided to use Leitmeritz to expand the production of tungsten and molybdenum wire and sheet metal produced by Osram s Berlin factory 31 17 For this 15 000 square metres 160 000 sq ft of underground floor space was required as well as 300 civilian workers and 600 prisoners 17 The Hamburg company Robert Kieserling was contracted to construct this space 18 The cover name of Osram operating in Leitmeritz was Kalkspat K G which was responsible for machinery power access roads and accommodation for civilian workers 19 Production was scheduled to begin by the end of 1944 but none ever took place because Osram executives recognized the hopelessness of the war situation 18 Command editThis first commandant SS Hauptscharfuhrer Schreiber arrived with a contingent of 10 SS men who accompanied the transport Schreiber was replaced by SS Hauptscharfuhrer Erich von Berg within a few months The third commandant SS Obersturmfuhrer Volkner tried to improve conditions for prisoners but was replaced in November by SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Heiling who had the most brutal reputation of the SS leaders From February 1945 SS Untersturmfuhrer Benno Bruckner was the commandant The Schutzhaftlagerfuhrer of the camp had the greatest control over camp conditions All three of them SS Hauptscharfuhrer Willi Czibulka in 1944 Kurt Panicke through March 1945 and SS Oberscharfuhrer Karl Opitz had a reputation for arbitrary cruelty Supervising prisoners in their barracks was the responsibility of the block leaders while the Labor Operations Department commanded by SS Unterscharfuhrer Tilling and later SS Unterscharfuhrer Piasek oversaw labor deployment 32 The Political Department was headed originally by SS Rottenfuhrer Willi Bacher and later by SS Rottenfuhrer Hans Ruhrmeyer SS Unterscharfuhrer Hans Kohn initially commanded the supply department In 1945 Kohn was put in charge of the prisoners kitchen and SS Oberscharfuhrer Gunter Schmidt and SS Scharfuhrer Eduard Schwarz succeeded him 33 There was a separate command for SS Fuhrungsstab B 5 headed first by SS Obersturmfuhrer Werner Meyer and from November 1944 SS Sturmbannfuhrer Alfons Kraft 23 Initially the camp was guarded by thirty Luftwaffe guards who reported to the Fighter Staff command in Nordhausen The first commander of the guard was Emanuel Fritz a former prosecutor from Vienna who was replaced by Hauptmann Jelinek in mid 1944 and SS Oberscharfuhrer Edmund Johann in November As the camp expanded the number of Luftwaffe guards increased to as many as 300 who had been seconded from Vienna Leipzig and Buchenwald Guards who shot a prisoner were rewarded with leave and a commendation 33 Prisoners editBy August 1944 there were more than 2 800 prisoners which increased further to 5 000 by November In April 1945 the population peaked at 9 000 nearly as many as were held in the Flossenburg main camp 7 An estimated 18 000 people passed through the camp 18 The plurality of prisoners came from Flossenburg 3 649 large numbers also came from Gross Rosen 3 253 Auschwitz II Birkenau 1 995 and Dachau 1 441 34 35 In March and April 1945 2 000 people were deported to Leitmeritz from various Flossenburg subcamps and 800 from subcamps of Buchenwald due to the advance of Allied armies 36 Leitmeritz began as a male camp but from February to April 1945 770 women also were imprisoned at the site 7 to work for Osram 36 An unusually high number of the prisoners about 3 600 11 or 4 000 were Jews most of whom were from Poland and the first of whom arrived on 9 August 1944 36 By country of origin the largest groups were Poles almost 9 000 Soviet citizens 3 500 Germans 950 Hungarians 850 French 800 Yugoslavs more than 600 and Czechs more than 500 32 Transports to Leitmeritz 1944 45 b Date of arrival Source Number of deportees Notes 24 March Dachau 500 31 June Gross Rosen 1 202 25 July Dachau 400 Included many Slovenian partisans 36 9 August Flossenburg 1 038 Polish Jews 4 September Flossenburg 1 296 Poles 17 September Auschwitz II Birkenau 1 495 Warsaw Uprising detainees 18 October Flossenburg 300 28 October Auschwitz II Birkenau 500 Warsaw Uprising detainees 25 November Flossenburg 248 For Richard I 8 December Flossenburg 452 For Richard I 6 January Kaufering 835 Jews 36 16 27 January Dachau 206 14 February Gross Rosen 2 051 Part of the evacuation of the camp 68 prisoners died during the transport 36 23 February Konigstein 565 2 April Zwickau 416 6 April Ravensbruck 300 Women 9 April Buchenwald 1 473 14 April Dresden 200 16 April Chemnitz 370 Women 20 April Groditz 325Conditions edit nbsp Aerial photograph of the concentration camp barracks 1945 The camp itself was located in a former Czechoslovak Army base The SS guards and administrators as well as civilian laborers lived in the original soldiers quarters while prisoners were warehoused in the former stables indoor riding arena and storage depot which were surrounded by a double barbed wire fence and seven watchtowers During mid 1944 the prisoners renovated the buildings in order to house more prisoners A kitchen was set up in June 1944 and the infirmary was built around September Additional barracks were built during the winter of 1944 1945 to accommodate increases in the prisoner population By April 1945 seven additional barracks had been built for prisoners while an additional two were planned 9 37 The capacity was 4 300 men which had already been exceeded 7 and 1 000 women in the separate women s camp 37 Despite the continual increase in the number of prisoners not enough accommodation was built resulting in serious overcrowding and major problems with hygiene 7 Rations of food were completely inadequate 7 33 The rate of infectious disease especially tuberculosis was very high at the end of 1944 many prisoners were x rayed showing that nearly half had the disease 22 By February 1945 a third of prisoners were incapacitated by disease preventing sufficient prisoners from being mustered for slave labor As a result the companies constantly had to train new prisoners Initially the prisoners were grouped in quarters based on the transport they arrived in later they were organized by work group but not nationality as was typical elsewhere 33 Prisoners called it the death factory 10 about 4 500 prisoners died at the camp 11 According to records 150 people died through November 1944 and after that the mortality rate climbed with 706 deaths in December 934 in January 1945 and 862 in February 38 The increase in the death rate coincided with the arrival of Jewish prisoners The Warsaw Uprising detainees were specifically targeted by the kapos and SS guards a third did not survive 36 Victims were first cremated at the Theresienstadt crematorium cs at the Small Fortress Due to the large number of deaths another crematorium was built at Leitmeritz in April The remains of 66 others who had been buried in seven mass graves were exhumed in 1946 another 723 bodies were found in a 40 metre 130 ft long anti tank ditch After the war these victims were reburied in the cemetery at Theresienstadt Small Fortress cs 39 Before the evacuation of the camp 3 869 prisoners primarily those unable to work were sent to other camps including 1 657 to Flossenburg and its subcamps and 1 200 suffering from typhus and dysentery to Bergen Belsen concentration camp 40 32 Their fate is not known 32 Dissolution editIn the last week of the war Leitmeritz was a hub for many death marches Thousands of prisoners arrived at the camp 21 where there was no space for them Some prisoners had to sleep outside while others during the last few days of the war slept in the tunnels 23 Prisoners were bundled into almost 100 transports and deported south into Bohemia The number of deaths during the evacuation is unknown 21 About 1 222 prisoners mostly Jewish men 41 some from Leitmeritz itself others who had arrived after death marches from elsewhere ended up in Theresienstadt Ghetto 42 However some of them may have been sent there after liberation 43 Ninety eight died in Theresienstadt 44 After Flossenburg main camp was liberated by the United States Army on 23 April 1945 Leitmeritz continued to operate administering nearby concentration camps such as Lobositz 7 On the afternoon of 5 May Panicke summoned the prisoners to announce that the war was over and they would be released Between 6 and 8 May many prisoners received certificates for their release 30 The camp was officially dissolved by the German Instrument of Surrender on 8 May 7 On 9 10 May 5th Guards Army of the Red Army arrived at the site finding 1 200 sick prisoners who had been left behind The Czechoslovak militia guarded the site until 16 May when it was taken over by the Red Army Parts of the Soviet and Czech medical missions to Theresienstadt were diverted to Leitmeritz The last prisoners were repatriated in July 1945 30 Aftermath edit nbsp Memorial to the victims of the camp designed by Jiri Sozansky cs The Elsabe production lines were dismantled and shipped to the Soviet Union as war reparations while the barracks were returned to use by the Czechoslovak Army and used until 2003 30 The crematorium is the only part of the former camp open to the public Nearby 30 a memorial to the victims of the camp designed by the Czech artist Jiri Sozansky cs was unveiled in 1992 The memorial 45 and the surviving archives of the former camp are administered by the Terezin Memorial cs Leitmeritz is known as one of the most infamous and best researched Flossenburg subcamps the Terezin Memorial has sponsored research into the camp s history 21 In 2014 Audi the successor to Auto Union released a report by Audi historian Martin Kukowski and Chemnitz University of Technology academic Rudolf Boch de that it had commissioned into its activity during the Nazi era According to the report the company bore moral responsibility for the 4 500 deaths that occurred at Leitmeritz 46 47 48 In 1946 former Schutzhaftlagerfuhrer Karl Opitz was convicted of responsibility for the execution of thirty prisoners and sentenced to life in prison by a Czechoslovak court 32 In 1974 former guard Henryk Matuszkowiak was convicted and sentenced to death in Poland for committing fourteen murders at Leitmeritz 49 In 2001 Julius Viel de fr was convicted by a German court of murdering seven Jewish prisoners in an anti tank trench in the spring of 1945 despite having claimed to be in Vienna when the murders were committed The information which led to his conviction was given by a Hungarian born former SS man Adalbert Lallier More than 360 witnesses were interviewed by the prosecutors 50 51 Notes edit a b Companies involved included Fuchs amp Co Cottbus Siemens Schuckertwerke A G Teplitz Schonau Siemens Halske A G Dresden Wolfferts amp Wittmer Berlin Fritz Pollems K G Berlin Dyckerhoff amp Widmann Dresden Polensky amp Zollner Driesen Nm Alwin Bohme amp Sohn Leipzig Oberschlesische Baugesellschaft m b H Kattowitz Josef Kargel Reichenberg Ferngas A G Teplitz Schonau Wiener Baugesellschaft m b H Dniepropetrowsk Paul Schreck K G Halle und Robert Kieserling Hamburg 18 Source Benesova 1995 pp 233 234 Transports with fewer than 200 prisoners are not listed Also not listed are evacuation transports that occurred in late April and early May References editCitations edit Plch amp Plch 2018 pp 79 82 83 Karny 1993 p 37 Uziel 2011 pp 190 195 203 a b c Karny 1993 pp 38 39 Four Year Plan PDF Shoah Resource Center Yad Vashem Retrieved 7 March 2020 a b Karny 1993 p 39 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Skriebeleit 2009 p 627 Osterloh 2015 p 73 a b c d e f g h i Langhamerova 2007 p 169 a b Skriebeleit 2009 p 626 a b c Osterloh 2015 p 87 Brenner 2009 p 607 Plch amp Plch 2018 pp 82 83 Plch amp Plch 2018 p 76 a b c d e Karny 1993 p 40 a b Benesova 1995 p 233 a b c d Karny 1993 p 41 a b c d e f g h Langhamerova 2007 p 171 a b Karny 1993 pp 41 42 Karny 1993 p 43 a b c d Skriebeleit 2009 p 628 a b Skriebeleit 2009 pp 627 628 a b c d Langhamerova 2007 p 170 Foreign Claims Settlement Commission 1968 p 655 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Karny 1993 p 38 Levine 2000 p 37 Kukowski 2003 p 31 Skriebeleit 2009 p 638 a b c d e Langhamerova 2007 p 175 Langhamerova 2007 pp 170 171 a b c d e Langhamerova 2007 p 173 a b c d Langhamerova 2007 p 174 Langhamerova 2007 pp 171 172 Benesova 1995 pp 233 234 a b c d e f g Langhamerova 2007 p 172 a b Benesova 1995 p 218 Benesova 1995 p 236 Benesova 1995 pp 231 232 Benesova 1995 pp 235 236 Poloncarz 1999 pp 255 259 Poloncarz 1999 pp 243 248 Poloncarz 1999 p 259 Poloncarz 1999 p 251 Litomerice Memorial Information Portal to European Sites of Remembrance Retrieved 11 January 2020 Le Blond Josie 26 May 2014 Slave probe exposes Audi s Nazi past The Local Retrieved 9 January 2020 Auto Union Historiker legen braune Vergangenheit von Audi offen Die Welt AFP 25 May 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2020 Schanetzky 2016 p 186 News Brief Jewish Telegraphic Agency 26 February 1974 Retrieved 9 January 2020 German Nazi jailed at 83 BBC News 3 April 2001 Eisenthal Bram 10 April 2001 Former SS man breaks oath of silence Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 8 January 2020 Sources edit Benesova Miroslava 1995 Das Konzentrationslager in Leitmeritz und seine Haftlinge Leitmeritz concentration camp and its prisoners Theresienstadter Studien und Dokumente in German 2 217 240 CEEOL 142663 Brenner Hans 2009 Hainichen In Megargee Geoffrey P ed Early Camps Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume 1 Translated by Pallavicini Stephen Bloomington United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 605 607 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Foreign Claims Settlement Commission 1968 Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the United States Decisions and Annotations Washington D C U S Government Printing Office OCLC 1041397012 Karny Miroslav 1993 gt gt Vernichtung durch Arbeit lt lt in Leitmeritz Dei SS Fuhrungsstabe in der deutschen Kriegswirtschaft Extermination through labor in Leitmeritz The SS leadership in the German war economy 1999 Zeitschrift fur Sozialgeschichte des 20 Und 21 Jahrhunderts 4 37 61 ISSN 0930 9977 Kukowski Martin 2003 Die Chemnitzer Auto Union AG und die Demokratisierung der Wirtschaft in der Sowjetischen Besatzungszone von 1945 bis 1948 The Chemnitz Auto Union AG and the Democratization of the Economy in the Soviet Occupation Zone from 1945 to 1948 in German Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 978 3 515 08059 0 Langhamerova Miroslava 2007 Leitmeritz 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 169 175 ISBN 9783406562297 Levine Alan J 2000 From the Normandy Beaches to the Baltic Sea The Northwest Europe Campaign 1944 1945 Westport Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 96920 2 Osterloh Jorg 2015 Sudetenland In Gruner Wolf Osterloh Jorg eds The Greater German Reich and the Jews Nazi Persecution Policies in the Annexed Territories 1935 1945 War and Genocide Translated by Heise Bernard New York Berghahn Books pp 68 98 ISBN 978 1 78238 444 1 Plch Milan Plch Roman 2018 Tajemna mista nacismu Mysterious places of Nazism in Czech Brno Computer Press ISBN 978 80 264 1900 6 Poloncarz Marek 1999 Die Evakuierungstransporte nach Theresienstadt April Mai 1945 The Evacuation Transports to Terezin April May 1945 Theresienstadter Studien und Dokumente in German 6 242 262 CEEOL 69753 Schanetzky Tim 2016 Kriegswirtschaft und Arbeitseinsatz bei der Auto Union AG Chemnitz im Zweiten Weltkrieg by Martin Kukowski and Rudolph Boch German Studies Review 39 1 186 188 doi 10 1353 gsr 2016 0033 S2CID 163393973 Skriebeleit Jorg 2009 Leitmeritz In Megargee Geoffrey P ed Early Camps Youth Camps and Concentration Camps and Subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Vol 1 Translated by Pallavicini Stephen Bloomington United States Holocaust Memorial Museum pp 626 628 ISBN 978 0 253 35328 3 Uziel Daniel 2011 Arming the Luftwaffe The German Aviation Industry in World War II Jefferson McFarland ISBN 9780786488797 Further reading editAdamczyk A 1980 Ostatnie dni w szpitalu obozu w Litomierzycach The Last Days in the Hospital of the Leitmeritz Camp Przeglad Lekarski in Polish 37 1 184 186 PMID 6988885 Bursikova Barbora 2017 Konec valky Litomerice v roce 1945 The End of the War Litomerice in 1945 Master s thesis in Czech Charles University Catholic Theological Faculty Institute of the History of Christian Art Cziborra Pascal 2017 KZ Leitmeritz Frauen fur Richard Leitmeritz Concentration Camp Women for Richard Die Aussenlager des KZ Flossenburg The Subcamps of Flossenburg Concentration Camp in German Vol 12 Bielefeld Lorbeer Verlag ISBN 978 3 938969 53 3 Kukowski Martin Boch Rudolf 2014 Kriegswirtschaft und Arbeitseinsatz bei der Auto Union AG Chemnitz im Zweiten Weltkrieg War Economy and Employment at Auto Union AG Chemnitz in the Second World War in German Stuttgart Franz Steiner Verlag ISBN 978 3 515 10618 4 External links editTimeline of the camp in Czech by Terezin Memorial Exhumation of victims Testimonies at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 50 32 28 N 14 06 44 E 50 54111 N 14 11222 E 50 54111 14 11222 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leitmeritz concentration camp amp oldid 1175010099, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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