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Mauthausen concentration camp

Coordinates: 48°15′25″N 14°30′04″E / 48.25694°N 14.50111°E / 48.25694; 14.50111

Mauthausen was a Nazi concentration camp on a hill above the market town of Mauthausen (roughly 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Linz), Upper Austria. It was the main camp of a group with nearly 100 further subcamps located throughout Austria and southern Germany.[2][3] The three Gusen concentration camps in and around the village of St Georgen/Gusen, just a few kilometres from Mauthausen, held a significant proportion of prisoners within the camp complex, at times exceeding the number of prisoners at the Mauthausen main camp.

Mauthausen
Nazi concentration camp
New arrivals after a weeklong trip in open railway cars

Exterior view of the main camp's entrance
LocationMauthausen, Upper Austria
CommandantAlbert Sauer
Franz Ziereis
OperationalAugust 1938 – May 1945
InmatesPolitical prisoners, Jews, Soviet POWs
Number of inmates190,000[1]
KilledMore than 90,000[1]
Liberated byUnited States Army, 3–6 May 1945
Appellplatz at the Mauthausen main camp
Wiener Graben quarry in 2016, "Stairs of Death" towards the right

The Mauthausen main camp operated from 8 August 1938, several months after the German annexation of Austria, to 5 May 1945, when it was liberated by the United States Army. Starting with the camp at Mauthausen, the number of subcamps expanded over time. In January 1945, the camps contained roughly 85,000 inmates.

As at other Nazi concentration camps, the inmates at Mauthausen and its subcamps were forced to work as slave labour, under conditions that caused many deaths. Mauthausen and its subcamps included quarries, munitions factories, mines, arms factories and plants assembling Me 262 fighter aircraft.[4][5] The conditions at Mauthausen were even more severe than at most other Nazi concentration camps. Half of the 190,000 inmates died at Mauthausen or its subcamps.

Mauthausen was one of the first massive concentration camp complexes in Nazi Germany, and the last to be liberated by the Allies. The Mauthausen main camp is now a museum.

Establishment of the main camp

 
Heinrich Himmler visiting Mauthausen in June 1941. Himmler is talking to Franz Ziereis, camp commandant, with Karl Wolff on the left and August Eigruber on the right.

On 9 August 1938, prisoners from Dachau concentration camp near Munich were sent to the town of Mauthausen in Austria, to begin the construction of a new slave labour camp.[6] The site was chosen because of the nearby granite quarry, and its proximity to Linz.[7][8] Although the camp was controlled by the German state from the beginning, it was founded by a private company as an economic enterprise.[8]

The owner of the Wiener-Graben quarry (the Marbacher-Bruch and Bettelberg quarries) was a DEST Company: an acronym for Deutsche Erd– und Steinwerke GmbH.[9] The company was led by Oswald Pohl, who was a high-ranking official of the Schutzstaffel (SS).[10] It rented the quarries from the City of Vienna in 1938 and started the construction of the Mauthausen camp.[4] A year later, the company ordered the construction of the first camp at Gusen.

The granite mined in the quarries had previously been used to pave the streets of Vienna, but the Nazi authorities envisioned a complete reconstruction of major German towns in accordance with plans of Albert Speer and other proponents of Nazi architecture,[11] for which large quantities of granite were needed.[8] The money to fund the construction of the Mauthausen camp was gathered from a variety of sources, including commercial loans from Dresdner Bank and Prague-based Böhmische Escompte-Bank; the so-called Reinhardt's fund (meaning money stolen from the inmates of the concentration camps themselves); and from the German Red Cross.[7][note 1]

Mauthausen initially served as a strictly-run prison camp for common criminals, prostitutes[12] and other categories of "Incorrigible Law Offenders".[note 2] On 8 May 1939 it was converted to a labour camp which was mainly used for the incarceration of political prisoners.[14]

Gusen

 
 
Mauthausen main camp
 
Gusen I
 
Gusen II
 
Gusen III
 
Bergkristall

The three Gusen concentration camps held a significant proportion of prisoners within the Mauthausen-Gusen complex. For most of its history, this exceeded the number of prisoners at the Mauthausen main camp itself.[15]

DEST began purchasing land at Sankt Georgen an der Gusen in May 1938. During 1938 and 1939, inmates of the nearby Mauthausen makeshift camp marched daily to the granite quarries at St Georgen/Gusen, which were more productive and more important for DEST than the Wienergraben Quarry.[4] After the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, the as-yet unfinished Mauthausen camp became overcrowded with prisoners. The number of inmates rose from 1,080 in late 1938 to over 3,000 a year later.[16][17] At about that time, the construction of a new camp "for the Poles" began in Gusen (Langenstein) about 4.5 kilometres (2.8 mi) away after an order by the SS(Schutzstaffel) in December 1939.[18] The new camp (later named Gusen I) became operational in May 1940. The first inmates were put in the first two huts (No. 7 and 8) on 17 April 1940,[19] while the first transport of prisoners – mostly from the camps in Dachau and Sachsenhausen – arrived just over a month later, on 25 May.[20]

 
Soviet prisoners of war at Gusen, October 1941

Like nearby Mauthausen, the Gusen camps also rented inmates out to various local businesses as slave labour. In October 1941, several huts were separated from the Gusen subcamp by barbed wire and turned into a separate Prisoner of War Labour Camp (German: Kriegsgefangenenarbeitslager).[21][22] This camp had many prisoners of war, mostly Red Army officers.[23][22] By 1942 the production capacity of Mauthausen and the Gusen camps had reached its peak. The Gusen site was expanded to include the central depot of the SS, where various goods, which had been seized from occupied territories, were sorted and then dispatched to Germany.[24] Local quarries and businesses were in constant need of a new source of labour as more and more Austrians were drafted into the Wehrmacht.[25]

In March 1944, the former SS depot was converted to a new subcamp, named Gusen II, which served as an improvised concentration camp until the end of the war. Gusen II contained about 12,000 to 17,000 inmates, who were deprived of even the most basic facilities.[2] In December 1944, Gusen III was opened in nearby Lungitz. Here, parts of a factory infrastructure were converted into the third Gusen camp.[2] The rise in the number of subcamps could not catch up with the rising number of inmates, which led to overcrowding of the huts in Mauthausen and its subcamps. From late 1940 to 1944, the number of inmates per bed rose from two to four.[2]

Subcamps

 
Map showing location of some of the most notable subcamps of Mauthausen

As the production in Mauthausen and its subcamps was constantly increasing, so were the numbers of detainees and subcamps themselves. Although initially the camps of Gusen and Mauthausen mostly served the local quarries, from 1942 onwards they began to be included in the German war machine. To accommodate the ever-growing number of slave workers, additional subcamps (German: Außenlager) of Mauthausen were built.

By the end of the war, the list included 101 camps (including 49 major subcamps)[26] which covered most of modern Austria, from Mittersill south of Salzburg to Schwechat east of Vienna and from Passau on the prewar Austro-German border to the Loibl Pass on the border with Yugoslavia. The subcamps were divided into several categories, depending on their main function: Produktionslager for factory workers, Baulager for construction, Aufräumlager for cleaning the rubble in Allied-bombed towns, and Kleinlager (small camps) where the inmates were working specifically for the SS.[citation needed]

Forced labour

Business enterprise

 
Prisoners hauling earth for the construction of the "Russian camp" at Mauthausen

The production output of Mauthausen and its subcamps exceeded that of each of the five other large slave labour centres: Auschwitz-Birkenau, Flossenbürg, Gross-Rosen, Marburg and Natzweiler-Struthof, in terms of both production quota and profits.[27] The list of companies using slave labour from Mauthausen and its subcamps was long, and included both national corporations and small, local firms and communities. Some parts of the quarries were converted into a Mauser machine pistol assembly plant.

In 1943, an underground factory for the Steyr-Daimler-Puch company was built in Gusen. Altogether, 45 larger companies took part in making Mauthausen and its subcamps one of the most profitable concentration camps of Nazi Germany, with more than 11,000,000 ℛℳ [note 3] in profits in 1944 alone (EUR 86.7 million in 2023). The companies using slave labourers from Mauthausen included:[27]

Prisoners were also rented out as slave labour to work on local farms, road construction, reinforcing and repairing the banks of the Danube, and the construction of large residential areas in Sankt Georgen[4] as well as being forced to excavate archaeological sites in Spielberg.[citation needed]

 
The Bergkristall tunnel system at Gusen was built to protect Me 262 production from air raids.

When the Allied strategic bombing campaign started to target the German war industry, German planners decided to move production to underground facilities that were impenetrable to enemy aerial bombardment. In Gusen I, the prisoners were ordered to build several large tunnels beneath the hills surrounding the camp (code-named Kellerbau). By the end of World War II the prisoners had dug 29,400 square metres (316,000 sq ft) to house a small-arms factory.

In January 1944, similar tunnels were also built beneath the village of Sankt Georgen by the inmates of Gusen II subcamp (code-named Bergkristall).[31] They dug roughly 50,000 square metres (540,000 sq ft) so the Messerschmitt company could build an assembly plant to produce the Messerschmitt Me 262 and V-2 rockets.[32] In addition to planes, some 7,000 square metres (75,000 sq ft) of Gusen II tunnels served as factories for various war materials.[4][33] In late 1944, roughly 11,000 of the Gusen I and II inmates were working in underground facilities.[34] An additional 6,500 worked on expanding the underground network of tunnels and halls.

In 1945, the Me 262 works was already finished and the Germans were able to assemble 1,250 planes a month.[4][note 4] This was the second largest plane factory in Germany after the Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp, which was also underground.[34]

Weapons research

In January 2015, a "panel of archaeologists, historians and other experts" ruled out the earlier claims of an Austrian filmmaker that a bunker underneath the camp was connected to the German nuclear weapon project.[36] The panel indicated that stairs uncovered during an excavation prompted by the allegations led to an SS shooting range.[36]

Extermination

 
Soviet POWs standing before one of the huts in Mauthausen

The political function of the camp continued in parallel with its economic role. Until at least 1942, it was used for the imprisonment and murder of the Nazis' political and ideological enemies, real and imagined.[3][37] Initially, the camp did not have a gas chamber of its own and the so-called Muselmänner, or prisoners who were too sick to work, after being maltreated, under-nourished or exhausted, were then transferred to other concentration camps for extermination (mostly to the Hartheim Euthanasia Centre,[38] which was 40.7 kilometres or 25.3 miles away), or killed by lethal injection and cremated in the local crematorium. The growing number of prisoners made this system too expensive and from 1940, Mauthausen was one of the few camps in the West to use a gas chamber on a regular basis. In the beginning, an improvised mobile gas chamber – a van with the exhaust pipe connected to the inside – shuttled between Mauthausen and Gusen.[39] It was capable of killing about 120 prisoners at a time when it was completed.[40][41]

Inmates

 
New prisoners awaiting disinfection in the garage yard of Mauthausen
 
Grueling and pointless physical exercise was one of the methods of "wearing the inmates down".[35] Here a group of prisoners are forced to play "leap frog".

Until early 1940, the largest group of inmates consisted of German, Austrian and Czechoslovak socialists, communists, homosexuals, anarchists and people of Romani origin.[citation needed] Other groups of people to be persecuted solely on religious grounds were the Sectarians, as they were dubbed by the Nazi regime, meaning Bible Students, or as they are called today, Jehovah's Witnesses. The reason for their imprisonment was their rejection of giving the loyalty oath to Hitler and their refusal to participate in any kind of military service.[14]

In early 1940, many Poles were transferred to the Mauthausen–Gusen complex. The first groups were mostly composed of artists, scientists, Boy Scouts, teachers, and university professors,[7][42] who were arrested during Intelligenzaktion and the course of the AB Action.[43] Camp Gusen II was called by Germans Vernichtungslager für die polnische Intelligenz ("Extermination camp for the Polish intelligentsia").[44]

Later in the war, new arrivals were from every category of the "unwanted", but educated people and so-called political prisoners constituted the largest part of all inmates until the end of the war. During World War II, large groups of Spanish Republicans were also transferred to Mauthausen and its subcamps. Most of them were former Republican soldiers or activists who had fled to France after Franco's victory and then were captured by German forces after the defeat of France in 1940 or handed over to the Germans by the Vichy authorities. The largest of these groups arrived at Gusen in January 1941.[45]

In early 1941, almost all the Poles and Spaniards, except for a small group of specialists working in the quarry's stone mill, were transferred from Mauthausen to Gusen.[35] Following the outbreak of the Soviet-German War in 1941, the camps started to receive a large number of Soviet POWs. Most of them were kept in huts separated from the rest of the camp. The Soviet prisoners of war were a major part of the first groups to be gassed in the newly built gas chamber in early 1942. In 1944, a large group of Hungarian and Dutch Jews, about 8,000 people altogether, was also transferred to the camp. Much like all the other large groups of prisoners that were transferred to Mauthausen and its subcamps, most of them either died as a result of the hard labour and poor conditions, or were deliberately killed.[citation needed]

After the Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 and the outbreak of the partisan resistance in summer of the same year, many people suspected of aiding the Yugoslav resistance were sent to the Mauthausen camp, mostly from areas under direct German occupation, namely northern Slovenia and Serbia. An estimated 1,500 Slovenes died in Mauthausen.[46]

Throughout the years of World War II, the Mauthausen and its subcamps received new prisoners in smaller transports daily, mostly from other concentration camps in German-occupied Europe. Most of the prisoners at the subcamps of Mauthausen had been kept in a number of different detention sites before they arrived. The most notable of such centres for Mauthausen and its subcamps were the camps at Dachau and Auschwitz. The first transports from Auschwitz arrived in February 1942. The second transport in June of that year was much larger and numbered some 1,200 prisoners. Similar groups were sent from Auschwitz to Gusen and Mauthausen in April and November 1943, and then in January and February 1944. Finally, after Adolf Eichmann visited Mauthausen in May of that year, Mauthausen received the first group of roughly 8,000 Hungarian Jews from Auschwitz; the first group to be evacuated from that camp before the Soviet advance. Initially, the groups evacuated from Auschwitz consisted of qualified workers for the ever-growing industry of Mauthausen and its subcamps, but as the evacuation proceeded other categories of people were also transported to Mauthausen, Gusen, Vienna or Melk.[citation needed]

Subcamp
inmate counts
Late 1944 – early 1945[7][note 5]
Gusen I, II, III 26,311
Ebensee 18,437
Gunskirchen 15,000
Melk 10,314
Linz 6,690
Amstetten 2,966
Wiener-Neudorf 2,954
Schwechat 2,568
Steyr-Münichholz 1,971
Schlier-Redl-Zipf 1,488

Over time, Auschwitz had to almost stop accepting new prisoners and most were directed to Mauthausen instead. The last group – roughly 10,000 prisoners – was evacuated in the last wave in January 1945, only a few weeks before the Soviet liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau complex.[47] Among them was a large group of civilians arrested by the Germans after the failure of the Warsaw uprising,[48][22] but by the liberation not more than 500 of them were still alive.[49] Altogether, during the final months of the war, 23,364 prisoners from other concentration camps arrived at the camp complex.[49] Many more perished from exhaustion during death marches, or in railway wagons, where the prisoners were confined at sub-zero temperatures for several days before their arrival, without adequate food or water. Prisoner transports were considered less important than other important services, and could be kept on sidings for days as other trains passed.[citation needed]

Many of those who survived the journey died before they could be registered, whilst others were given the camp numbers of prisoners who had already been killed.[49] Most were then accommodated in the camps or in the newly established tent camp (German: Zeltlager) just outside the Mauthausen subcamp, where roughly 2,000 people were forced into tents intended for not more than 800 inmates, and then starved to death.[50]

As in all other Nazi concentration camps, not all the prisoners were equal. Their treatment depended largely on the category assigned to each inmate, as well as their nationality and rank within the system. The so-called kapos, or prisoners who had been recruited by their captors to police their fellow prisoners, were given more food and higher pay in the form of concentration camp coupons which could be exchanged for cigarettes in the canteen, as well as a separate room inside most barracks.[51] On Himmler's order of June 1941, a brothel was opened in the Mauthausen and Gusen I camps in 1942.[52][53] The Kapos formed the main part of the so-called Prominents (German: Prominenz), or prisoners who were given a much better treatment than the average inmate.[54]

Women and children in Mauthausen

 
Women's camp at Mauthausen after liberation

Although the Mauthausen camp complex was mostly a labour camp for men, a women's camp was opened in Mauthausen, in September 1944, with the first transport of female prisoners from Auschwitz. Eventually, more women and children came to Mauthausen from Ravensbrück, Bergen-Belsen, Gross-Rosen, and Buchenwald. Along with the female prisoners came some female guards; twenty are known to have served in the Mauthausen camp, and sixty in the whole camp complex.

Female guards also staffed the Mauthausen subcamps at Hirtenberg, Lenzing (the main women's subcamp in Austria), and Sankt Lambrecht. The Chief Overseers at Mauthausen were firstly Margarete Freinberger, and then Jane Bernigau. Almost all the female Overseers who served in Mauthausen were recruited from Austrian cities and towns between September and November 1944. In early April 1945, at least 2,500 more female prisoners came from the female subcamps at Amstetten, St. Lambrecht, Hirtenberg, and the Flossenbürg subcamp at Freiberg. According to Daniel Patrick Brown, Hildegard Lächert also served at Mauthausen.[55]

The available Mauthausen inmate statistics[56] from the spring of 1943, shows that there were 2,400 prisoners below the age of 20, which was 12.8% of the 18,655 population. By late March 1945, the number of juvenile prisoners in Mauthausen increased to 15,048, which was 19.1% of the 78,547 Mauthausen inmates. The number of imprisoned children increased 6.2 times, whereas the total number of adult prisoners during the same period multiplied by a factor of only four.

These numbers reflected the increasing use of Polish, Czech, Soviet, and Balkan teenagers as slave labour as the war continued.[57] Statistics showing the composition of juvenile inmates shortly before their liberation reveal the following major child/prisoner sub-groups: 5,809 foreign civilian labourers, 5,055 political prisoners, 3,654 Jews, and 330 Russian POWs. There were also 23 Romani children, 20 so-called "anti-social elements", six Spaniards, and three Jehovah's Witnesses.[56]

Treatment of inmates and methodology of crime

 
Hans Bonarewitz being taken to his execution after escaping and being recaptured 7 July 1942

Mauthausen was one of the most brutal and severe of the Nazi concentration camps.[58][59][60] The inmates suffered not only from malnutrition, overcrowded huts and constant abuse and beatings by the guards and kapos,[35] but also from exceptionally hard labour.[40]

The work in the quarries – often in unbearable heat or in temperatures as low as −30 °C (−22 °F)[35] – led to exceptionally high mortality rates.[60][note 6] The food rations were limited, and during the 1940–1942 period, an average inmate weighed 40 kilograms (88 lb).[61] It is estimated that the average energy content of food rations dropped from about 1,750 calories (7,300 kJ) a day during the 1940–1942 period, to between 1,150 and 1,460 calories (4,800 and 6,100 kJ) a day during the next period. In 1945 the energy content was even lower and did not exceed 600 to 1,000 calories (2,500 to 4,200 kJ) a day – less than a third of the energy needed by an average worker in heavy industry.[2] The reduced rations led to the starvation of thousands of inmates.

 
"Stairs of Death": prisoners forced to carry a granite block up 186 steps to the top of the quarry

The inmates of Mauthausen, Gusen I, and Gusen II had access to a separate part of the camp for the sick – the so-called Krankenlager. Despite the fact that (roughly) 100 medics from among the inmates were working there,[62] they were not given any medication and could offer only basic first aid.[7][62] Thus the hospital camp – as it was called by the German authorities – was, in fact, a "hospital" only in name.

The rock quarry in Mauthausen was at the base of the "Stairs of Death". Prisoners were forced to carry roughly-hewn blocks of stone – often weighing as much as 50 kilograms (110 lb) – up the 186 stairs, one prisoner behind the other. As a result, many exhausted prisoners collapsed in front of the other prisoners in the line, and then fell on top of the other prisoners, creating a domino effect; the first prisoner falling onto the next, and so on, all the way down the stairs.[63] In the quarry, prisoners were forced to carry the boulders from morning until night, whipped by Nazi guards.[64][65]

Such brutality was not accidental. Former prisoner Edward Mosberg said: "If you stopped for a moment, the SS either shot you or pushed you off the cliff to your death."[65] The SS guards would often force prisoners – exhausted from hours of hard labour without sufficient food and water – to race up the stairs carrying blocks of stone. Those who survived the ordeal would often be placed in a line-up at the edge of a cliff known as "The Parachutists Wall" (German: Fallschirmspringerwand).[66] At gun-point each prisoner would have the option of being shot or pushing the prisoner in front of him off the cliff.[26] Other common methods of extermination of prisoners who were either sick, unfit for further labour or as a means of collective responsibility or after escape attempts included beating the prisoners to death by the SS guards and Kapos, starving to death in bunkers, hangings and mass shootings.[67]

At times the guards or Kapos would either deliberately throw the prisoners on the 380 volt electric barbed wire fence,[67] or force them outside the boundaries of the camp and then shoot them on the pretence that they were attempting to escape.[68] Another method of extermination were icy showers – some 3,000 inmates died of hypothermia after having been forced to take an icy cold shower and then left outside in cold weather.[69] A large number of inmates were drowned in barrels of water at Gusen II.[70][71]

The Nazis also performed pseudo-scientific experiments on the prisoners. Among the doctors to organise them were Sigbert Ramsauer, Karl Josef Gross, Eduard Krebsbach and Aribert Heim. Heim was dubbed "Doctor Death" by the inmates; he was in Gusen for seven weeks, which was enough to carry out his experiments.[72][73]

 
Mauthausen concentration camp, memorial plaques behind the Prison Block marking the spot where the ashes of the executed Englandspiel SOE agents are buried

Hans Maršálek estimated that an average life expectancy of newly arrived prisoners in Gusen varied from six months between 1940 and 1942, to less than three months in early 1945.[74] Paradoxically, with the growth of forced labour industry in various subcamps of Mauthausen, the situation of some of the prisoners improved significantly. While the food rations were increasingly limited every month, the heavy industry necessitated skilled specialists rather than unqualified workers and the brutality of the camp's SS and Kapos was limited. While the prisoners were still beaten on a daily basis and the Muselmänner were still exterminated, from early 1943 on some of the factory workers were allowed to receive food parcels from their families (mostly Poles and Frenchmen). This allowed many of them not only to evade the risk of starvation, but also to help other prisoners who had no relatives outside the camps – or who were not allowed to receive parcels.[75]

In February 1945, the camp was the site of Nazi war crime Mühlviertler Hasenjagd ("hare hunt") where around 500 escaped prisoners (mostly Soviet officers) were mercilessly hunted down and murdered by SS, local law enforcement and civilians.[76]

Death toll

 
Fourteen Czech intellectuals shot by the SS in Mauthausen, 1942

The Germans destroyed much of the camp's files and evidence and often allocated newly arrived prisoners the camp numbers of those who had already been killed,[40] so the exact death toll of Mauthausen and its subcamps is impossible to calculate. The matter is further complicated due to some of the inmates of Gusen being murdered in Mauthausen, and at least 3,423 were sent to Hartheim Castle, 40.7 km (25.3 mi) away. Overall, more than 90,000 of the 190,000 people deported to Mauthausen died there or in one of its subcamps.[1]

Staff

SS Captain Albert Sauer presided over the initial establishment of the camp on 1 August 1938 and remained camp commandant until 17 February 1939. Franz Ziereis assumed control as commandant of the Mauthausen concentration camp from 1939 until the camp was liberated by the American forces in 1945.[77] The infamous Death's- Head Unit or SS-Totenkopfverbände charged with guarding the camp perimeter in addition to work detachments was headed by Georg Bachmayer, a captain in the SS. Further records of camp leadership were destroyed by Nazi officials in effort to cover up war atrocities and those involved.

Several Norwegian Waffen SS volunteers worked as guards or as instructors for prisoners from Nordic countries, according to senior researcher Terje Emberland at the Center for Studies of Holocaust and Religious Minorities.[78]

Liberation and postwar heritage

 
An M8 Greyhound armored car of the US Army's 11th Armored Division entering the Mauthausen concentration camp. The banner in the background (in Spanish) reads as "Anti-fascist Spaniards salute the forces of liberation".[79]
 
Naked survivors at Mauthausen
 
Temporary identity papers produced for Mauthausen detainee after camp liberation

During the final months before liberation, the camp's commander Franz Ziereis prepared for its defence against a possible Soviet offensive. The remaining prisoners were rushed to build a line of granite anti-tank obstacles to the east of Mauthausen. The inmates unable to cope with the hard labour and malnutrition were exterminated in large numbers to free space for newly arrived evacuation transports from other camps, including most of the subcamps of Mauthausen located in eastern Austria. In the final months of the war, the main source of dietary energy, the parcels of food sent through the International Red Cross, stopped and food rations became catastrophically low. The prisoners transferred to the "Hospital Subcamp" received one piece of bread per 20 inmates and roughly half a litre of weed soup a day.[80] This made some of the prisoners, previously engaged in various types of resistance activity, begin to prepare plans to defend the camp in case of an SS attempt to exterminate all the remaining inmates.[80]

On 3 May the SS and other guards started to prepare for evacuation of the camp. The following day, the guards of Mauthausen were replaced with unarmed Volkssturm soldiers and an improvised unit formed of elderly police officers and fire fighters evacuated from Vienna. The police officer in charge of the unit accepted the "inmate self-government" as the camp's highest authority and Martin Gerken, until then the highest-ranking kapo prisoner in the Gusen's administration (in the rank of Lagerälteste, or the Camp's Elder), became the new de facto commander. He attempted to create an International Prisoner Committee that would become a provisional governing body of the camp until it was liberated by one of the approaching armies, but he was openly accused of co-operation with the SS and the plan failed.

All work in the subcamps of Mauthausen stopped and the inmates focused on preparations for their liberation – or defence of the camps against a possible assault by the SS divisions concentrated in the area.[81] The remnants of several German divisions indeed assaulted the Mauthausen subcamp, but were repelled by the prisoners who took over the camp.[12] Of the main subcamps of Mauthausen, only Gusen III was to be evacuated. On 1 May the inmates were rushed on a death march towards Sankt Georgen, but were ordered to return to the camp after several hours. The operation was repeated the following day, but called off soon afterwards. The following day, the SS guards deserted the camp, leaving the prisoners to their fate.[81]

On 5 May 1945 the camp at Mauthausen was approached by a squad of US Army soldiers of the 41st Reconnaissance Squadron of the US 11th Armored Division, 3rd US Army. The reconnaissance squad was led by Staff Sergeant Albert J. Kosiek.[82][83] His troop disarmed the policemen and left the camp. By the time of its liberation, most of the guards in Mauthausen had fled; around 30 of those who remained were killed by the prisoners.[84] A similar number were killed in Gusen II.[84] By 6 May all the remaining subcamps of Mauthausen, with the exception of the two camps in the Loibl Pass, were also liberated by American forces.[citation needed]

Among the inmates liberated from the camp was Lieutenant Jack Taylor, an officer of the Office of Strategic Services.[85][86] He had managed to survive with the help of several prisoners and was later a key witness at the Mauthausen-Gusen camp trials carried out by the Dachau International Military Tribunal.[87] Another of the camp's survivors was Simon Wiesenthal, an engineer who spent the rest of his life hunting Nazi war criminals. Future Medal of Honor recipient Tibor "Ted" Rubin was imprisoned there as a young teenager; a Hungarian Jew, he vowed to join the US Army upon his liberation and later did just that, distinguishing himself in the Korean War as a corporal in the 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division.[88]

Francesc Boix, a photographer and veteran of the Spanish Civil War, was imprisoned at the camp for four years. During his time working in the photography lab of the camp, he smuggled 3,000 negatives out of the camp and later used this photographic evidence to testify at the Nuremberg trials.[89]

Following the capitulation of Germany, Mauthausen fell within the Soviet sector of occupation of Austria. Initially, the Soviet authorities used parts of the Mauthausen and Gusen I camps as barracks for the Red Army. At the same time, the underground factories were being dismantled and sent to the USSR as a war reparations. After that, between 1946 and 1947, the camps were unguarded and many furnishings and facilities of the camp were dismantled, both by the Red Army and by the local population. In the early summer of 1947, the Soviet forces had blown up the tunnels and were then withdrawn from the area, while the camp was turned over to Austrian civilian authorities.[citation needed]

Memorials

 
French monument at Mauthausen
 
Memorial to Mauthausen Concentration Camp, Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris

Mauthausen was declared a national memorial site in 1949.[90] Bruno Kreisky, the Chancellor of Austria, officially opened the Mauthausen Museum on 3 May 1975, 30 years after the camp's liberation.[3] A visitor centre was inaugurated in 2003, designed by the architects Herwig Mayer, Christoph Schwarz, and Karl Peyrer-Heimstätt, covering an area of 2,845 square metres (30,620 sq ft).[91]

The Mauthausen site remains largely intact, but much of what constituted the subcamps of Gusen I, II and III is now covered by residential areas built after the war.[92]

A memorial to Mauthausen stands amongst the various memorials to concentration camps in Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.[93]

The "Mauthausen Trilogy", also known as "The Ballad of Mauthausen" is a cycle of four arias with lyrics based on poems written by Greek poet Iakovos Kambanellis, a Mauthausen concentration camp survivor, and music written by Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis.

Documentaries and films

  • The Quality of Mercy (1994). Austrian film written, directed and produced by Andreas Gruber.
  • Mauthausen–Gusen: La memòria (2009) (in Valencian) by Rosa Brines. An 18-minute documentary about the republican Spaniards deported to Mauthausen and Gusen. It includes testimonies from survivors.
  • The Photographer of Mauthausen (2018). Based on real events, Francisco Boix is the Spanish photographer and inmate of Mauthausen who saved thousands of pieces of photographic evidence of the horrors committed inside the Austrian concentration camp's walls.[94]
  • Les Résitants de Mauthausen = Resistance at Mauthausen (2021) A 51-minute documentary by Barbara Necek about the resistance by republican Spanish prisoners, focusing particularly on Francisco Boix who preserved thousands of photographs of conditions inside the camp.

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Oswald Pohl, apart from being a high-ranking SS member, owner of DEST and several other companies, and chief of administration and treasurer of various Nazi organizations, was also the managing director of the German Red Cross. In 1938, he transferred 8,000,000 Reichsmark from member fees to one of the accounts of the SS (SS-Spargemeinschaft e. V.), which in turn donated all the money to DEST in 1939.[7]
  2. ^ As stated in Reinhard Heydrich's memo of 1 January 1941.[13]
  3. ^ 11,000,000 Reichsmark was equivalent to roughly 4,403,000 US dollars or almost one million sterling by 1939 exchange rates;[28] In turn, 4,403,000 1939 dollars are roughly equivalent to 560,370,000 modern US dollars using the relative share of GDP as the main factor of comparison, or 85.8 million using the consumer price index.[29]
  4. ^ In reality the actual production never reached such levels.[35]
  5. ^ The subcamp inmate counts refer to the situation in late 1944 and early 1945, before the major reorganization of the camp's system and before the arrival of a large number of evacuation trains and death marches.
  6. ^ It is often mentioned that the mortality rate reached 58% in 1941, as compared with 36% at Dachau, and 19% at Buchenwald over the same period. Dobosiewicz – who made the most extensive study – compared various factors: his estimations were based on the number of prisoners to arrive in a year as compared to the number of that were murdered during a year.[7]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Freund & Kranebitter 2016, p. 56.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dobosiewicz (2000), pp. 191–202.
  3. ^ a b c Bischof & Pelinka, pp. 185–190.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Haunschmied, Mills, Witzany-Durda (2008), pp. 172–175.
  5. ^ Walden, p. 1.
  6. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 13.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 449.
  8. ^ a b c Haunschmied, Mills, Witzany-Durda (2008), pp. 45–48.
  9. ^ Pike, p. 89.
  10. ^ Pike, p. 18.
  11. ^ Speer, pp. 367–368.
  12. ^ a b Żeromski, pp. 6–12.
  13. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 12.
  14. ^ a b Maršálek (1995), p. 69.
  15. ^ Freund & Kranebitter 2016, p. 58.
  16. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 13, 47.
  17. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 15.
  18. ^ "The Mauthausen Concentration Camp 1938–1945". Mauthausen Memorial. 21 December 2021. from the original on 27 October 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  19. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 14.
  20. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 198.
  21. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 25, 196–197.
  22. ^ a b c Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 193.
  23. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 25.
  24. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 26.
  25. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 240.
  26. ^ a b Waller, pp. 3–5.
  27. ^ a b "Memoriales históricos", ¶ Historia de los campos de concentración.
  28. ^ Derela, p. 1.
  29. ^ Williamson, p. 1.
  30. ^ M.S., ¶ Geschichte.
  31. ^ Pike, p. 98.
  32. ^ Dobosiewicz (1980), pp. 37–38.
  33. ^ Haunschmied (1997), p. 1325.
  34. ^ a b Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 194.
  35. ^ a b c d e Grzesiuk, p. 392.
  36. ^ a b "Nazi secret weapons site claims refuted". The Local. 27 January 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  37. ^ Richardson, pp. 162–164.
  38. ^ Terrance, p. 142.
  39. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), p. 343.
  40. ^ a b c Abzug, pp. 106–110.
  41. ^ Shermer & Grobman, pp. 168–175.
  42. ^ Nogaj, p. 64.
  43. ^ Piotrowski, p. 25.
  44. ^ Kunert, p. 104.
  45. ^ Wnuk (1972), pp. 100–105.
  46. ^ STA & mm, "Že pred današnjo…".
  47. ^ Filipkowski, p. 1.
  48. ^ Kirchmayer, p. 576.
  49. ^ a b c Dobosiewicz (2000), pp. 365–367.
  50. ^ Freund & Greifeneder, "Die Zelte waren für höchstens 800 Personen…".
  51. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 204.
  52. ^ Nizkor, KZ Gusen Memorial Committee, "KZ Gusen I Concentration Camp at Langenstein", "KZ Gusen Brothel".
  53. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 205.
  54. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 108.
  55. ^ Brown, p. 288.
  56. ^ a b Friedlander, pp. 33–69.
  57. ^ Myczkowski, p. 31.
  58. ^ Simon Wiesenthal Center, "Mauthausen".
  59. ^ Bloxham, p. 210.
  60. ^ a b Burleigh, pp. 210–211.
  61. ^ Pike, p. 97.
  62. ^ a b Krukowski, pp. 292–297.
  63. ^ Weissman, pp. 2–3.
  64. ^ "Edward Mosberg". USC Shoah Foundation. 16 September 2020.
  65. ^ a b Michael Jones (2015). After Hitler; The Last Ten Days of World War II in Europe
  66. ^ KZ-Gedenkstaette Mauthausen, "Parachute Jump".
  67. ^ a b Maida, "The systematic and deliberate extermination by hunger…".
  68. ^ Schmidt, pp. 146–148.
  69. ^ Wnuk (1961), pp. 20–22.
  70. ^ Dobosiewicz (2000), p. 12.
  71. ^ Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 102, 276.
  72. ^ Fuchs, p. 1.
  73. ^ Schmidt & Loehrer, p. 146.
  74. ^ Maršálek (1968), p. 32; as cited in: Dobosiewicz (2000), pp. 192–193.
  75. ^ Grzesiuk, pp. 252–255.
  76. ^ Demeritt, Linda C. (1999). "Representations of History: The "Mühlviertler Hasenjagd" as Word and Image". Modern Austrian Literature. 32 (4): 135–145. JSTOR 24648890.
  77. ^ "Camp SS and Guards". Mauthausen Memorial.
  78. ^ "Verdens Gang", p. 1.
  79. ^ Pike, p. 256.
  80. ^ a b Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 374–375.
  81. ^ a b Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 382–388.
  82. ^ Pike, pp. 233–234.
  83. ^ Radd, Maggie (6 May 2020). "75th Anniversary Of The Liberation Of Mauthausen". Museum of Jewish Heritage. from the original on 19 January 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  84. ^ a b Dobosiewicz (1977), pp. 395–397.
  85. ^ UDT-SEAL Association, "Lt. Jack Taylor of the OSS…".
  86. ^ Pike, p. 237.
  87. ^ Taylor 2003.
  88. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients – Korean War: TIBOR RUBIN". United States Army Center of Military History. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  89. ^ "Francesc Boix". Retrieved 10 March 2020.
  90. ^ "History of the Mauthausen Memorial - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
  91. ^ van Uffelen, pp. 150–153.
  92. ^ Terrance, pp. 138–139.
  93. ^ "Paris walks: Père-Lachaise". Time Out Paris.
  94. ^ Antón, Jacinto (23 November 2017). "La vida del fotógrafo que sufrió el horror nazi se convierte en película". El País. Prisa. Retrieved 5 January 2018.

Bibliography

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  • Robert Abzug (1987). Inside the Vicious Heart. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 106–110. ISBN 0-19-504236-0.
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  • Donald Bloxham (2003). Genocide on Trial: War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 210. ISBN 0-19-925904-6.
  • Daniel Patrick Brown (2002). The Camp Women: The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System. Schiffer Publishing. p. 288. ISBN 0-7643-1444-0.
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  • (in Polish) Stanisław Dobosiewicz (1980). Mauthausen/Gusen; Samoobrona i konspiracja [Mauthausen/Gusen: self-defence and underground]. Warsaw: Wydawnictwa MON. p. 486. ISBN 83-11-06497-0.
  • (in Polish) Stanisław Dobosiewicz (2000). Mauthausen–Gusen; w obronie życia i ludzkiej godności [Mauthausen–Gusen; in defence of life and human dignity]. Warsaw: Bellona. pp. 191–202. ISBN 83-11-09048-3.
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  • (in Polish) Stanisław Grzesiuk (1985). Pięć lat kacetu [Five Years of KZ]. Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. p. 392. ISBN 83-05-11108-3.
  • Rudolf Haunschmied; Harald Faeth (1997). . Tunnel and Shelter Researching. Archived from the original on 14 June 2006. Retrieved 26 April 2006.
  • Rudolf A. Haunschmied; Jan-Ruth Mills; Siegi Witzany-Durda (2008). St. Georgen-Gusen-Mauthausen – Concentration Camp Mauthausen Reconsidered. Norderstedt: Books on Demand. p. 289. ISBN 978-3-8334-7610-5. OCLC 300552112.
  • (in Czech) Stanislav Hlaváček (2000). "Historie KTM" [History of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp]. Koncentrační Tábor Mauthausen; Pamětní tisk k 55. výročí osvobození KTM [Mauthausen concentration camp: Memorial publication for the 55th anniversary of the liberation]. Retrieved 18 May 2006.
  • (in Polish) Jerzy Kirchmayer (1978). Powstanie warszawskie [Warsaw Uprising]. Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. p. 576. ISBN 83-05-11080-X.
  • (in Polish) Stefan Krukowski (1966). "Pamięci lekarzy" [In memoriam of the doctors]. Nad pięknym modrym Dunajem; Mauthausen 1940–1945 [Mauthausen 1940–1945: At The Blue Danube]. Tadeusz Żeromski (foreword). Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. pp. 292–297. PB 9330/66.
  • (in Polish) Various authors (2009). Andrzej Kunert (ed.). Człowiek człowiekowi… Niszczenie polskiej inteligencji w latach 1939–1945 KL Mauthausen/Gusen [Man to Man…; The destruction of Polish intelligentsia 1939–1945 in the camps of Mauthausen/Gusen]. Warsaw: Rada Ochrony Pamięci Walk i Męczeństwa. p. 104.
  • KZ-Gedenkstaette Mauthausen. "Parachute Jump". Mauthausen Memorial. KZ-Gedenkstaette Mauthausen. Retrieved 23 September 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Bruno Maida. . National Association of Italian political deportees in the Nazi concentration camps. Fondazione Memoria della Deportazione. Archived from the original on 5 June 2006.
  • Hans Maršálek (1968). Konzentrazionslager Gusen [Gusen concentration camp]. Vienna. p. 32.
  • (in German) Hans Maršálek (1995). Die Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Mauthausen [History of Mauthausen Concentration Camp]. Wien-Linz: Österreichischen Lagergemeinschaft Mauthausen u. Mauthausen-Aktiv Oberösterreich.
  • (in Polish) Adam Myczkowski (1946). Poprzez Dachau do Mauthausen–Gusen [Through Dachau to Mauthausen–Gusen]. Kraków: Księgarnia Stefana Kamińskiego. p. 31.
  • (in German) M.S. (2000). . Österreichs Geschichte im Dritten Reich. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 11 April 2006.
  • (in Polish) Stanisław Nogaj (1945). Gusen; Pamiętnik dziennikarza [Gusen; Memoir of a Journalist]. Katowice-Chorzów: Komitet byłych więźniów obozu koncentracyjnego Gusen. p. 64.
  • David Wingeate Pike (2000). Spaniards in the Holocaust: Mauthausen, Horror on the Danube. London: Routledge. p. 480. ISBN 0-415-22780-1.
  • Tadeusz Piotrowski (1998). Poland's holocaust: ethnic strife, collaboration with occupying forces and genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947. McFarland.
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  • various authors (2008). Amy Schmidt; Gudrun Loehrer (eds.). "The Mauthausen Concentration Camp Complex: World War II and Postwar Records" (PDF). Reference Information Paper. Washington, DC: National Archives and Records Administration. 115: 145–148. Retrieved 23 September 2013.
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  • Michael Shermer; Alex Grobman (2002). "The Gas Chamber at Mauthausen". Denying History: Who Says the Holocaust Never Happened and Why Do They Say It?. University of California Press. pp. 168–175. ISBN 0-520-23469-3.
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  • James Waller (2002). Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 0-19-514868-1.
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  • (in Polish) Zbigniew Wlazłowski (1974). Przez kamieniołomy i kolczasty drut [Through the Quarries and Barbed Wire]. Kraków: Wydawnictwo Literackie. p. 184. PB 1974/7600.
  • (in Polish) various authors; Włodzimierz Wnuk (1961). "Śmiertelne kąpiele" [Deadly Baths]. Oskarżamy! Materiały do historii obozu koncentracyjnego Mauthausen–Gusen [We Accuse! Materials on the History of Mauthausen–Gusen Concentration Camp]. Katowice: Klub Mauthausen–Gusen ZBoWiD. pp. 20–22.
  • (in Polish) Włodzimierz Wnuk (1972). "Z Hiszpanami w jednym szeregu" [With the Spaniards in One Line]. Byłem z wami [I Was With You]. Warsaw: PAX. pp. 100–105.
  • (in Polish) Tadeusz Żeromski (1983). Kazimierz Rusinek (ed.). Międzynarodówka straceńców [Desperados' Internationale]. Warsaw: Książka i Wiedza. pp. 76+19. ISBN 83-05-11175-X.
  • (in Spanish) various authors (2005). "Historia de los campos de concentración: El sistema de campos de concentración nacionalsocialista, 1933–1945: un modelo europeo" [History of the concentration camps: the national-socialist concentration camp system 1933–1945; European model]. Memoriales históricos, 1933–1945 [Historical memorials, 1933–1945].
  • (in Norwegian) Verdens Gang (1 November 2010). "Norske vakter jobbet i Hitlers konsentrasjonsleire" [Norwegian guards worked in Hitler's concentration camps]. Verdens Gang (15 November 2010). ISSN 0805-5203. Retrieved 22 April 2014.

Further reading

External links

  • USHMM United States Holocaust Memorial Museum contains more than 500 pictures of Mauthausen–Gusen
  • Interviews with American servicemen imprisoned at Mauthausen
  • Online exhibition of the Polish History Museum on the former KZ Gusen complex
  • Mauthausen Memorial

mauthausen, concentration, camp, some, this, article, listed, sources, reliable, please, help, this, article, looking, better, more, reliable, sources, unreliable, citations, challenged, deleted, february, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, co. Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Coordinates 48 15 25 N 14 30 04 E 48 25694 N 14 50111 E 48 25694 14 50111 Mauthausen was a Nazi concentration camp on a hill above the market town of Mauthausen roughly 20 kilometres 12 mi east of Linz Upper Austria It was the main camp of a group with nearly 100 further subcamps located throughout Austria and southern Germany 2 3 The three Gusen concentration camps in and around the village of St Georgen Gusen just a few kilometres from Mauthausen held a significant proportion of prisoners within the camp complex at times exceeding the number of prisoners at the Mauthausen main camp MauthausenNazi concentration campNew arrivals after a weeklong trip in open railway carsExterior view of the main camp s entranceLocationMauthausen Upper AustriaCommandantAlbert SauerFranz ZiereisOperationalAugust 1938 May 1945InmatesPolitical prisoners Jews Soviet POWsNumber of inmates190 000 1 KilledMore than 90 000 1 Liberated byUnited States Army 3 6 May 1945Appellplatz at the Mauthausen main camp Wiener Graben quarry in 2016 Stairs of Death towards the right The Mauthausen main camp operated from 8 August 1938 several months after the German annexation of Austria to 5 May 1945 when it was liberated by the United States Army Starting with the camp at Mauthausen the number of subcamps expanded over time In January 1945 the camps contained roughly 85 000 inmates As at other Nazi concentration camps the inmates at Mauthausen and its subcamps were forced to work as slave labour under conditions that caused many deaths Mauthausen and its subcamps included quarries munitions factories mines arms factories and plants assembling Me 262 fighter aircraft 4 5 The conditions at Mauthausen were even more severe than at most other Nazi concentration camps Half of the 190 000 inmates died at Mauthausen or its subcamps Mauthausen was one of the first massive concentration camp complexes in Nazi Germany and the last to be liberated by the Allies The Mauthausen main camp is now a museum Contents 1 Establishment of the main camp 2 Gusen 3 Subcamps 4 Forced labour 4 1 Business enterprise 4 2 Weapons research 4 3 Extermination 5 Inmates 5 1 Women and children in Mauthausen 5 2 Treatment of inmates and methodology of crime 5 3 Death toll 6 Staff 7 Liberation and postwar heritage 8 Memorials 9 Documentaries and films 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Footnotes 11 2 Citations 11 3 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksEstablishment of the main camp Edit Heinrich Himmler visiting Mauthausen in June 1941 Himmler is talking to Franz Ziereis camp commandant with Karl Wolff on the left and August Eigruber on the right On 9 August 1938 prisoners from Dachau concentration camp near Munich were sent to the town of Mauthausen in Austria to begin the construction of a new slave labour camp 6 The site was chosen because of the nearby granite quarry and its proximity to Linz 7 8 Although the camp was controlled by the German state from the beginning it was founded by a private company as an economic enterprise 8 The owner of the Wiener Graben quarry the Marbacher Bruch and Bettelberg quarries was a DEST Company an acronym for Deutsche Erd und Steinwerke GmbH 9 The company was led by Oswald Pohl who was a high ranking official of the Schutzstaffel SS 10 It rented the quarries from the City of Vienna in 1938 and started the construction of the Mauthausen camp 4 A year later the company ordered the construction of the first camp at Gusen The granite mined in the quarries had previously been used to pave the streets of Vienna but the Nazi authorities envisioned a complete reconstruction of major German towns in accordance with plans of Albert Speer and other proponents of Nazi architecture 11 for which large quantities of granite were needed 8 The money to fund the construction of the Mauthausen camp was gathered from a variety of sources including commercial loans from Dresdner Bank and Prague based Bohmische Escompte Bank the so called Reinhardt s fund meaning money stolen from the inmates of the concentration camps themselves and from the German Red Cross 7 note 1 Mauthausen initially served as a strictly run prison camp for common criminals prostitutes 12 and other categories of Incorrigible Law Offenders note 2 On 8 May 1939 it was converted to a labour camp which was mainly used for the incarceration of political prisoners 14 Gusen EditMain article Gusen concentration camp Mauthausen main camp Gusen I Gusen II Gusen III Bergkristall The three Gusen concentration camps held a significant proportion of prisoners within the Mauthausen Gusen complex For most of its history this exceeded the number of prisoners at the Mauthausen main camp itself 15 DEST began purchasing land at Sankt Georgen an der Gusen in May 1938 During 1938 and 1939 inmates of the nearby Mauthausen makeshift camp marched daily to the granite quarries at St Georgen Gusen which were more productive and more important for DEST than the Wienergraben Quarry 4 After the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 the as yet unfinished Mauthausen camp became overcrowded with prisoners The number of inmates rose from 1 080 in late 1938 to over 3 000 a year later 16 17 At about that time the construction of a new camp for the Poles began in Gusen Langenstein about 4 5 kilometres 2 8 mi away after an order by the SS Schutzstaffel in December 1939 18 The new camp later named Gusen I became operational in May 1940 The first inmates were put in the first two huts No 7 and 8 on 17 April 1940 19 while the first transport of prisoners mostly from the camps in Dachau and Sachsenhausen arrived just over a month later on 25 May 20 Soviet prisoners of war at Gusen October 1941 Like nearby Mauthausen the Gusen camps also rented inmates out to various local businesses as slave labour In October 1941 several huts were separated from the Gusen subcamp by barbed wire and turned into a separate Prisoner of War Labour Camp German Kriegsgefangenenarbeitslager 21 22 This camp had many prisoners of war mostly Red Army officers 23 22 By 1942 the production capacity of Mauthausen and the Gusen camps had reached its peak The Gusen site was expanded to include the central depot of the SS where various goods which had been seized from occupied territories were sorted and then dispatched to Germany 24 Local quarries and businesses were in constant need of a new source of labour as more and more Austrians were drafted into the Wehrmacht 25 In March 1944 the former SS depot was converted to a new subcamp named Gusen II which served as an improvised concentration camp until the end of the war Gusen II contained about 12 000 to 17 000 inmates who were deprived of even the most basic facilities 2 In December 1944 Gusen III was opened in nearby Lungitz Here parts of a factory infrastructure were converted into the third Gusen camp 2 The rise in the number of subcamps could not catch up with the rising number of inmates which led to overcrowding of the huts in Mauthausen and its subcamps From late 1940 to 1944 the number of inmates per bed rose from two to four 2 Subcamps EditSee also List of subcamps of Mauthausen Map showing location of some of the most notable subcamps of Mauthausen As the production in Mauthausen and its subcamps was constantly increasing so were the numbers of detainees and subcamps themselves Although initially the camps of Gusen and Mauthausen mostly served the local quarries from 1942 onwards they began to be included in the German war machine To accommodate the ever growing number of slave workers additional subcamps German Aussenlager of Mauthausen were built By the end of the war the list included 101 camps including 49 major subcamps 26 which covered most of modern Austria from Mittersill south of Salzburg to Schwechat east of Vienna and from Passau on the prewar Austro German border to the Loibl Pass on the border with Yugoslavia The subcamps were divided into several categories depending on their main function Produktionslager for factory workers Baulager for construction Aufraumlager for cleaning the rubble in Allied bombed towns and Kleinlager small camps where the inmates were working specifically for the SS citation needed Forced labour EditBusiness enterprise Edit Prisoners hauling earth for the construction of the Russian camp at Mauthausen The production output of Mauthausen and its subcamps exceeded that of each of the five other large slave labour centres Auschwitz Birkenau Flossenburg Gross Rosen Marburg and Natzweiler Struthof in terms of both production quota and profits 27 The list of companies using slave labour from Mauthausen and its subcamps was long and included both national corporations and small local firms and communities Some parts of the quarries were converted into a Mauser machine pistol assembly plant In 1943 an underground factory for the Steyr Daimler Puch company was built in Gusen Altogether 45 larger companies took part in making Mauthausen and its subcamps one of the most profitable concentration camps of Nazi Germany with more than 11 000 000 ℛℳ note 3 in profits in 1944 alone EUR 86 7 million in 2023 The companies using slave labourers from Mauthausen included 27 DEST cartel producing bricks and quarrying stone for German state construction projects Accumulatoren Fabrik AFA the main producer of batteries for German U boats Bayer the main German producer of medicines and medications Deutsche Bergwerks und Huttenbau constructing mines and quarries Linz based Eisenwerke Oberdonau the largest World War II steel supplier for the German Panzer tanks 30 Flugmotorenwerke Ostmark aeroplane engine manufacturer Nibelungenwerk the largest tank factory in Nazi Germany Otto Eberhard Patronenfabrik munitions works Heinkel and Messerschmitt Heinkel Sud facilities in Floridsdorf Vienna Schwechat and Zwolfaxing and other aeroplane factories also a V 2 rocket factory Osterreichische Sauerwerks arms producer Rax Werke machinery and V 2 rockets Steyr Daimler Puch arms and vehicles Hochtief construction of tunnels in the Loibl Pass Prisoners were also rented out as slave labour to work on local farms road construction reinforcing and repairing the banks of the Danube and the construction of large residential areas in Sankt Georgen 4 as well as being forced to excavate archaeological sites in Spielberg citation needed The Bergkristall tunnel system at Gusen was built to protect Me 262 production from air raids When the Allied strategic bombing campaign started to target the German war industry German planners decided to move production to underground facilities that were impenetrable to enemy aerial bombardment In Gusen I the prisoners were ordered to build several large tunnels beneath the hills surrounding the camp code named Kellerbau By the end of World War II the prisoners had dug 29 400 square metres 316 000 sq ft to house a small arms factory In January 1944 similar tunnels were also built beneath the village of Sankt Georgen by the inmates of Gusen II subcamp code named Bergkristall 31 They dug roughly 50 000 square metres 540 000 sq ft so the Messerschmitt company could build an assembly plant to produce the Messerschmitt Me 262 and V 2 rockets 32 In addition to planes some 7 000 square metres 75 000 sq ft of Gusen II tunnels served as factories for various war materials 4 33 In late 1944 roughly 11 000 of the Gusen I and II inmates were working in underground facilities 34 An additional 6 500 worked on expanding the underground network of tunnels and halls In 1945 the Me 262 works was already finished and the Germans were able to assemble 1 250 planes a month 4 note 4 This was the second largest plane factory in Germany after the Mittelbau Dora concentration camp which was also underground 34 Weapons research Edit In January 2015 a panel of archaeologists historians and other experts ruled out the earlier claims of an Austrian filmmaker that a bunker underneath the camp was connected to the German nuclear weapon project 36 The panel indicated that stairs uncovered during an excavation prompted by the allegations led to an SS shooting range 36 Extermination Edit Soviet POWs standing before one of the huts in Mauthausen The political function of the camp continued in parallel with its economic role Until at least 1942 it was used for the imprisonment and murder of the Nazis political and ideological enemies real and imagined 3 37 Initially the camp did not have a gas chamber of its own and the so called Muselmanner or prisoners who were too sick to work after being maltreated under nourished or exhausted were then transferred to other concentration camps for extermination mostly to the Hartheim Euthanasia Centre 38 which was 40 7 kilometres or 25 3 miles away or killed by lethal injection and cremated in the local crematorium The growing number of prisoners made this system too expensive and from 1940 Mauthausen was one of the few camps in the West to use a gas chamber on a regular basis In the beginning an improvised mobile gas chamber a van with the exhaust pipe connected to the inside shuttled between Mauthausen and Gusen 39 It was capable of killing about 120 prisoners at a time when it was completed 40 41 Inmates EditSee also List of Mauthausen and Gusen inmates New prisoners awaiting disinfection in the garage yard of Mauthausen Grueling and pointless physical exercise was one of the methods of wearing the inmates down 35 Here a group of prisoners are forced to play leap frog Until early 1940 the largest group of inmates consisted of German Austrian and Czechoslovak socialists communists homosexuals anarchists and people of Romani origin citation needed Other groups of people to be persecuted solely on religious grounds were the Sectarians as they were dubbed by the Nazi regime meaning Bible Students or as they are called today Jehovah s Witnesses The reason for their imprisonment was their rejection of giving the loyalty oath to Hitler and their refusal to participate in any kind of military service 14 In early 1940 many Poles were transferred to the Mauthausen Gusen complex The first groups were mostly composed of artists scientists Boy Scouts teachers and university professors 7 42 who were arrested during Intelligenzaktion and the course of the AB Action 43 Camp Gusen II was called by Germans Vernichtungslager fur die polnische Intelligenz Extermination camp for the Polish intelligentsia 44 Later in the war new arrivals were from every category of the unwanted but educated people and so called political prisoners constituted the largest part of all inmates until the end of the war During World War II large groups of Spanish Republicans were also transferred to Mauthausen and its subcamps Most of them were former Republican soldiers or activists who had fled to France after Franco s victory and then were captured by German forces after the defeat of France in 1940 or handed over to the Germans by the Vichy authorities The largest of these groups arrived at Gusen in January 1941 45 In early 1941 almost all the Poles and Spaniards except for a small group of specialists working in the quarry s stone mill were transferred from Mauthausen to Gusen 35 Following the outbreak of the Soviet German War in 1941 the camps started to receive a large number of Soviet POWs Most of them were kept in huts separated from the rest of the camp The Soviet prisoners of war were a major part of the first groups to be gassed in the newly built gas chamber in early 1942 In 1944 a large group of Hungarian and Dutch Jews about 8 000 people altogether was also transferred to the camp Much like all the other large groups of prisoners that were transferred to Mauthausen and its subcamps most of them either died as a result of the hard labour and poor conditions or were deliberately killed citation needed After the Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 and the outbreak of the partisan resistance in summer of the same year many people suspected of aiding the Yugoslav resistance were sent to the Mauthausen camp mostly from areas under direct German occupation namely northern Slovenia and Serbia An estimated 1 500 Slovenes died in Mauthausen 46 Throughout the years of World War II the Mauthausen and its subcamps received new prisoners in smaller transports daily mostly from other concentration camps in German occupied Europe Most of the prisoners at the subcamps of Mauthausen had been kept in a number of different detention sites before they arrived The most notable of such centres for Mauthausen and its subcamps were the camps at Dachau and Auschwitz The first transports from Auschwitz arrived in February 1942 The second transport in June of that year was much larger and numbered some 1 200 prisoners Similar groups were sent from Auschwitz to Gusen and Mauthausen in April and November 1943 and then in January and February 1944 Finally after Adolf Eichmann visited Mauthausen in May of that year Mauthausen received the first group of roughly 8 000 Hungarian Jews from Auschwitz the first group to be evacuated from that camp before the Soviet advance Initially the groups evacuated from Auschwitz consisted of qualified workers for the ever growing industry of Mauthausen and its subcamps but as the evacuation proceeded other categories of people were also transported to Mauthausen Gusen Vienna or Melk citation needed Subcamp inmate countsLate 1944 early 1945 7 note 5 Gusen I II III 26 311Ebensee 18 437Gunskirchen 15 000Melk 10 314Linz 6 690Amstetten 2 966Wiener Neudorf 2 954Schwechat 2 568Steyr Munichholz 1 971Schlier Redl Zipf 1 488Over time Auschwitz had to almost stop accepting new prisoners and most were directed to Mauthausen instead The last group roughly 10 000 prisoners was evacuated in the last wave in January 1945 only a few weeks before the Soviet liberation of the Auschwitz Birkenau complex 47 Among them was a large group of civilians arrested by the Germans after the failure of the Warsaw uprising 48 22 but by the liberation not more than 500 of them were still alive 49 Altogether during the final months of the war 23 364 prisoners from other concentration camps arrived at the camp complex 49 Many more perished from exhaustion during death marches or in railway wagons where the prisoners were confined at sub zero temperatures for several days before their arrival without adequate food or water Prisoner transports were considered less important than other important services and could be kept on sidings for days as other trains passed citation needed Many of those who survived the journey died before they could be registered whilst others were given the camp numbers of prisoners who had already been killed 49 Most were then accommodated in the camps or in the newly established tent camp German Zeltlager just outside the Mauthausen subcamp where roughly 2 000 people were forced into tents intended for not more than 800 inmates and then starved to death 50 As in all other Nazi concentration camps not all the prisoners were equal Their treatment depended largely on the category assigned to each inmate as well as their nationality and rank within the system The so called kapos or prisoners who had been recruited by their captors to police their fellow prisoners were given more food and higher pay in the form of concentration camp coupons which could be exchanged for cigarettes in the canteen as well as a separate room inside most barracks 51 On Himmler s order of June 1941 a brothel was opened in the Mauthausen and Gusen I camps in 1942 52 53 The Kapos formed the main part of the so called Prominents German Prominenz or prisoners who were given a much better treatment than the average inmate 54 Women and children in Mauthausen Edit Women s camp at Mauthausen after liberation Although the Mauthausen camp complex was mostly a labour camp for men a women s camp was opened in Mauthausen in September 1944 with the first transport of female prisoners from Auschwitz Eventually more women and children came to Mauthausen from Ravensbruck Bergen Belsen Gross Rosen and Buchenwald Along with the female prisoners came some female guards twenty are known to have served in the Mauthausen camp and sixty in the whole camp complex Female guards also staffed the Mauthausen subcamps at Hirtenberg Lenzing the main women s subcamp in Austria and Sankt Lambrecht The Chief Overseers at Mauthausen were firstly Margarete Freinberger and then Jane Bernigau Almost all the female Overseers who served in Mauthausen were recruited from Austrian cities and towns between September and November 1944 In early April 1945 at least 2 500 more female prisoners came from the female subcamps at Amstetten St Lambrecht Hirtenberg and the Flossenburg subcamp at Freiberg According to Daniel Patrick Brown Hildegard Lachert also served at Mauthausen 55 The available Mauthausen inmate statistics 56 from the spring of 1943 shows that there were 2 400 prisoners below the age of 20 which was 12 8 of the 18 655 population By late March 1945 the number of juvenile prisoners in Mauthausen increased to 15 048 which was 19 1 of the 78 547 Mauthausen inmates The number of imprisoned children increased 6 2 times whereas the total number of adult prisoners during the same period multiplied by a factor of only four These numbers reflected the increasing use of Polish Czech Soviet and Balkan teenagers as slave labour as the war continued 57 Statistics showing the composition of juvenile inmates shortly before their liberation reveal the following major child prisoner sub groups 5 809 foreign civilian labourers 5 055 political prisoners 3 654 Jews and 330 Russian POWs There were also 23 Romani children 20 so called anti social elements six Spaniards and three Jehovah s Witnesses 56 Treatment of inmates and methodology of crime Edit Hans Bonarewitz being taken to his execution after escaping and being recaptured 7 July 1942 Mauthausen was one of the most brutal and severe of the Nazi concentration camps 58 59 60 The inmates suffered not only from malnutrition overcrowded huts and constant abuse and beatings by the guards and kapos 35 but also from exceptionally hard labour 40 The work in the quarries often in unbearable heat or in temperatures as low as 30 C 22 F 35 led to exceptionally high mortality rates 60 note 6 The food rations were limited and during the 1940 1942 period an average inmate weighed 40 kilograms 88 lb 61 It is estimated that the average energy content of food rations dropped from about 1 750 calories 7 300 kJ a day during the 1940 1942 period to between 1 150 and 1 460 calories 4 800 and 6 100 kJ a day during the next period In 1945 the energy content was even lower and did not exceed 600 to 1 000 calories 2 500 to 4 200 kJ a day less than a third of the energy needed by an average worker in heavy industry 2 The reduced rations led to the starvation of thousands of inmates Stairs of Death prisoners forced to carry a granite block up 186 steps to the top of the quarry The inmates of Mauthausen Gusen I and Gusen II had access to a separate part of the camp for the sick the so called Krankenlager Despite the fact that roughly 100 medics from among the inmates were working there 62 they were not given any medication and could offer only basic first aid 7 62 Thus the hospital camp as it was called by the German authorities was in fact a hospital only in name The rock quarry in Mauthausen was at the base of the Stairs of Death Prisoners were forced to carry roughly hewn blocks of stone often weighing as much as 50 kilograms 110 lb up the 186 stairs one prisoner behind the other As a result many exhausted prisoners collapsed in front of the other prisoners in the line and then fell on top of the other prisoners creating a domino effect the first prisoner falling onto the next and so on all the way down the stairs 63 In the quarry prisoners were forced to carry the boulders from morning until night whipped by Nazi guards 64 65 Edward Mosberg Such brutality was not accidental Former prisoner Edward Mosberg said If you stopped for a moment the SS either shot you or pushed you off the cliff to your death 65 The SS guards would often force prisoners exhausted from hours of hard labour without sufficient food and water to race up the stairs carrying blocks of stone Those who survived the ordeal would often be placed in a line up at the edge of a cliff known as The Parachutists Wall German Fallschirmspringerwand 66 At gun point each prisoner would have the option of being shot or pushing the prisoner in front of him off the cliff 26 Other common methods of extermination of prisoners who were either sick unfit for further labour or as a means of collective responsibility or after escape attempts included beating the prisoners to death by the SS guards and Kapos starving to death in bunkers hangings and mass shootings 67 At times the guards or Kapos would either deliberately throw the prisoners on the 380 volt electric barbed wire fence 67 or force them outside the boundaries of the camp and then shoot them on the pretence that they were attempting to escape 68 Another method of extermination were icy showers some 3 000 inmates died of hypothermia after having been forced to take an icy cold shower and then left outside in cold weather 69 A large number of inmates were drowned in barrels of water at Gusen II 70 71 The Nazis also performed pseudo scientific experiments on the prisoners Among the doctors to organise them were Sigbert Ramsauer Karl Josef Gross Eduard Krebsbach and Aribert Heim Heim was dubbed Doctor Death by the inmates he was in Gusen for seven weeks which was enough to carry out his experiments 72 73 Mauthausen concentration camp memorial plaques behind the Prison Block marking the spot where the ashes of the executed Englandspiel SOE agents are buried Hans Marsalek estimated that an average life expectancy of newly arrived prisoners in Gusen varied from six months between 1940 and 1942 to less than three months in early 1945 74 Paradoxically with the growth of forced labour industry in various subcamps of Mauthausen the situation of some of the prisoners improved significantly While the food rations were increasingly limited every month the heavy industry necessitated skilled specialists rather than unqualified workers and the brutality of the camp s SS and Kapos was limited While the prisoners were still beaten on a daily basis and the Muselmanner were still exterminated from early 1943 on some of the factory workers were allowed to receive food parcels from their families mostly Poles and Frenchmen This allowed many of them not only to evade the risk of starvation but also to help other prisoners who had no relatives outside the camps or who were not allowed to receive parcels 75 In February 1945 the camp was the site of Nazi war crime Muhlviertler Hasenjagd hare hunt where around 500 escaped prisoners mostly Soviet officers were mercilessly hunted down and murdered by SS local law enforcement and civilians 76 Death toll Edit Fourteen Czech intellectuals shot by the SS in Mauthausen 1942 The Germans destroyed much of the camp s files and evidence and often allocated newly arrived prisoners the camp numbers of those who had already been killed 40 so the exact death toll of Mauthausen and its subcamps is impossible to calculate The matter is further complicated due to some of the inmates of Gusen being murdered in Mauthausen and at least 3 423 were sent to Hartheim Castle 40 7 km 25 3 mi away Overall more than 90 000 of the 190 000 people deported to Mauthausen died there or in one of its subcamps 1 Staff EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2015 SS Captain Albert Sauer presided over the initial establishment of the camp on 1 August 1938 and remained camp commandant until 17 February 1939 Franz Ziereis assumed control as commandant of the Mauthausen concentration camp from 1939 until the camp was liberated by the American forces in 1945 77 The infamous Death s Head Unit or SS Totenkopfverbande charged with guarding the camp perimeter in addition to work detachments was headed by Georg Bachmayer a captain in the SS Further records of camp leadership were destroyed by Nazi officials in effort to cover up war atrocities and those involved Several Norwegian Waffen SS volunteers worked as guards or as instructors for prisoners from Nordic countries according to senior researcher Terje Emberland at the Center for Studies of Holocaust and Religious Minorities 78 Liberation and postwar heritage Edit An M8 Greyhound armored car of the US Army s 11th Armored Division entering the Mauthausen concentration camp The banner in the background in Spanish reads as Anti fascist Spaniards salute the forces of liberation 79 Naked survivors at Mauthausen Temporary identity papers produced for Mauthausen detainee after camp liberation During the final months before liberation the camp s commander Franz Ziereis prepared for its defence against a possible Soviet offensive The remaining prisoners were rushed to build a line of granite anti tank obstacles to the east of Mauthausen The inmates unable to cope with the hard labour and malnutrition were exterminated in large numbers to free space for newly arrived evacuation transports from other camps including most of the subcamps of Mauthausen located in eastern Austria In the final months of the war the main source of dietary energy the parcels of food sent through the International Red Cross stopped and food rations became catastrophically low The prisoners transferred to the Hospital Subcamp received one piece of bread per 20 inmates and roughly half a litre of weed soup a day 80 This made some of the prisoners previously engaged in various types of resistance activity begin to prepare plans to defend the camp in case of an SS attempt to exterminate all the remaining inmates 80 On 3 May the SS and other guards started to prepare for evacuation of the camp The following day the guards of Mauthausen were replaced with unarmed Volkssturm soldiers and an improvised unit formed of elderly police officers and fire fighters evacuated from Vienna The police officer in charge of the unit accepted the inmate self government as the camp s highest authority and Martin Gerken until then the highest ranking kapo prisoner in the Gusen s administration in the rank of Lageralteste or the Camp s Elder became the new de facto commander He attempted to create an International Prisoner Committee that would become a provisional governing body of the camp until it was liberated by one of the approaching armies but he was openly accused of co operation with the SS and the plan failed All work in the subcamps of Mauthausen stopped and the inmates focused on preparations for their liberation or defence of the camps against a possible assault by the SS divisions concentrated in the area 81 The remnants of several German divisions indeed assaulted the Mauthausen subcamp but were repelled by the prisoners who took over the camp 12 Of the main subcamps of Mauthausen only Gusen III was to be evacuated On 1 May the inmates were rushed on a death march towards Sankt Georgen but were ordered to return to the camp after several hours The operation was repeated the following day but called off soon afterwards The following day the SS guards deserted the camp leaving the prisoners to their fate 81 On 5 May 1945 the camp at Mauthausen was approached by a squad of US Army soldiers of the 41st Reconnaissance Squadron of the US 11th Armored Division 3rd US Army The reconnaissance squad was led by Staff Sergeant Albert J Kosiek 82 83 His troop disarmed the policemen and left the camp By the time of its liberation most of the guards in Mauthausen had fled around 30 of those who remained were killed by the prisoners 84 A similar number were killed in Gusen II 84 By 6 May all the remaining subcamps of Mauthausen with the exception of the two camps in the Loibl Pass were also liberated by American forces citation needed Among the inmates liberated from the camp was Lieutenant Jack Taylor an officer of the Office of Strategic Services 85 86 He had managed to survive with the help of several prisoners and was later a key witness at the Mauthausen Gusen camp trials carried out by the Dachau International Military Tribunal 87 Another of the camp s survivors was Simon Wiesenthal an engineer who spent the rest of his life hunting Nazi war criminals Future Medal of Honor recipient Tibor Ted Rubin was imprisoned there as a young teenager a Hungarian Jew he vowed to join the US Army upon his liberation and later did just that distinguishing himself in the Korean War as a corporal in the 8th Cavalry Regiment 1st Cavalry Division 88 Francesc Boix a photographer and veteran of the Spanish Civil War was imprisoned at the camp for four years During his time working in the photography lab of the camp he smuggled 3 000 negatives out of the camp and later used this photographic evidence to testify at the Nuremberg trials 89 Following the capitulation of Germany Mauthausen fell within the Soviet sector of occupation of Austria Initially the Soviet authorities used parts of the Mauthausen and Gusen I camps as barracks for the Red Army At the same time the underground factories were being dismantled and sent to the USSR as a war reparations After that between 1946 and 1947 the camps were unguarded and many furnishings and facilities of the camp were dismantled both by the Red Army and by the local population In the early summer of 1947 the Soviet forces had blown up the tunnels and were then withdrawn from the area while the camp was turned over to Austrian civilian authorities citation needed Memorials Edit French monument at Mauthausen Memorial to Mauthausen Concentration Camp Pere Lachaise Cemetery Paris Mauthausen was declared a national memorial site in 1949 90 Bruno Kreisky the Chancellor of Austria officially opened the Mauthausen Museum on 3 May 1975 30 years after the camp s liberation 3 A visitor centre was inaugurated in 2003 designed by the architects Herwig Mayer Christoph Schwarz and Karl Peyrer Heimstatt covering an area of 2 845 square metres 30 620 sq ft 91 The Mauthausen site remains largely intact but much of what constituted the subcamps of Gusen I II and III is now covered by residential areas built after the war 92 A memorial to Mauthausen stands amongst the various memorials to concentration camps in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris 93 The Mauthausen Trilogy also known as The Ballad of Mauthausen is a cycle of four arias with lyrics based on poems written by Greek poet Iakovos Kambanellis a Mauthausen concentration camp survivor and music written by Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis Documentaries and films EditThe Quality of Mercy 1994 Austrian film written directed and produced by Andreas Gruber Mauthausen Gusen La memoria 2009 in Valencian by Rosa Brines An 18 minute documentary about the republican Spaniards deported to Mauthausen and Gusen It includes testimonies from survivors The Photographer of Mauthausen 2018 Based on real events Francisco Boix is the Spanish photographer and inmate of Mauthausen who saved thousands of pieces of photographic evidence of the horrors committed inside the Austrian concentration camp s walls 94 Les Resitants de Mauthausen Resistance at Mauthausen 2021 A 51 minute documentary by Barbara Necek about the resistance by republican Spanish prisoners focusing particularly on Francisco Boix who preserved thousands of photographs of conditions inside the camp See also EditAmicale de Mauthausen Camp de concentration d Argeles sur Mer Eisenwerke Oberdonau Auschwitz concentration camp Flugmotorenwerke Ostmark Granitwerke Mauthausen Mauthausen Trilogy Muhlviertler Hasenjagd Steyr Munichholz subcamp Ljubelj subcamp List of Nazi concentration camps Portals Austria Germany World War IIReferences EditFootnotes Edit Oswald Pohl apart from being a high ranking SS member owner of DEST and several other companies and chief of administration and treasurer of various Nazi organizations was also the managing director of the German Red Cross In 1938 he transferred 8 000 000 Reichsmark from member fees to one of the accounts of the SS SS Spargemeinschaft e V which in turn donated all the money to DEST in 1939 7 As stated in Reinhard Heydrich s memo of 1 January 1941 13 11 000 000 Reichsmark was equivalent to roughly 4 403 000 US dollars or almost one million sterling by 1939 exchange rates 28 In turn 4 403 000 1939 dollars are roughly equivalent to 560 370 000 modern US dollars using the relative share of GDP as the main factor of comparison or 85 8 million using the consumer price index 29 In reality the actual production never reached such levels 35 The subcamp inmate counts refer to the situation in late 1944 and early 1945 before the major reorganization of the camp s system and before the arrival of a large number of evacuation trains and death marches It is often mentioned that the mortality rate reached 58 in 1941 as compared with 36 at Dachau and 19 at Buchenwald over the same period Dobosiewicz who made the most extensive study compared various factors his estimations were based on the number of prisoners to arrive in a year as compared to the number of that were murdered during a year 7 Citations Edit a b c Freund amp Kranebitter 2016 p 56 a b c d e Dobosiewicz 2000 pp 191 202 a b c Bischof amp Pelinka pp 185 190 a b c d e f Haunschmied Mills Witzany Durda 2008 pp 172 175 sfn error no target CITEREFHaunschmied Mills Witzany Durda 2008 help Walden p 1 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 13 a b c d e f g Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 449 a b c Haunschmied Mills Witzany Durda 2008 pp 45 48 sfn error no target CITEREFHaunschmied Mills Witzany Durda 2008 help Pike p 89 Pike p 18 Speer pp 367 368 a b Zeromski pp 6 12 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 12 a b Marsalek 1995 p 69 Freund amp Kranebitter 2016 p 58 Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 13 47 Dobosiewicz 2000 p 15 The Mauthausen Concentration Camp 1938 1945 Mauthausen Memorial 21 December 2021 Archived from the original on 27 October 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 14 Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 198 Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 25 196 197 a b c Dobosiewicz 2000 p 193 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 25 Dobosiewicz 2000 p 26 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 240 a b Waller pp 3 5 a b Memoriales historicos Historia de los campos de concentracion Derela p 1 Williamson p 1 M S Geschichte Pike p 98 Dobosiewicz 1980 pp 37 38 Haunschmied 1997 p 1325 a b Dobosiewicz 2000 p 194 a b c d e Grzesiuk p 392 a b Nazi secret weapons site claims refuted The Local 27 January 2015 Retrieved 11 October 2015 Richardson pp 162 164 Terrance p 142 Dobosiewicz 1977 p 343 a b c Abzug pp 106 110 Shermer amp Grobman pp 168 175 Nogaj p 64 Piotrowski p 25 Kunert p 104 Wnuk 1972 pp 100 105 STA amp mm Ze pred danasnjo Filipkowski p 1 Kirchmayer p 576 a b c Dobosiewicz 2000 pp 365 367 Freund amp Greifeneder Die Zelte waren fur hochstens 800 Personen Dobosiewicz 2000 p 204 Nizkor KZ Gusen Memorial Committee KZ Gusen I Concentration Camp at Langenstein KZ Gusen Brothel Dobosiewicz 2000 p 205 Dobosiewicz 2000 p 108 Brown p 288 a b Friedlander pp 33 69 Myczkowski p 31 Simon Wiesenthal Center Mauthausen Bloxham p 210 a b Burleigh pp 210 211 Pike p 97 a b Krukowski pp 292 297 Weissman pp 2 3 Edward Mosberg USC Shoah Foundation 16 September 2020 a b Michael Jones 2015 After Hitler The Last Ten Days of World War II in Europe KZ Gedenkstaette Mauthausen Parachute Jump a b Maida The systematic and deliberate extermination by hunger Schmidt pp 146 148 Wnuk 1961 pp 20 22 Dobosiewicz 2000 p 12 Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 102 276 Fuchs p 1 Schmidt amp Loehrer p 146 Marsalek 1968 p 32 as cited in Dobosiewicz 2000 pp 192 193 Grzesiuk pp 252 255 Demeritt Linda C 1999 Representations of History The Muhlviertler Hasenjagd as Word and Image Modern Austrian Literature 32 4 135 145 JSTOR 24648890 Camp SS and Guards Mauthausen Memorial Verdens Gang p 1 Pike p 256 a b Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 374 375 a b Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 382 388 Pike pp 233 234 Radd Maggie 6 May 2020 75th Anniversary Of The Liberation Of Mauthausen Museum of Jewish Heritage Archived from the original on 19 January 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 a b Dobosiewicz 1977 pp 395 397 UDT SEAL Association Lt Jack Taylor of the OSS Pike p 237 Taylor 2003 Medal of Honor Recipients Korean War TIBOR RUBIN United States Army Center of Military History Retrieved 5 December 2014 Francesc Boix Retrieved 10 March 2020 History of the Mauthausen Memorial KZ Gedenkstatte Mauthausen van Uffelen pp 150 153 Terrance pp 138 139 Paris walks Pere Lachaise Time Out Paris Anton Jacinto 23 November 2017 La vida del fotografo que sufrio el horror nazi se convierte en pelicula El Pais Prisa Retrieved 5 January 2018 Bibliography Edit KZ Gusen Memorial Committee 1997 KZ Gusen I Concentration Camp at Langenstein The Nizkor Project Nizkor Archived from the original on 2 October 2006 Retrieved 10 April 2006 Robert Abzug 1987 Inside the Vicious Heart Oxford Oxford University Press pp 106 110 ISBN 0 19 504236 0 Gunter Bischof Anton Pelinka 1996 Austrian Historical Memory and National Identity Transaction Publishers pp 185 190 ISBN 1 56000 902 0 Donald Bloxham 2003 Genocide on Trial War Crimes Trials and the Formation of Holocaust History and Memory Oxford Oxford University Press p 210 ISBN 0 19 925904 6 Daniel Patrick Brown 2002 The Camp Women The Female Auxiliaries Who Assisted the SS in Running the Nazi Concentration Camp System Schiffer Publishing p 288 ISBN 0 7643 1444 0 Michael Burleigh 1997 Ethics and Extermination Reflections on Nazi Genocide Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 210 211 ISBN 0 521 58816 2 Adam Cyra 2004 Mauthausen Concentration Camp Records in the Auschwitz Museum Archives Auschwitz Birkenau Memorial and Museum Historical Research Section Auschwitz Birkenau Museum Archived from the original on 30 September 2006 Retrieved 11 April 2006 Michal Derela 2005 The prices of Polish armament before 1939 The PIBWL military site Archived from the original on 1 February 2018 Retrieved 22 May 2006 in Polish Stanislaw Dobosiewicz 1977 Mauthausen Gusen oboz zaglady Mauthausen Gusen the Camp of Doom Warsaw Ministry of National Defence Press p 449 ISBN 83 11 06368 0 in Polish Stanislaw Dobosiewicz 1980 Mauthausen Gusen Samoobrona i konspiracja Mauthausen Gusen self defence and underground Warsaw Wydawnictwa MON p 486 ISBN 83 11 06497 0 in Polish Stanislaw Dobosiewicz 2000 Mauthausen Gusen w obronie zycia i ludzkiej godnosci Mauthausen Gusen in defence of life and human dignity Warsaw Bellona pp 191 202 ISBN 83 11 09048 3 in Polish various authors 1962 Marian Filip Mikolaj Lomacki eds Wrogom ku przestrodze Mauthausen 5 maja 1945 Enemies Beware Mauthausen 5 May 1945 Warsaw ZG ZBoWiD p 135 in Polish Piotr Filipkowski 2005 Auschwitz w drodze do Mauthausen Auschwitz en route to Mauthausen Europe According to Auschwitz Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 11 April 2006 in English Joseph Fisher 2017 The Heavens were Walled In Vienna New Academic Press p 326 ISBN 978 3 7003 1956 6 in German Florian Freund Harald Greifeneder 2005 Zeltlager Tent Camp mauthausen memorial at Retrieved 16 May 2006 Freund Florian Kranebitter Andreas 2016 On the Quantitative Dimension of Mass Murder at the Mauthausen Concentration Camp and its Subcamps Memorial Book for the Dead of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp Commentaries and Biographies Vienna New Academic Press pp 56 67 ISBN 978 3 7003 1975 7 various authors Henry Friedlander 1981 The Nazi Concentration Camps In Michael D Ryan ed Human Responses to the Holocaust Perpetrators and Victims Bystanders and Resisters Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press pp 33 69 ISBN 0 88946 901 6 Dale Fuchs October 2005 Nazi war criminal escapes Costa Brava police search Guardian 17 October 2005 Retrieved 25 September 2013 in Polish Wladyslaw Gebik 1972 Z diablami na ty Calling the Devils by their Names Gdansk Wydawnictwo Morskie p 332 Martin Gilbert 1987 The Holocaust A History of the Jews of Europe During the Second World War Owl Books p 976 ISBN 0 8050 0348 7 in Polish Stanislaw Grzesiuk 1985 Piec lat kacetu Five Years of KZ Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza p 392 ISBN 83 05 11108 3 Rudolf Haunschmied Harald Faeth 1997 B8 BERGKRISTALL KL Gusen II Tunnel and Shelter Researching Archived from the original on 14 June 2006 Retrieved 26 April 2006 Rudolf A Haunschmied Jan Ruth Mills Siegi Witzany Durda 2008 St Georgen Gusen Mauthausen Concentration Camp Mauthausen Reconsidered Norderstedt Books on Demand p 289 ISBN 978 3 8334 7610 5 OCLC 300552112 in Czech Stanislav Hlavacek 2000 Historie KTM History of the Mauthausen Concentration Camp Koncentracni Tabor Mauthausen Pametni tisk k 55 vyroci osvobozeni KTM Mauthausen concentration camp Memorial publication for the 55th anniversary of the liberation Retrieved 18 May 2006 in Polish Jerzy Kirchmayer 1978 Powstanie warszawskie Warsaw Uprising Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza p 576 ISBN 83 05 11080 X in Polish Stefan Krukowski 1966 Pamieci lekarzy In memoriam of the doctors Nad pieknym modrym Dunajem Mauthausen 1940 1945 Mauthausen 1940 1945 At The Blue Danube Tadeusz Zeromski foreword Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza pp 292 297 PB 9330 66 in Polish Various authors 2009 Andrzej Kunert ed Czlowiek czlowiekowi Niszczenie polskiej inteligencji w latach 1939 1945 KL Mauthausen Gusen Man to Man The destruction of Polish intelligentsia 1939 1945 in the camps of Mauthausen Gusen Warsaw Rada Ochrony Pamieci Walk i Meczenstwa p 104 KZ Gedenkstaette Mauthausen Parachute Jump Mauthausen Memorial KZ Gedenkstaette Mauthausen Retrieved 23 September 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Bruno Maida The gas chamber of Mauthausen History and testimonies of the Italian deportees A Brief history of the camp National Association of Italian political deportees in the Nazi concentration camps Fondazione Memoria della Deportazione Archived from the original on 5 June 2006 Hans Marsalek 1968 Konzentrazionslager Gusen Gusen concentration camp Vienna p 32 in German Hans Marsalek 1995 Die Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Mauthausen History of Mauthausen Concentration Camp Wien Linz Osterreichischen Lagergemeinschaft Mauthausen u Mauthausen Aktiv Oberosterreich in Polish Adam Myczkowski 1946 Poprzez Dachau do Mauthausen Gusen Through Dachau to Mauthausen Gusen Krakow Ksiegarnia Stefana Kaminskiego p 31 in German M S 2000 Linz Eisenwerke Oberdonau Osterreichs Geschichte im Dritten Reich Archived from the original on 11 March 2007 Retrieved 11 April 2006 in Polish Stanislaw Nogaj 1945 Gusen Pamietnik dziennikarza Gusen Memoir of a Journalist Katowice Chorzow Komitet bylych wiezniow obozu koncentracyjnego Gusen p 64 David Wingeate Pike 2000 Spaniards in the Holocaust Mauthausen Horror on the Danube London Routledge p 480 ISBN 0 415 22780 1 Tadeusz Piotrowski 1998 Poland s holocaust ethnic strife collaboration with occupying forces and genocide in the Second Republic 1918 1947 McFarland Elizabeth C Richardson 1995 United States vs Leprich Administrative Law and Procedure Thomson Delmar Learning pp 162 164 ISBN 0 8273 7468 2 various authors 2008 Amy Schmidt Gudrun Loehrer eds The Mauthausen Concentration Camp Complex World War II and Postwar Records PDF Reference Information Paper Washington DC National Archives and Records Administration 115 145 148 Retrieved 23 September 2013 James Schmidt 2005 Not These Sounds Beethoven at Mauthausen PDF Philosophy and Literature Boston Boston University 29 146 163 doi 10 1353 phl 2005 0013 ISSN 0190 0013 S2CID 201741314 Retrieved 22 April 2014 Michael Shermer Alex Grobman 2002 The Gas Chamber at Mauthausen Denying History Who Says the Holocaust Never Happened and Why Do They Say It University of California Press pp 168 175 ISBN 0 520 23469 3 in Polish sm 3 April 2006 Pracownicy muzeum Auschwitz zeskanowali juz kartoteke Mauthausen The Workers of Auschwitz Museum Have Scanned the Mauthausen Files 61 rocznica wyzwolenia Auschwitz Polish Press Agency Retrieved 11 April 2006 Albert Speer 1970 Inside The Third Reich New York The Macmillan Company ISBN 0 88365 924 7 in Slovene STA mm May 2012 Taborisce v katerem je umrlo 1500 Slovencev Camp in which 1500 Slovenes died Mladina 13 5 2012 ISSN 1580 5352 Retrieved 16 November 2012 Jack Taylor 2003 OSS Archives The Dupont Mission The Blast UDT SEAL Association Archived from the original on 27 January 2006 Retrieved 28 April 2006 Marc Terrance 1999 Concentration Camps A Traveler s Guide to World War II Sites Universal Publishers ISBN 1 58112 839 8 UDT SEAL Association 2006 Jack Taylor American Agent Who Survived Mauthausen Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 28 April 2006 Chris van Uffelen 2010 Contemporary Museums Architecture History Collections Braun Publishing pp 150 153 ISBN 9783037680674 Geoffrey R Walden 2 July 2000 Gusen Concentration Camp Project B 8 Bergkristall Tunnel System The Third Reich in Ruins Retrieved 15 April 2015 James Waller 2002 Becoming Evil How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 5 ISBN 0 19 514868 1 Gary Weissman 2004 Fantasies of Witnessing Postwar Efforts to Experience the Holocaust Cornell University Press pp 2 3 ISBN 0 8014 4253 2 Simon Wiesenthal Center Selected Holocaust Glossary Terms Places and Personalities Florida Holocaust Museum webpage Florida Holocaust Museum Archived from the original on 8 December 2006 Retrieved 12 April 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Samuel H Williamson March 2011 Seven Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a U S Dollar Amount 1774 to present MeasuringWorth in Polish Zbigniew Wlazlowski 1974 Przez kamieniolomy i kolczasty drut Through the Quarries and Barbed Wire Krakow Wydawnictwo Literackie p 184 PB 1974 7600 in Polish various authors Wlodzimierz Wnuk 1961 Smiertelne kapiele Deadly Baths Oskarzamy Materialy do historii obozu koncentracyjnego Mauthausen Gusen We Accuse Materials on the History of Mauthausen Gusen Concentration Camp Katowice Klub Mauthausen Gusen ZBoWiD pp 20 22 in Polish Wlodzimierz Wnuk 1972 Z Hiszpanami w jednym szeregu With the Spaniards in One Line Bylem z wami I Was With You Warsaw PAX pp 100 105 in Polish Tadeusz Zeromski 1983 Kazimierz Rusinek ed Miedzynarodowka stracencow Desperados Internationale Warsaw Ksiazka i Wiedza pp 76 19 ISBN 83 05 11175 X in Spanish various authors 2005 Historia de los campos de concentracion El sistema de campos de concentracion nacionalsocialista 1933 1945 un modelo europeo History of the concentration camps the national socialist concentration camp system 1933 1945 European model Memoriales historicos 1933 1945 Historical memorials 1933 1945 in Norwegian Verdens Gang 1 November 2010 Norske vakter jobbet i Hitlers konsentrasjonsleire Norwegian guards worked in Hitler s concentration camps Verdens Gang 15 November 2010 ISSN 0805 5203 Retrieved 22 April 2014 Further reading EditEvelyn Le Chene 1971 Mauthausen The History of a Death Camp London Methuen p 296 ISBN 0 416 07780 3 Snyder Timothy D 2015 Black Earth The Holocaust As History and Warning ISBN 978 1 101 90346 9 Austrian Ministry of the Interior 2005 Das sichtbare Unfassbare The Visible Part Fotografien aus dem Konzentrationslager Mauthausen Photographs of Mauthausen Concentration Camp Vienna Mandelbaum Verlag p 220 ISBN 978385476 158 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to KZ Mauthausen concentration camp complex USHMM United States Holocaust Memorial Museum contains more than 500 pictures of Mauthausen Gusen Interviews with American servicemen imprisoned at Mauthausen Online exhibition of the Polish History Museum on the former KZ Gusen complex Mauthausen Memorial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mauthausen concentration camp amp oldid 1151155455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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