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Subcamp

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(Redirected fromSubcamp (SS))
Outlying Nazi detention center under the command of a main concentration camp
For other uses, seeSubcamp (disambiguation).
The Außenkommando "Unter den Eichen" inWiesbaden was the site of a subcamp of theSS-Sonderlager Hinzert in which 100 political prisoners performed forced labor.[1][2][3][4]

Subcamps[a] were outlying detention centres (Haftstätten) that came under the command of a mainconcentration camp run by theSS inNazi Germany andGerman-occupied Europe. The Nazis distinguished between themain camps (orStammlager) and the subcamps (Außenlager orAußenkommandos) subordinated to them. Survival conditions in the subcamps were, in many cases, poorer for the prisoners than those in the main camps.[5][6][7][2]

Emergence of the concept

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Within aconcentration camp, prisoners were forced to carry out various tasks. The work could even be pointless and vexatious, without any useful output. Based on military language theSS designated such prisoner task forces as "details" orKommandos; the generic term being the "works details" (Arbeitskommandos) of a camp.

For example, inDachau concentration camp there was a "Crematorium Works Detail" (Arbeitskommando Krematorium), which was put together from a group of concentration camp prisoners; they were separately accommodated and were to have no contact with the other prisoners.Kommandos that were charged withforced labor were overseen by prisoner functionaries known asKapos.

Whether a prisoner was assigned to a physically easy or difficultKommando affected their chances of survival.[8] AKommando assigned work that was inside a building, e.g. carrying out technical work, was more likely to survive thanKommandos who were made to work outside, in the open in winter, in freezing temperatures.

KZ Außenkommandos

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Dachau was the first concentration camp thatReichsführer-SSHimmler had built. It was already in existence in 1933 and developed into a prototype for subsequent concentration camps such asBuchenwald, which was completed in 1937. But even Dachau concentration camp was not geographically restricted toDachau. In addition to theKommandos that had to be formed within the camp itself, were soon addedKommandos that worked outside the camp, for example the herb plantation detail (Kommando der Kräuterplantage) or the works details assigned to peat cutting. The SS increasingly deployed prisoners outside their concentration camp and made them build installations such as roads, ditches, barracks or SS recreation homes. Concentration camp prisoners were even used for the private purposes of senior Nazi officers: forOswald Pohl's country house ofBrüningsau, for Himmler's Hunting Lodge and also for the country house ofHans Loritz, the commandant of Dachau. EvenEleonore Baur, a nurse at the concentration camp and acquaintance of Hitler, was given her ownKommando.

Many of these works details were only established for weeks or months and their strength varied.Kommandos who stayed overnight, outside the concentration camp, were also calledAußenkommandos.[9]

In several casesAußenkommandos developed into new, independent concentration camps:Mauthausen concentration camp began in August 1938 with the arrival of the first prisoner details from Dachau.Niederhagen concentration camp was also formed from a KZ Außenkommando.Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp was initially a subcamp of Buchenwald and later became an independent concentration camp.

KZ Außenlager

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The earth huts inKaufering concentration camp in which prisoners were housed

At the onset of war, the SS increasingly employed concentration camp prisoners inarmaments factories. In some cases, the prisoners were accommodated in a hodge-podge of makeshift sleeping areas; in other cases, the SS forced them to erect the camp including the watchtowers and fences. Many such subcamps (KZ-Außenlager) were laid out in similar fashion to the concentration camps. There were also SS camp commanders (SS-Lagerführer) andprisoner functionaries such as the "camp senior" (Lagerältester) or "block senior" (Blockältester).

Today the camps are known as subcamps (in German either asKZ-Außenlager orNebenlager). Sometimes the colloquial abbreviation "KZ" is used, but this can also refer to a main camp.

In the hierarchy of the Nazi camp system, subcamps were subordinated to a concentration camp that, for example, held the prisoner records and the death registers. Often the supply of food in subcamps was poorer than that of the main camp, quite apart from the condition of the sanitary facilities or sleeping arrangements for the prisoners.[10] Since 1943, in Nazi documentation theAußenlager were often referred to as "Waffen-SS Work Camps" (Arbeitslager der Waffen-SS), especially in reference to subcamps that housed workforce forunderground production facilities [de].[11] The largest one of these was theMittelbau-Dora concentration camp, a subcamp ofBuchenwald, which itself spawned a large number of subcamps.

Lists

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The following articles list the subcamps under individual main camps of a particular concentration camp:

  1. List of subcamps of Auschwitz
  2. List of subcamps of Buchenwald
  3. List of subcamps of Dachau
  4. List of subcamps of Flossenbürg
  5. List of subcamps of Gross-Rosen
  6. List of subcamps of Hinzert
  7. List of subcamps of Herzogenbusch
  8. List of subcamps of Kraków-Płaszów
  9. List of subcamps of Majdanek
  10. List of subcamps of Mauthausen
  11. List of subcamps of Mittelbau
  12. List of subcamps of Natzweiler-Struthof
  13. List of subcamps of Neuengamme
  14. List of subcamps of Ravensbrück
  15. List of subcamps of Sachsenhausen
  16. List of subcamps of Stutthof

Notes

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  1. ^also translated assatellite camps

References

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  1. ^"Das Wiesbadener Außenkommando "Unter den Eichen" des SS-Sonderlagers/KZ Hinzert".Hessische Landeszentrale für politische Bildung (in German). Archived fromthe original on 2020-09-19.
  2. ^abBärbel Maul, Axel Ulrich (2014). Renate Knigge-Tesche (ed.).Das Wiesbadener-Außenkommando "Unter den Eichen" des SS-Sonderlagers/KZ Hinzert(PDF). Design: Gottfried Schmid (8th ed.). Magistrat der LandeshauptstadtWiesbaden, Kulturamt - Stadtarchiv. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2021-09-21.
  3. ^"KZ-Gedenkstätte "Unter den Eichen"".LandeshauptstadtWiesbaden (in German).Archived from the original on 2021-07-31. Retrieved2023-05-14.
  4. ^Wolfgang Jung, Gerhard Honekamp and Hartmann Wunderer (1995). "KZ-Häftlinge und SS in Wiesbaden".Alltag zwischen Mächtigen und Müßiggängern – Historische Erkundungen in Wiesbaden und Umgebung (2nd ed.). Marianne Breuer Verlag. pp. 77–82.ISBN 9783980470100.
  5. ^"KZ-Außenlager in Bayern, Tagung" (in German). Germany: ... November 2006.
  6. ^"KZ-Außenlager im Ruhrgebiet, Tagung" (in German). December 2009.
  7. ^Caplan, Jane; Wachsmann, Nikolaus (2009). "Introduction".Concentration Camps in Nazi Germany: The New Histories. Routledge. pp. 1–16.ISBN 978-1-135-26322-5.
  8. ^Stanislav Zámečník:Das war Dachau. Luxemburg, 2002,ISBN 2-87996-948-4. p. 150, Kapitel "Überlebensbedingungen"
  9. ^Verzeichnis der Konzentrationslager und ihrer Außenkommandos gemäß § 42 Abs. 2 BEGArchived 2004-11-26 at theWayback Machine
  10. ^Zámečník, p. 303. KapitelAußenkommandos und Nebenlager
  11. ^Hans Maršálek,Die Geschichte des Konzentrationslagers Mauthausen. Dokumentation. 3. Auflage. Österreichische Lagergemeinschaft Mauthausen, Wien 1995, p. 71.

Literature

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External links

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