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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fritz_SuhrenFritz Suhren - Wikipedia

    Ravensbrück concentration camp Fritz Suhren (10 June 1908 – 12 June 1950) was a Nazi German SS officer and Nazi concentration camp commandant. In 1950 he was tried for his role in The Holocaust by a French military court and found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity , and executed.

  2. Trabajó en el campo de concentración de Sachsenhausen entre 1941 y 1942. 1 En mayo de 1942, siendo Lagerführer (vicecomandante del campo) de Sachsenhausen, dirigió en persona el ahorcamiento de un prisionero, después de ordenar a otro interno que ahorcara él mismo al condenado. 2 . Ravensbrück.

  3. Number of inmates. 130,000 [1] to 132,000 [2] Killed. Unknown; 30,000 to 90,000 died or were killed. [3] Liberated by. Soviet Union, 30 April 1945. Ravensbrück ( pronounced [ʁaːvənsˈbʁʏk]) was a Nazi concentration camp exclusively for women from 1939 to 1945, located in northern Germany, 90 km (56 mi) north of Berlin at a site near the ...

  4. Following an evacuation order from Himmler, Ravensbrücks commandant Fritz Suhren had the remaining 20,000 prisoners marched towards the north-west in several columns. On 30 April 1945, the Red Army liberated the camp and around 2,000 sick prisoners who had been left behind.

  5. Camp commandant Fritz Suhren at first evaded capture, but was eventually captured and tried by a French military court in 1949, along with the director of forced labor at Ravensbrück, Hans Pflaum. The Tribunal sentenced both to death. In 1947 a Polish court found former Ravensbrück camp guard Maria Mandel guilty and sentenced her to death.

  6. Courtesy of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Ravensbrück was a concentration camp built by the Nazis to imprison and exploit female prisoners in the Third Reich, often through forced labour. The construction of Ravensbrück began in November 1938.

  7. Former Ravensbrück camp commandant Fritz Suhren is tried by a French military court in 1949, along with the director of forced labor at Ravensbrück, Hans Pflaum. Both are sentenced to death. 1950s and 1960s East German courts continue to prosecute former Ravensbrück camp personnel. 1965-1966 The last Ravensbrück trial takes place in East ...