Auschwitz Trial
0 sources
Auschwitz Trial
Summary
Auschwitz Trial is a war crimes trial[1]. It draws 137 Wikipedia views per month (war_crimes_trial category, ranking #12 of 40).[2]
Key Facts
- Auschwitz Trial is in the country of Poland[3].
- Auschwitz Trial's instance of is recorded as war crimes trial[4].
- Auschwitz Trial's instance of is recorded as Trials against Nazi Crimes[5].
- Auschwitz Trial's instance of is recorded as event[6].
- Auschwitz Trial's followed by is recorded as Frankfurt Auschwitz Trials[7].
- Auschwitz Trial's location is recorded as Kraków[8].
- Auschwitz Trial's Commons category is recorded as Auschwitz trial, Krakow[9].
- Auschwitz Trial's start time is recorded as +1947-11-24T00:00:00Z[10].
- Auschwitz Trial's end time is recorded as +1947-12-22T00:00:00Z[11].
- Auschwitz Trial's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04pw89[12].
- Auschwitz Trial's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Auschwitz trial[13].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Arthur Liebehenschel[14].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Maximilian Grabner[15].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Hans Aumeier[16].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Maria Mandl[17].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Karl Möckel[18].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Eric Muhsfeldt[19].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Franz Kraus[20].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Ludwig Plagge[21].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Fritz Buntrock[22].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Wilhelm Gehring[23].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Otto Lätsch[24].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Heinrich Josten[25].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Josef Kollmer[26].
- Auschwitz Trial's defendant is recorded as Hermann Kirschner[27].
Why It Matters
Auschwitz Trial draws 137 Wikipedia views per month (war_crimes_trial category, ranking #12 of 40).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]