München-Giesing concentration camp
0 sources
München-Giesing concentration camp
Summary
München-Giesing concentration camp is a subcamp[1]. It draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (subcamp category, ranking #2 of 3).[2]
Key Facts
- München-Giesing concentration camp is in the country of Nazi Germany[3].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's image is recorded as Female foreign workers from Stadelheim prison work in a factory owned by the AGFA camera company.jpg[4].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's instance of is recorded as subcamp[5].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's instance of is recorded as concentration camp[6].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 3466162368034425790006[7].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's GND ID is recorded as 4450508-5[8].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as nb2021004733[9].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's location is recorded as Giesing[10].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's Commons category is recorded as Agfa-Commando[11].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's catalog code is recorded as camps/261[12].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 48.1071, 'lon': 11.5925}[13].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/012r5m4m[14].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's parent organization or unit is recorded as Dachau concentration camp[15].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's FactGrid item ID is recorded as Virág Erdős[16].
- München-Giesing concentration camp's WW2 Thesaurus Camp List ID is recorded as 9047[17].
Body
Operations
München-Giesing concentration camp's parent organization or unit is recorded as Dachau concentration camp[15].
Why It Matters
München-Giesing concentration camp draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (subcamp category, ranking #2 of 3).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[18] It is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[19]