Neuengamme concentration camp
0 sources
Neuengamme concentration camp
Summary
Neuengamme concentration camp is a Nazi concentration camp[1]. It draws 568 Wikipedia views per month (nazi_concentration_camp category, ranking #10 of 81).[2]
Key Facts
- Neuengamme concentration camp is located in Hamburg[3].
- Neuengamme concentration camp is in the country of Germany[4].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's image is recorded as KZ Neuengamme - Luftbild - 1945.jpg[5].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's instance of is recorded as Nazi concentration camp[6].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's ISNI is recorded as 0000000100617906[7].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 122000427[8].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's GND ID is recorded as 4129673-4[9].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's locator map image is recorded as Map of Nazi concentration camps.jpg[10].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as no97079767[11].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 17078100s[12].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's IdRef ID is recorded as 027497186[13].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hamburg-Wandsbek concentration camp[14].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hannover-Ahlem concentration camp[15].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hannover-Langenhagen concentration camp[16].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hannover-Limmer concentration camp[17].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hannover-Mühlenberg concentration camp[18].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Hildesheim concentration camp[19].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Kiel concentration camp[20].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Porta Westfalica concentration camp[21].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Salzgitter-Drütte concentration camp[22].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Schandelah concentration camp[23].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Vechelde concentration camp[24].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Verden concentration camp[25].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Wittenberge concentration camp[26].
- Neuengamme concentration camp's child organization or unit is recorded as Bremen-Blumenthal concentration camp[27].
Body
Operations
Subsidiaries include Hamburg-Wandsbek concentration camp[14], a concentration camp[28], in Germany[29]; Hannover-Ahlem concentration camp[15], a concentration camp[30], in Germany[31]; Hannover-Langenhagen concentration camp[16], a concentration camp[32], in Germany[33]; Hannover-Limmer concentration camp[17], a concentration camp[34], in Nazi Germany[35], founded in 1944[36]; Hannover-Mühlenberg concentration camp[18], a concentration camp[37], in Germany[38]; and Hildesheim concentration camp[19], a concentration camp[39], in Germany[40].
Why It Matters
Neuengamme concentration camp draws 568 Wikipedia views per month (nazi_concentration_camp category, ranking #10 of 81).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 26 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[41] It is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[42]