The following is a list of subcamps of the Natzweiler-Struthof complex of Nazi concentration camps, and work kommandos from the main camp.
These subordinated camps were located on both sides of the German-French border. There were about 50 subcamps in the Natzweiler-Struthof camp system, located in Alsace and Lorraine as well as in the adjacent German provinces of Baden and Württemberg. By the fall of 1944, there were about 7,000 prisoners in the main camp and more than 20,000 in subcamps.[1]
- Asbach, today part of Obrigheim
- Auerbach, today part of Bensheim
- Bad Rappenau
- Baden-Baden
- Balingen
- Bernhausen
- Binau, seat of administration for subcamps in the area of Neckarelz, not a Concentration Camp
- Bisingen
- Bruttig-Treis (also called Treis-Bruttig), today Treis-Karden and Bruttig-Fankel, near Cochem
- Calw
- Cernay, Haut-Rhin
- Colmar
- Darmstadt
- Daudenzell, today part of Aglasterhausen
- Dautmergen
- Echterdingen
- Ellwangen
- Erzingen, today part of Balingen
- Frankfurt/Main, located within the Adler factory
- Frommern, today part of Balingen
- Geisenheim
- Geislingen an der Steige
- Fort Goeben within the city of Metz
- Gross-Sachsenheim
- Guttenbach, today part of Neckargerach, part of the administration moved into the town hall after they abandoned the main camp, not a Concentration Camp
- Hailfingen-Tailfingen
- Haslach
- Heilbronn
- Heppenheim
- Hessenthal, today part of Schwäbisch Hall
- Iffezheim
- Kaisheim
- Kochendorf
- Leonberg, in the Engelberg Tunnel
- Mosbach
- Neckarbischofsheim
- Neckarelz I and II
- Neckargerach
- Neckargartach, today part of Heilbronn
- Neunkirchen
- Oberehnheim, today Obernai
- Oberschefflenz, today part of Schefflenz
- Obrigheim
- Offenburg
- Peltre
- Plattenwald, today part of Bad Friedrichshall
- Rothau
- Saint-Die
- Sainte Marie aux Mines
- Sandhofen
- Schirmeck
- Schömberg
- Schörzingen, today part of Schömberg
- Schwäbisch Hall
- Schwarzacher Hof, today part of Schwarzach
- Spaichingen
- Thil
- Unterriexingen, today part of Markgröningen
- Wiesengrund at Vaihingen an der Enz
- Walldorf, today part of Mörfelden-Walldorf
- Wasseralfingen, today part of Aalen
- Weckrieden, today part of Schwäbisch Hall
- Wesserling, today Husseren-Wesserling
- Zuffenhausen
References
edit- ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (August 18, 2015). "Natzweiler-Struthof". Holocaust Encyclopedia. Retrieved September 20, 2015.
External links
edit- Listing at Jewish virtual library based on "Le livre des Camps" by Ludo Van Eck (1979).
Literature
edit- Stegemann, Robert: Das Konzentrationslager Natzweiler-Struthof und seine Außenkommandos an Rhein und Neckar 1941–1945. Metropol, Berlin 2010, ISBN 978-3-940938-58-9.