B
ergen-Belsen began as a prison camp for captured prisoners of war. It was not like Auschwitz where numerous gas chambers killed thousands everyday. But Bergen-Belsen was no less cruel or horrifying. Most died at Bergen-Belsen from being shot, hung, starved to death, or killed by disease. Bergen-Belsen's most famous prisoner was Anne Frank who was transferred there from Auschwitz in October 1944; she died of typhus a few weeks before the British Army liberated the camp. This camp did not fit the standard organization of a concentration camp. It had several camps that segregated the prisoners. Camp officials even traded important prisoners, including Jews, in exchange for money from different governments. Bergen-Belsen was unique in many ways, but it was still a camp where thousands suffered and died under the harsh hand of Nazi leadership.
Camp Commandants: SS Captain Adolf Haas
Camp Commandants: SS Captain Josef Kramer
Other: B-B established as a prisoner of war (POW) camp
1940
Other: SS establish the “star camp”
Sept 15, 1943
Other: First Jews from Greece arrives in “neutrals camp"
Aug 13, 1943
Other: SS establish a “residence camp” & “prisoners' camp
Apr 1943
Other: First Jews from the Netherlands arrives
Sept 15, 1943
Other: SS Captain Adolf Haas becomes 1st camp commandant
Apr 1943
Other: 1st Jewish prisoners arrives in “special camp”
Jul 7, 1943
Other: Bergen-Belsen is designated a concentration camp
Dec 1944
Other: Around 15,000 prisoners are interned at the camp
Dec 1, 1944
Other: SS trade approx. 300 Hungarian Jews for money
Aug 18, 1944
Other: Hungarian Camp established for 1st Hungarian Jews
Jul 9, 1944
Other: The “tent camp” is created for more sick prisoners
Aug 1944
Other: 1,800 prisoners are deported to Auschwitz
Oct 21, 1943
Other: 7,300 prisoners are interned in the camp
Jul 31, 1944
Other: Release 222 Jewish prisoners for captured Germans
Jun 29, 1944
Other: Around 1,300 more Hungarian Jews are released
Dec 4, 1944
Other: The “small women's camp” is established
Nov 1944
Other: 365 Jewish prisoners are released & sent to Spain
Feb 3, 1944
Other: “Prisoners' camp” becomes place for sick & injured
Mar 1944
Other: SS Captain Josef Kramer becomes camp commandant
Dec 2, 1944
Other: Victims
Approx. 50,000 prisoners died
Other: POW camp is dissolved, large women's camp created
Jan 1945
Other: Camp now interned 22,000 prisoners
Feb 1945
Other: 136 Jewish prisoners w/ S American papers released
Jan 21, 1945
Other: Kramer and other camp officials are executed
Dec 12, 1945
Other: British forces liberate Bergen-Belsen
Apr 15, 1945
Other: SS evacuate prisoners and head to Theresienstadt
Apr 6, 1945
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