Flossenbürg-Mülsen St. Micheln: Difference between revisions

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== Custodians ==
== Custodians ==
<!-- Organisations that have records, information, research, etc about this location. This could be museums, government institutions and other organisations.  -->
<!-- Organisations that have records, information, research, etc about this location. This could be museums, government institutions and other organisations.  -->
*  
* The following archival collections are important: Zdl at BA-L, IV 410 AR 3174/66; IV 410 AR-Z 2/70; ITS, Hist. Abt., Flossenbürg.


= Outstanding questions =
= Outstanding questions =

Revision as of 05:55, 27 January 2025


Names

  • Mülsen St. Micheln[1][2]
  • Muelsen-St. Micheln[3]
  • Außenlager Mülsen St. Micheln[4]

Type

Dates

(YYYY-MM-DD)

  • Opened: 1944-01-27[5]
  • Closed: 1945-04-13[6]

Internal and external work details and, if applicable, (known) subcamps

Internal work details (Kommando)

External work details (Aussenkommando)

  • Walter Schroff, infamous for his brutality when he was Kapo of the canal building detail.[7]

Subcamps (Aussenlager)

Locations

Camp location

GPS[8]

geo: (link for navigation systems)

  • Street Address: [[]]
  • District: [[]]
  • Town: [[]]
  • State: [[]]
  • Country: [[]]

Organisations involved

Victims and Survivors

Population information

Names of victims

Names of survivors

Location of graves

Staff

This camp was run by the SS-WVHA/Gestapo/Wehrmacht/DAF/OT

Names of perpetrators and any other people involved

Current status

Status of the site

Accessibility

Memorials

Memorial location

GPS

geo: (link for navigation systems)

  • Street Address: [[]]
  • District: [[]]
  • Town: [[]]
  • State: [[]]
  • Country: [[]]

No memorial known at this time.

Description

Resources

Bibliography

  • Hans Brenner, “Der Mord auf dem Sportplatz in Schlema,” ErzHei 19:2 (1998): 4–7
  • Toni Siegert, “Das Konzentrations1ager F1ossenbürg: Gegründet für sogenannte Asozia1e und Kriminelle,” in Bayern in der NS-Zeit: Herrschaft und Gesellschaft im Konflikt, Tei1 A, Bd. 2, ed. Martin Broszat and E1ke Fröhlich (Vienna: Oldenbourg-Verl., 1979)
  • Dietrich Eichholtz, Geschichte der deutschen Kriegswirtschaft 1939–1945 (Berlin: Akademie, 1996), 3:169.

Links

Custodians

  • The following archival collections are important: Zdl at BA-L, IV 410 AR 3174/66; IV 410 AR-Z 2/70; ITS, Hist. Abt., Flossenbürg.

Outstanding questions

  • The SS killed 51 prisoners before the beginning of the death march and had them buried in a plot of forest near Mülsen.[11]

Discrepancies and errata


Sources