Konzentrations- und Kriegsgefangenenlager in Deutschland und in den besetzen Gebieten (Fond 1367) Concentration and prisoner of war camps in and the Occupied Territories RG-11.001M.20

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW Washington, DC 20024-2126 Tel. (202) 479-9717 e-mail: [email protected]

Descriptive summary

Title: Konzentrations- und Kriegsgefangenenlager in Deutschland und in den besetzen Gebieten (Fond 1367) Concentration and prisoner of war camps in Germany and the Occupied Territories

Dates: 1937-1944

Accession number: 1993.A.0085.1.20

Extent: 10 microfilm reels (partial) digital images

Repository: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives, 100 Raoul Wallenberg Place SW, Washington, DC 20024-2126

Languages: German

Scope and content of collection The collection contains various documents of concentration camps and Prisoner of War (POW) camps: regulations, instructions, daily reports, lists, summaries, journals, personnel files, card files, questionnaires, registers, and correspondence. Includes fragmentary compilations of records of Sachsenhausen (ca. 6,000 prisoner file cards for KL Sachsenhausen/Oranienburg), Buchenwald, Wewelsburg, Gross Rosen, Dachau, Lublin (Majdanek), Natzweiler, Neuengamme (Hamburg), Treblinka, and Esterwegen concentration camps; of POW camps III-A in Luckenwalde, I-A in Stalag, IX-C in Bad Sulza, No.352 in Minsk, No.122 in Compiègne, France, POW camp in Murnau of the Polish officers, the Hammelburg officers camp, Stalag XII (for interned civilians) in Wulzburg (Bavaria), the -Falkensee camp for Italian and other foreign workers. Among the documents are lists of Jews transferred from the Auschwitz concentration camp to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, and other records of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp: lists of prisoners including Jewish names, reports on changes in the prisoner population, and list of personal items left in the camp’s storage facility.

Note: USHMM Archives holds only selected records.

Administrative Information

Restrictions on access: No restrictions on access.

Restrictions on reproduction and use: Reproduction and publication only with written permission of the Russian State Military Archives.

Preferred citation: Preferred citation for USHMM archival collections; consult the USHMM website for guidance.

Acquisition information: Source of acquisition is the Russian State Military Archive (Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv), Osobyi Archive, Fond 1367. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Archives received the filmed collection via the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum International Archival Programs Division in 1993, and accretion in 2004 (Reel 418-419).

Existence and location of originals: Rossiĭskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ voennyĭ arkhiv

Related materials: • Fishman, D. E., Kupovetsky, M., Kuzelenkov, V. (ed.), Nazi-Looted Jewish Archives in Moscow. A guide to Jewish Historical and Cultural Collections in the Russian State Military Archive. Scranton, 2010 • http://www.sonderarchiv.de/fondverzeichnis.htm [accessed 12 September 2018] • Browder, G. C. Captured German and other Nation's Documents in the Osobyi (Special) Archive, Moscow. Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of Conference Group for Central European History of the American Historical Association. Internet access: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4546224 [accessed 12 September 2018]

Processing history: Processed by Aleksandra Borecka, 2018. Finding aid revised by Ron Coleman, 2019.

System of arrangement Fond 1367 (1933-1945). Opis 1-2, delo 1-289. Selected records arranged in four series. Arrangement, for the most of part, is in alphabetical order by the camp name: 1. Records of the KL Sachsenhausen (Oranienburg) including lists of prisoners and their transfers to other camps, 1941-1944; 2. Records of various concentration camps in Germany, Poland, France and other countries: 3. Death and burial lists of Soviet POWs, and lists of POWs executed and cremated in Gross Rosen, 1941-1942; 4.Testimonies and reports of former prisoners regarding Nazi crimes in concentration camps.

Note: Microfilm reels: # 84 (near the end)-91, 418-419 (16 mm)

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Indexing terms Buchenwald (Concentration camp) Compiègne (Concentration camp) Dachau (Concentration camp) Esterwegen (Concentration camp) Falkensee (Concentration camp) Gross-Rosen (Concentration camp) Majdanek (Concentration camp) Murnau (Concentration camp) Natzweiler (Concentration camp) Neuengamme (Concentration camp) Sachsenhausen (Concentration camp) Stalag 1 A. Stalag 12 D. Stalag III A. Treblinka (Concentration camp) Wewelsburg (Concentration camp) World War, 1939-1945--Concentration camps--Europe. World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons--Europe. World War, 1939-1945--Confiscations and contributions--Europe. Prisoner-of-war camps--Europe--History--20th century. World War 1939-1945--Atrocitie Europe--History--20th century. Germany--Politics and government--1933-1945. Poland--History--Occupation, 1939-1945. Correspondence. Questionnaires. Registers. Reports. Testimonies.

CONTAINER LIST

Reel 84

Fond 1367, opis 1

KL Sachsenhausen (Oranienburg)

2 Duties of guards in KL. Lists of guards and of Jews taken from Auschwitz. 1941 - 1944. 25 pp. Folder begins at image 1473

Tasks and Duties of Guards in a Concentration Camp, with questions and answers. Question: whom does this camp contain; answer: criminals, asocials, sexual deviates, enemies of the state, do-nothings, thieves, those politically unreliable, enemies of the people, etc. Includes questions and answers about use of arms in camp. Personnel

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forms of French citizens in unidentified camp (Sachsenhausen?). List of names of 356 Jews transferred from Auschwitz: includes Poles, French, Belgians, Italians, Czechs, Dutch, Hungarians, Greeks, Slovaks (sent to Sachsenhausen). List of prisoners arriving at Mauthausen. 1941-1944.

4 Orders regarding taking prisoners' property and storing it in warehouse. 1940 - 1941. 142 pp. Folder begins at image 1526

Index cards of arrestees, and list of personal belongings turned in after arrest. Statistics with categories of prisoners, showing weekly changes in the prisoner complement of Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg (September 1941), total of 10,696, including 524 Jews (there were a total of 12,193 in February 1940). Procedural matters concerning the person and property of "protective custody" prisoners. 1940-1941.

5-I Prisoner-informers. 1944. 91 pp. Folder begins at image 1691

Various reports of use of informants in Sachsenhausen, particularly to root out suspected communists in the camp or employed at the Heinkel works as prison labor. Details on punishments meted out to a suspect. 1944.

5-II Prisoner-informers. no date. 158 pp. Folder begins at image 1803

Russian translations of Sachsenhausen material.

5-III Prisoner-informers. no date. 80 pp. Folder begins at image 1977

Russian translations of Sachsenhausen material.

6 Prisoner-informers Leonard Gofman and Rudolf Schneller. 1944. 12 pp. Folder begins at image 2062

Russian translations of Sachsenhausen material.

7 Names lists of special command "Dirlewanger." 1944 - 1945. 15 pp. Folder begins at image 2081

List of names in SS Sonderkommando "Dirlewanger" (1944).

10 Correspondence with special command regarding moving prisoners to other cells (chambers), torture of prisoners during interrogation, etc. 1944. 71 pp. Folder begins at image 2100

Reports and lists pertaining to Sachsenhausen; some dealing with French prisoners, also, list of prisoners to be put in isolation block prior to release. Names of prisoners accused of various violations of rules, etc. 1944.

Reel 85

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15 Namelists of prisoners in KL (Germans, Jews, Poles, Ukrainians, and Russians). no date. 533 pp. Folder begins at image 6

List of prisoners transferred to Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg (November 1938), includes Jews and those with prior convictions, and of those in protective custody. List of prisoners to be discharged in November 1938, including Jews. Laboratory reports with names of those tested, but no reason given (February 1944, Oranienburg). Item about the forms to be filled out by prisoners for personal belongings deposited in the camp.

17 Daily statistics regarding number of prisoners in various categories. 1937. 362 pp. Folder begins at image 559

List of categories and numbers of prisoners in Sachsenhausen "protective custody" camp, January through December 1937 (daily). 1937.

20 Idem. 1938. 564 pp. Folder begins at image 930

List of categories and numbers of prisoners in Sachsenhausen, January-December 1938 (on a daily basis); this time among the various categories there are Jewish prisoners broken down into political, asocial, homosexual. List of names of prisoners released from camp. 1938.

23 Idem. 1939. 367 pp. Folder begins at image 1541

Prisoner list (Sachsenhausen) for January-December 1937; this time there is a category for Polish Jews, and on for those "refusing to work." 1939.

25 Name lists of prisoners. 1943 - 1944. 124 pp. Folder begins at image 1916

List of names of prisoners sent to Sachsenhausen, including many Polish and Russian names, as well as French, Dutch, etc. 1943-1944.

26 Idem (female camp). 1945. 99 pp. Folder begins at image 2164

List of women prisoners in Sachsenhausen, January through April 1945.

28 Registration lists of prisoners. Lists of their belongings stored in the KL warehouse. 1941 - 1942. 336 pp. Folder begins at image 2358

Series of file cards with personal data, to be turned in to the Sachsenhausen personal property storage office. 1941-1942.

Reel 86

28 (Continued from reel 85.) Folder begins at image 6

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Personal file cards for property storage, all from 1941, mostly with Slavic (i.e. Polish) names (Sachsenhausen).

29 Idem. no date. 20 pp. Folder begins at image 293

30 Idem. 1941 - 1943. 854 pp. Folder begins at image 319

31 Idem. no date. 337 pp. Folder begins at image 1189

Name card files from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

32 Idem. 1941 - 1942. 51 pp. Folder begins at image 1537

Name card files from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

33 Idem. no date. 353 pp. Folder begins at image 1594

Name card files from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

34 Idem. 1941 - 1944. 318 pp. Folder begins at image 1959

Name card files from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

35 Idem. 1941. 70 pp. Folder begins at image 2286

Name card files from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

Reel 87

36 Idem. 1941 - 1943. 414 pp. Folder begins at image 6

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

37 Idem. no date. 348 pp. Folder begins at image 430

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

38 Idem. no date. 343 pp. Folder begins at image 786

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

39 Idem. no date. 352 pp. Folder begins at image 1137

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

40 Idem. no date. 346 pp. Folder begins at image 1497

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Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

41 Idem. no date. 313 pp. Folder begins at image 1847

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

Reel 88

41 (Continued from reel 87.) Folder begins at image 6

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

42 Idem. no date. 66 pp. Folder begins at image 166

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

43 Idem. no date. 83 pp. Folder begins at image 244

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

44 Name lists of prisoners in KL to be transferred in 1944. 1941 - 1944. 326 pp. Folder begins at image 335

List of prisoners to be released from Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg. List of Sachsenhausen prisoners to be transferred to Dachau, Auschwitz, Mauthausen, Ravensbrück, Buchenwald, Flossenburg, Stalag POW camp Berlin, Birkenau; some are to be sent to Command "Dirlewanger" [punishment unit for service on Russian front]. More lists of personal belongings, with annotation "turned in at concentration camp Columbia."

45 Name lists of prisoners to be released or transported to other camps. Registration lists of prisoners written for KL warehouse. no date. 275 pp. Folder begins at image 667

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners. Additional lists of releases and transfers from Sachsenhausen. 1941-1944.

46 Lists of prisoners whose possessions are in the KL warehouse. Name lists of new prisoners. 1941 - 1945. 391 pp. Folder begins at image 951

Lists of Sachsenhausen releases. Additional lists of personal belongings turned in at Sachsenhausen. Listings of prisoners transferred to Sachsenhausen. 1941-1944.

47 Idem. 1941 - 1942. 777 pp. Folder begins at image 1415

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

48 Idem. 1942. 52 pp. Folder begins at image 2203

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Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners.

Reel 89

49 Idem. 1943. 317 pp. Folder begins at image 6

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners [with many from France, folders 49, 50, 52, 53 and from Spain folder 51].

50 Idem. no date. 327 pp. Folder begins at image 332

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners [with many from France, folders 49, 50, 52, 53 and from Spain folder 51].

51 Idem. no date. 26 pp. Folder begins at image 667

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners [with many from France, folders 49, 50, 52, 53 and from Spain folder 51].

52 Idem. no date. 321 pp. Folder begins at image 699

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners [with many from France, folders 49, 50, 52, 53 and from Spain folder 51].

53 Idem. no date. 340 pp. Folder begins at image 1027

Name file cards from Sachsenhausen prisoners [with many from France, folders 49, 50, 52, 53 and from Spain folder 51].

55 Register of medical tests of prisoners. 194? -1943. 231 pp. Folder begins at image 1380

Handwritten results of lab "Examination of Blood, Bowel movements, Urine, at the Waffen-SS Hygiene Institute, Berlin," of individuals in various Berlin hospitals, including SS members. 1943.

60 KL administration orders. 1942 - 1945. 28 pp. Folder begins at image 1830

Special orders of a SS guard battalion: swearing in of two Volkssturm companies at Oranienburg (January 1945). SS General Pohl orders, in line with a Führer decree, that in the press, and in public, only the terms "war injured" and "severely war injured" are to be used (December 1944). Special orders from SS command Sachsenhausen concerning ideological indoctrination and National Socialist leadership (December 1944). Various special administrative orders for SS guard battalion in Sachsenhausen including arrests during war and rules pertaining to Replacement Army (made up of various violators of military regulation). 1942-1945.

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127 Lists of KL guards and their obligations not to divulge secrets. 1942 - 1944. Folder begins at image 1871

Forms to be filled out, including secrecy oath, for Sachsenhausen guards designated to do long-term emergency service. Entry forms for Waffen-SS. 1942-1944.

Reel 90

127 (Continued.) Folder begins at image 6

Sachsenhausen guards’ personnel files. Order to report as volunteer in Waffen-SS.

195 Summaries for Sachsenhausen, Gross-Rosen, and other KL regarding changes in distribution of prisoners in 1944 (lists of prisoners by cell or chamber). 1944. 207 pp. Folder begins at image 126

Weekly lists of prisoners (only their numbers are listed) in Sachsenhausen and their transfers to other assignments; totals are entered at lower left of each page. Similar list for Gross-Rosen [initially a Sachsenhausen branch camp], Mauthausen, and Stutthof. 1944.

196 Name lists of prisoners of KL Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen, Dachau, Mauthausen, Gross- Rosen, and Neuengamme. 1940. 457 pp. Folder begins at image 529

Name list of prisoners sent from Buchenwald to Sachsenhausen, including those of Jews.

199 Name lists of prisoners removed to KL Bebelsburg from other KL and places. 1941. 27 pp. Folder begins at image 993

List of prisoner names in Wewelsburg, one of Sachsenhausen's extension camps.

(See reel 418 for folders 200-202)

203 Lists of prisoners removed to KL Dachau from other KL and places. 29 August 1940 - 21 October 1941. 215 pp. Folder begins at image 1023

Name list of prisoners from Sachsenhausen sent to Dachau, including gypsies, Jews, Poles, and Belgians (one list contains 1,600 names; another 1,400 names; and another 1,000 names). 1940-1941. Folder begins at image 1248

204 Lists of prisoners in KL Dachau (by prisoner number). 1944. 76 pp. Folder begins at image 1248

List of Dachau work transfer assignments with such annotations as "returned escapee" or "mistakenly released;" among those transferred are doctors, nurses, druggists, Kapos, and block elders. 1944.

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(See reel 418 for folders 205-207)

220 Name lists of prisoners of KL Natzweiler. 1944. 17 pp. Folder begins at image 1397

List of prisoners to be stricken from rolls and to be assigned elsewhere from Natzweiler, as well as list of prisoners sent to Natzweiler (containing many homosexuals). 1941- 1944.

221 Name lists of prisoners in KL Neuengamme, Hamburg. 1940. 98 pp. Folder begins at image 1421

List of prisoners sent to Neuengamme (Hamburg). 1940 - ?.

222 Register of prisoners in KL Neuengamme, Buchenwald, Gross-Rosen, and others. 1944. 60 pp. Folder begins at image 1525

List of names (locale not identified) in columns probably indicating where prisoners were sent to Neuengamme, Natzweiler, Buchenwald, Gross-Rosen, Ravensbrück; contains many Dutch names. 1944.

223 Death and burial lists of Soviet POWs. 1941 -1942. 280 pp. Folder begins at image 1648

Memo from Neuengamme (POW camp): camp authorization to bury dead Soviet POWs with medical certification stating that they died of circulatory system collapse and pneumonia: "Autopsy results suggest there is no reason to suspect other than a natural cause of death." While most deaths listed are in this general category, there is occasional mention of other causes: tuberculosis, paratyphoid, kidney failure, phlebitis, undernourishment, debilitation, suicide (by hanging). 1941-1942.

224 Idem. 1942. 389 pp. Folder begins at image 1936

From Neuengamme POW work camp, more death certificates of Russian POWs. 1942.

Reel 91

225 KL Agneshof in Falkensee. Identification cards of prisoners from Italy. Daily statistics regarding number of prisoners in the camp. 1944. 140 pp. Folder begins at image 6

Complement of Camp Collective Falkensee (Agneshof); camp for railroad workers and families; housed Italian workers (some of whose personnel documents and photos are included). 1944.

227 Work detail of prisoners from KL Neuengamme. 1941. 60 pp. Folder begins at image 152

List of prisoners in labor command Neuengamme; in December 1941 there were 10,391 plus 1,532 POWs; also, prisoner totals in attached camps and industrial enterprises. Work force in Spandau Industrial Works, affiliated with Sachsenhausen; name list of

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female supervisors in various industrial enterprises. List of packages for Sachsenhausen prisoners, all of them Jewish (June 1942). Various requests for certifying racial purity of SS personnel and officers (all submitted by Chief, SS-Death Head (Totenkopf) Units and Concentration camps (1937). Diverse notices of release from Sachsenhausen and requests for prisoner appearances at court trials. Additional names on file cards of Sachsenhausen prisoners. List of numbers of prisoner transfers to Sachsenhausen from virtually every German concentration camp (summer 1943). 1937-1945.

228 Register of prisoners whose belongings are in storage, name of KL unknown. 1941 - 1944. 137 pp. Folder begins at image 226

List of names, apparently of camp prisoners (Sachsenhausen?), with listing of their personal belongings.

232 Journal of medical care of prisoners. 1944. 304 pp. Folder begins at image 334

Laboratory reports of Sachsenhausen prisoners. 1944.

239 Namelist of prisoners sent to KL Treblinka. Personal documents of F. F. Sbizersky (questionnaire, two references). 1942 - 1943. 7 pp. Folder begins at image 947

Personnel forms of Russians of German origin who are willing to work for and with the Germans; individual has to attest that he is not Jewish or a Communist party member. Applicant has to declare his readiness (in Russian and German) to become a member of a Wachmannschaft (guard unit) in the new eastern territories for the duration of the war. Assignment of Wachmannschaft members from Training Camp Trawniki to SS Labor Camp Treblinka. 1942-1943.

240 Anonymous note entitled “Trotz Buchenwald – sie toeten den Geist der Freiheit nicht!” regarding prison conditions in German KL. no date. 50 pp. Folder begins at image 959

Anti-Nazi pamphlet with testimonies of former prisoners about conditions under the Nazis in Buchenwald, with graphic descriptions of prisoner transports, the fate of Jews and non-Jews, etc. post World War II.

Fond 1367, opis 2

1a Himmler order to governmental and police organizations of Prussia regarding removal from Germany to KL of persons having no citizenship. Letter of Obersturmführer Maurer, Chief of the 2nd Directorate of SS, regarding use of KL prisoners as a work force. List of prisoners (by their prisoner numbers) from Mauthausen and removed from Auschwitz, dated 27 October 1944. May 1937 [sic]. 16 pp. Folder begins at image 1016

Memo from Himmler (RSFSS and German Police Chief) to all Prussian police and city officials concerning Ausweisungs (expellee) arrests in Concentration camps of stateless foreigners, so as to hold them until they can be expelled because they constitute a danger to the State. Deployment of prisoners in Camp. More work assignments to Mauthausen; transfers from Auschwitz (mostly non-German Europeans).

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4 List of Soviet POWs shot in KL Gross-Rosen. Report by KL commandant. 1941 - 1942. 22 pp. Folder begins at image 1038

[Russian translation of lists of Russian POWs cremated in Gross Rosen.] Memo from Gross Rosen with list of Russian POWs executed and cremated (among those executed Jews are listed as one of the Russian nationalities). List of Russian POWs held separated in Stalag III. Secret memo from Camp Chief Inspector to all concentration camps holding Russian POWs: Himmler has agreed that those POWs sent to a camp for execution (particularly communist commissars) who are able-bodied and thus could work in a quarry are for the time being not to be executed; selections for work are to be made by protective custody camp chief and camp doctor. More lists of POWs executed and cremated in Gross Rosen.

5 KL Dachau: journals of salaries paid to camp guards. 1945. 30 pp. Folder begins at image 1086

Salary lists of SS non-commissioned officers.

6 Report by former Camp Prisoners Committee about the life of prisoners and crimes of fascists in the camps. 1945. 30 pp. Folder begins at image 1147

Manuscript published by Committee of Former Political Prisoners about life and death in Dachau. Among the many topics are references to a "Jewish Aktion" in 1938 (Kristallnacht), and the remaining 3,800 Jews were sent to Buchenwald, making Dachau "judenfrei" - but by November 1938, after Grynszpan killed von Rath, Jews were sent to Dachau again by the thousands.

8 KL Sachsenhausen: Identification cards, questionnaires, notes from punishment registers, and other documents of the guard of the camp. 1939 - 1945. 189 pp. Folder begins at image 1213

Various service and administrative items concerning SS personnel, including questionnaires (mostly of Sachsenhausen staff).

18 Changes in prisoners at a medical hut. 25 December 1941. 1 page. Folder begins at image 1537

Changes of prisoners in Sachsenhausen prison hospital.

19 KL Esterwegen. KL's special day order. Discipline regulations by KL commandant's office, 1 August 1934, signed by Gruppenführer Aick. 1934. 17 pp. Folder begins at image 1541

Special camp orders in Camp Esterwegen for prisoner barracks, holding various categories of non-Jewish protective custody prisoners; also a long list of punishable offenses. 1934.

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19a KL Esterwegen rules of internal order. 1 August 1934. 1 page. Folder begins at image 1561

Special camp orders, Camp Esterwegen, for prisoner barracks, holding various categories of non-Jewish protective custody prisoners; also a long list of punishable offenses. 1934.

19Б Camp Control Office instructions regarding conditions among prisoners at KL Esterwegen. 1 August 1934. 17 pp. Folder begins at image 1581

Special camp orders, Camp Esterwegen, for prisoner barracks, holding various catagories of non-Jewish protective custody prisoners; also a long list of punishable offences. 1934.

23 Unknown KL: register of arrivals and departures of prisoners, including Russians. February 1943 - May 1944. 44 pp. Folder begins at image 1602

List of prisoners (location not given) of various nationalities. 1942-1944.

33 Testimonies including those of former prisoners regarding Nazi crimes in KLs. March - October 1933. 23 pp. Folder begins at image 1708

Various reports by individuals about arrest, treatment, and transport from different German cities sent to a variety of concentration camps. Names indicated that none were Jewish, and some may have been communists and socialists.

Reel 418

Fond 1367, opis 4

143 Notice of the transfer of guards to the concentration camps of Lublin, Mauthausen, and others; lists of guards, Ukrainian and Russian. Folder begins at image 1016

200 Personnel register of concentration camp guards. Folder begins at image 1093

201 Personnel register of concentration camp guards. Folder begins at image 1420

202 Lists of concentration camp guards; circular letters of the inspector of the concentration camp of Sachsenhausen to the commandants of concentration camps on the organization of vocational training for prisoners, the production of wooden spoons by prisoners. Folder begins at image 1841

205 Johann Nessner SS file, Majdanek (Lublin). Folder begins at image 1898

206 Adam Rometsch SS file, Majdanek (Lublin). Folder begins at image 1926

207 Helmuth Fink SS file, KL Majdanek (Lublin). Folder begins at image 1944

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236a Case histories, lists of deceased, reports and reports of the prisoner of war camp No. 352 in Minsk. Folder begins at image 1998

Reel 419

237 Material on transferred Soviet prisoners of war in camp No. 352 in Minsk. Folder begins at image 1

238 Lists of Soviet POWs of Camp No. 352 in Minsk Folder begins at image 77

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