Ravensbrück concentration camp | Hamburg Ravensbrück Trials | Ravensbruck concentration camp |
Adolf Winkelmann (physician) (1887–1947), German physician of the Ravensbrück Nazi concentration camp, see Hamburg Ravensbrück Trials
For the period of her camp service, August 1943 to August 1944 in Ravensbrück, Klein was freed on 21 July 1948 due to lack of evidence, during the seventh Ravensbrück Trial in Hamburg.
Strippel then served in Majdanek near Lublin Poland, Ravensbruck, then at Peenemünde on the Usedom peninsula, in the Karlshagen II forced labor camp, the site of V-2 rocket production and launches.
These pieces were collected and lined by file number and registered numbers of all the women deported from France, except deported Jewish-, from various sources: registers nuts prison French and German registries Ravensbrück lists of Department of Veterans Affairs, lists deported by themselves-for example revision.
The U.S. edition was published in hardback in Spring 2007 by Da Capo Press (Perseus Publishing Group) under the new title, Michelangelo in Ravensbrück.
Binz fled Ravensbrück during the death march, was captured on May 3, 1945, by the British in Hamburg and incarcerated in the Recklinghausen camp (formerly a Buchenwald subcamp).
In 1943 Bergmann arrived at Ravensbrück where she received her initial training and first assignment.
In 1939, she was assigned to oversee a work crew at the new Ravensbrück women's camp near Berlin.
In the summer of 1944, Hoern was given the title of Oberaufseherin in Ravensbrück, and assigned as head wardress to the Buchenwald subcamp near Allendorf, Germany.
After her return to Poland and the outbreak of World War II she was imprisoned at Pawiak, and later - with the death sentence - sent and imprisoned in Ravensbrück concentration camp.
On 2 May 1945, Malchow, and the rest of Ravensbrück was liberated by the Red Army.
Claire Maigret de Priches (1906–1983), as an Allied agent and member of the Belgian Resistance, was taken to Ravensbrück German concentration camp for female prisoners in Mecklenburg, northwest of Berlin, established in 1936.
Unlike civilians from Warsaw, they were not sent to the concentration camps such as Ravensbrück and Stutthof, but to special POW camps, operated by the Wehrmacht, mainly Stalag VI-C in Oberlangen and Oflag IX-C in Molsdorf.
All four were arrested, imprisoned, tortured, and sent to Ravensbrück, an entirely female concentration camp.