Buchenwald Concentration Camp

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The Buchenwald Concentration Camp was a Nazi death camp, notorious for medical experiments, in which at least 56,000 inmates died (out of 250,000 prisoners in all). It operated between July 1937 and April 1945 and lay in east-central Germany, about five miles northwest of the city of Weimar, in a wooded area on the northern slopes of the Ettersberg, a large hill or small mountain.

Exact mortality figures for the Buchenwald site can only be estimated, as camp authorities never registered a significant number of the prisoners, all of whom were arrested and sent to the camp by the SS. The SS murdered at least 56,000 male prisoners in the Buchenwald camp system. Some 11,000 of them were Jews. Over it's eight years of operation, the camp held some 250,000 persons from all countries of Europe.

The Buchenwald concentration camp was constructed in 1937 about five miles northwest of the city of Weimar in east-central Germany. It was located in a wooded area on the northern slopes of the Ettersberg, a hill north of the city of Weimar.

Tt was the site of notorious medical experiments conducted by Nazi doctors on unwilling prisoners.