Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Stalag XI-C
World War II German prisoner-of-war camp From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Stalag XI-C Bergen-Belsen, initially called Stalag 311, was a German Army prisoner-of-war camp located near the town of Bergen in Lower Saxony.
Remove ads
Timeline
- May 1940: The camp was built to house Belgian and French enlisted men captured in the Battle of France; initial count: 600.
- July 1941: About 5,000 Soviet prisoners captured during Operation Barbarossa arrived from the Oflag 52 and Oflag 53 camps.[1] They were housed in the open while huts were being built. By the spring of 1942 an estimated 18,000 had died of hunger and disease, mainly typhus fever.
- August 1941: About 3,000 Soviet POWs arrived from the Oflag 56 camp.[1]
- August 1941: Hospital for sick and injured POWs opened.[1]
- October 1941: 11,000 POWs arrived, including from Stalag 333. Some POWs were moved to the Stalag XI-A, Stalag XI-D and Oflag XIII-D camps.[1]
- November 1941: 1,000 POWs arrived, captured at Vyazma and Yelnya.[1]
- December 1941: Some POWs sent to the Stalag XI-A and Stalag XI-B camps.[1]
- Until April 1942, some 14,000 POWs died in the camp from typhus, starvation and cold.[1]
- April 1943: Part of the camp is turned into a hospital for POWs. The remainder of the camp is separated and taken over by the SS to house Jews ostensibly for shipment overseas in exchange for German civilians.
- Late 1943: The POW camp is closed and the entire facility becomes Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
Remove ads
Sources
- Official web-site of the Bergen-Belsen memorial Archived 2008-01-27 at the Wayback Machine
- Official list of Stalags in German.
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads