Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Gregor Holzinger

    Die zweite Reihe
    Exekutive der Gewalt
    Der Tatort Mauthausen
    The Concentration Camp Mauthausen
    The Concentration Camp Mauthausen 1938-1945
    • 2019

      The catalogue The Mauthausen Concentration Camp 1938-1945 presents the new overview exhibition at the Mauthausen Memorial that opened in May 2013. The exhibition offers a compact account of the complete history of the Mauthausen concentration camp. The Mauthausen concentration camp was established in August 1938 for the persecution of opponents of the National Socialist regime in the 'Ostmark'. Following the outbreak of war, people from all over Europe were deported to Mauthausen. With a branch camp in Gusen and a network of over 40 subcamps, it was an important part of the overall system of National Socialist concentration camps until the liberation on 5 May 1945. The documentation focuses on the portrayal of the prisoners, the perpetrators and the regional and economic contexts. Over 100 original objects, countless photographs and documents, eyewitness interviews and animated visualisations tell the history of prisoner forced labour in SS-owned quarries and the arms industry, of ideologically motivated killing actions, and of the expansion and collapse of the Mauthausen camp complex. The different aspects of the camp's history are placed in the context of the history of National Socialist terror as a whole, as well as in relation to post-war history. At the same time particular consideration is given to the experiences of former concentration camp prisoners.

      The Concentration Camp Mauthausen 1938-1945
    • 2014

      Der Tatort Mauthausen

      • 172 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Mauthausen, Gusen, and their associated subcamps were sites of mass death and murder, with at least 90,000 people perishing between 1938 and 1945 due to extreme labor, malnutrition, and violence. The SS systematically executed thousands of prisoners, with some killings being spontaneous while others were centrally planned and executed across the Reich. To obscure these murders, the SS falsified death causes in camp administration documents and installed crematoria for disposing of bodies. Prior to liberation, the SS destroyed much of the written evidence, dismantled killing facilities, and murdered witnesses to the atrocities. Current understanding of these crimes stems from extensive investigations, as many former crime scenes have been transformed. Some have become significant memorial sites honoring the victims. This catalogue fully documents the exhibition "The Crime Scenes of Mauthausen - Searching for Traces," which opened in May 2013 at the Mauthausen Memorial.

      Der Tatort Mauthausen
    • 2013

      The catalogue The Mauthausen Concentration Camp 1938-1945 presents the new overview exhibition at the Mauthausen Memorial that opened in May 2013. The exhibition offers a compact account of the complete history of the Mauthausen concentration camp. The Mauthausen concentration camp was established in August 1938 for the persecution of opponents of the National Socialist regime in the ‘Ostmark’. Following the outbreak of war, people from all over Europe were deported to Mauthausen. With a branch camp in Gusen and a network of over 40 subcamps, it was an important part of the overall system of National Socialist concentration camps until the liberation on 5 May 1945. The documentation focuses on the portrayal of the prisoners, the perpetrators and the regional and economic contexts. Over 100 original objects, countless photographs and documents, eyewitness interviews and animated visualisations tell the history of prisoner forced labour in SS-owned quarries and the arms industry, of ideologically motivated killing actions, and of the expansion and collapse of the Mauthausen camp complex. The different aspects of the camp’s history are placed in the context of the history of National Socialist terror as a whole, as well as in relation to post-war history. At the same time particular consideration is given to the experiences of former concentration camp prisoners.

      The Concentration Camp Mauthausen