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  1. Neuengamme foi um campo de concentração criado em 1938 pelo Terceiro Reich nos arredores da pequena localidade de Neuengamme, a 15 km do centro de Hamburgo, Alemanha. O campo foi operado pela Alemanha Nazista entre 1938 e 1945; nos sete anos de seu funcionamento, estima-se que cerca de 106 mil prisioneiros foram instalados lá e em ...

  2. The Neuengamme Concentration Camp Memorial (German: KZ-Gedenkstätte Neuengamme), opened in 2008, is located in Hamburg-Bergedorf at Jean-Dolidier-Weg 75, named for a French activist integral to the creation of the memorial, and renamed from Camp (German: Lager) road.

  3. As British troops approached Neuengamme, the SS evacuated some 9,000 prisoners towards Lübeck on the Baltic Sea on April 19, 1945, and murdered most of the remaining 3,000 prisoners in the camp. Some 700 almost exclusively German prisoners remained behind to destroy the internal documents of the camp.

  4. The new Neuengamme Concentration Camp Memorial was inaugurated on the 60th anniversary of the camp’s liberation in May 2005. Today, the Memorial encompasses virtually the entire grounds and 17 original buildings of the former concentration camp. Measuring 57 hectares, it is one of the largest memorials in Germany.

  5. The Amicale Internationale KZ Neuengamme (AIN) is an international association of the national organizations of survivors of the Neuengamme concentration camp as well as the families and friends of former prisoners of the Neuengamme concentration camp. Founded in 1958 by organizations from Belgium, France and West Germany, soon other national ...

  6. In the early summer of 1940, Neuengamme became an independent camp, and it remained the main concentration camp in north-west Germany until 1945. During the war, the Gestapo (secret state police) and the SS security service sent tens of thousands of people from across occupied Europe to Neuengamme concentration camp.

  7. Neuengamme was a German concentration camp to the south of Hamburg, from 1938 to 1945. Neuengamme was a village located about twenty kilometres south-east of Hamburg, where a sub-camp of Sachsenhausen concentration camp had been established since 1938 .