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Explore photographs showing the Mauthausen camp, personnel, and conditions. An estimated 197,464 prisoners passed through the Mauthausen concentration camp system between August 1938 and May 1945. At least 95,000 people were killed there.
156 photographs documenting the liberation of Mauthausen concentration camp.
Photographs and film footage illustrating the liberation of Mauthausen and two of its subcamps, Gusen and Ebensee. A soldier greets liberated prisoners. A US soldier with liberated prisoners of the Mauthausen concentration camp. Austria, May 1945. Item View. American soldiers pass through the main gate of the Mauthausen camp.
Clandestine photograph, taken by a German civilian, of Dachau concentration camp prisoners on a death march south through a village on the way to Wolfratshausen. Germany, between April 26 and 30, 1945.
Mauthausen was a German Nazi concentration camp on a hill above the market town of Mauthausen (roughly 20 kilometres (12 mi) east of Linz), Upper Austria. It was the main camp of a group with nearly 100 further subcamps located throughout Austria and southern Germany.
The Mauthausen Concentration Camp 1938–1945. Prisoners during roll-call, between 1942 and 1944 (photo credits: Mauthausen Memorial, Collection Antonio García, S 4665) On 12 March 1938 the ‘Anschluss’ (‘Annexation’) of austrofascist Austria to the German Reich took place.
photographer, 1945, Mauthausen concentration camp. The photographs were received by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1991 and cataloged as part of the unification