List of subcamps of Mauthausen


This is a list of subcamps of the Mauthausen concentration camp. The slave labour of the inmates was also used by a variety of companies and farms that accommodated a small number of inmates on their own.
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| Alternate list of Mauthausen sub-camps | 
List of subcamps
- Aflenz[1]
- Amstetten[2] - Frauenlager
- Männerlager
 
- Attnang-Puchheim
- Bachmanning
- Bretstein: KZ-Nebenlager Bretstein
- Dipoldsau[3]
- Ebelsberg
- Ebensee: KZ Ebensee
- Eisenerz[4]
- Enns[5]
- Ennsdorf[6]
- Floridsdorf
- Frankenburg am Hausruck (Schlier-Redl-Zipf)
- Graz
- Grein[7]
- Großraming[8]
- Gunskirchen[9] - Waldwerke I
- Sammellager
 
- Gusen complex - Gusen I (located at Gusen in the community of Langenstein)
- Gusen II (located at St Georgen in the community of Sankt Georgen an der Gusen)
- Gusen III (located at Lungitz in the community of Katsdorf)
 
- Haidfeld
- Schloß Hartheim, not properly a subcamp of Mauthausen but an institution of the Aktion T-4 where some thousands inmates of Mauthausen-Gusen and Dachau were killed.
- Hinterbrühl
- Hirtenberg
- Hollenstein
- Jedlsee
- Klagenfurt
- Lambach
- Schloß Lannach
- Leibnitz
- Lenzing
- Schloß Lind
- Lindau
- Linz - Aufräumungskommando
- Linz I
- Linz II
- Linz III
 
- Loibl-Paß - Nord
- Süd[10]
 
- Marialanzendorf
- Mauthausen - main camp
- Mauthausen Soviet prisoners of war camp
- Zeltlager Mauthausen (tent camp)
- Schiff — Donauhafen Mauthausen
 
- Melk[11]
- Mistelbach am der Zaya
- Schloß Mittersill (Zell am See)
- Moosbierbaum
- Passau - Passau I (Oberilzmühle)
- Passau II (Waldwerke Passau-Ilzstadt)
- Passau III (Jandelsbrunn)
 
- Peggau
- Perg (Arbeitseinsatzstelle)
- Rheydt
- Ried
- Schönbrunn[12]
- Schwechat
- Steyr
- St. Aegyd am Neuwalde
- St. Lambrecht - Frauenlager
- Männerlager
 
- St. Valentin[13]
- Steyr-Münichholz[14]
- Ternberg
- Vöcklabrück - Vöcklabrück I
- Vöcklabrück II
 
- Vöcklamarkt (Schlier Redl-Zipf)
- Wagram
- Wels - Wels I
- Wels II
 
- Weyer
- Wien - AFA-Werke
- Wien-Floridsdorf
- Wien-Floridsdorf II (Schwechat II)
- Wien-Floridsdorf III (Schwechat III)
- Wien-Heidfeld (Schwechat I)
- Wien-Hinterbrühl (Arbeitslager Haidfeld)
- Wien-Hinterbrühl (See Grotte)
- Wien-Jedlesee
- Wien-Maria-Lanzendorf
- Wien-Mödling
- Wien-Schönbrunn (Kraftfahrtechnische Lehranstalt)[12]
- Wien-Schwechat ("Santa")
- Wien-West (Saurerwerke)
 
- Wiener Neudorf[15]
- Wiener Neustadt[16] - Raxwerke GmbH (opened twice)
 
See also
- List of Nazi concentration camps
- List of subcamps of Dachau, other extensive net of camps operating in Austria and southern Germany
References
- ^ "The life of the field crops: Labor camp, National Socialism and the le ... - National Fund of the Republic of Austria for Victims of National Socialism".
- ^ "Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "The Subcamps - History - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "Corpses found by US soldiers after the liberation of Gunskirchen".
- ^ "Loibl Memorial (North) - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "Where Murder Was a Way of Life: The Mauthausen Concentration Camp".
- ^ a b "Vienna-Schönbrunn". Retrieved 14 September 2013. Location: Vienna, Hietzing, Kraftfahrtechnische Lehranstalt der SS, Maria-Theresien-Kaserne, Fasangartenstrasse 
- ^ "Solomon J. Salat - USA - KZ-Gedenkstätte Mauthausen".
- ^ "Mauthausen".
- ^ "Mauthausen".
- ^ "Mauthausen".