-
History
-
Final solution
- The \"Final Solution of the Jewish Question\" in the Bohemian Lands
-
general
- The end of German democracy
- The persecution of German Jews after the Nazi seizure of power
- Jews and Jewish organisations under the swastika
- 1938: the watershed year
- German aggression against Poland
- The ghettoisation of the Jewish population
- The territorial solution to the Jewish question
- The start of the mass murder
- Mass deportations to the concentration and extermination camps
- The collapse of Nazi Germany
- Epilogue
- Concentration camps and ghettos
- People
- Events
- The genocide of the Roma and Sinti during the second world war
- Queer Persecution
-
Final solution
- Sources
- education
Last change: 12. 01. 2016
This database contains the names and fates of about 80 000 people who have been deported from the territory of today’s Czech Republic and other European countries during WWII, because the Nazis categorized them as Jews. Most of them were deported first to the ghetto Theresienstadt, and from there later on to the extermination camps. Exact adresses can be found for those living in Prague during the 1941 registration.
Further, this database contains the names and general data of those men, women and children who died during the years 1942 and 1943 as prisoners of the „Gypsy camp I“ in Lety u Písku. Together with those who died at the „Gyspy camp II“ in Hodonín u Kunštátu and the „Gypsy camp“ in Auschwitz-Birkenau they make up the group of about 5000 people, mostly Roma and Sinti, from the territory of today’s Czech Republic who were murdered due to the national socialist persecution of those considered „gypsies“.
The database does not contain information on survivors.
Further, this database contains the names and general data of those men, women and children who died during the years 1942 and 1943 as prisoners of the „Gypsy camp I“ in Lety u Písku. Together with those who died at the „Gyspy camp II“ in Hodonín u Kunštátu and the „Gypsy camp“ in Auschwitz-Birkenau they make up the group of about 5000 people, mostly Roma and Sinti, from the territory of today’s Czech Republic who were murdered due to the national socialist persecution of those considered „gypsies“.
The database does not contain information on survivors.