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Terezín concentration camp

Principova alej 304, 411 55 Terezín, Repubblica Ceca ★★★★☆ 211 views
Ylenia Ford
Terezín
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About Terezín concentration camp

Terezín concentration camp - Terezín | Secret World Trip Planner

A sleepy countryside town today, Terezín epitomizes one of history’s darkest chapters. 140,000 people were deported here by the Nazis when it served them as a GESTAPO prison, ghetto and concentration camp during the Holocaust.The concentration camp of Terezin has been the greatest field of extermination of the Czech Republic that the Nazis obtained inside the Fortress of Terezin during the second world war. The Fortress of Terezin was built between 1780 and 1790 for want of the emperor of Austria Joseph II of Asburgo-Lorena that made it build in honor of the mother Maria Teresa of Austria (Teresa in Czech language is written exactly Terezín).

Terezín concentration camp - Terezín | Secret World Trip Planner

The structure, divided into two main bodies called "Great Fortress" and "Small Fortress", was born for defensive purposes, and had the function of protecting the city of Prague from Prussian attacks coming from the northern territories.

In 1882 the Fortress lost its original purpose and the Small Fortress was transformed by the Habsburg monarchy into a maximum security prison where military prisoners and political opponents of the monarchy were imprisoned.

Terezín concentration camp - Terezín | Secret World Trip Planner

The Terezin Fortress sadly went down in history in 1938, when the Third Reich took control of it and used it first as a prison and later as a concentration camp.

During the period of the Holocaust about 144,000 Jews were imprisoned there, of which over 33,000 lost their lives, while another 88,000 were deported to Nazi extermination camps. The Ghetto of Terezin was used by the Nazis as a "model ghetto" for their propaganda, to show to foreigners and to the diplomacy of other countries.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Terezín Fortress was built between 1780 and 1790 by Austrian Emperor Joseph II in honor of his mother, Maria Teresa of Austria. Originally constructed for defensive purposes to protect Prague from Prussian attacks from the north, it was divided into two main structures: the Great Fortress and the Small Fortress.
Approximately 144,000 Jews were imprisoned at Terezín during the Holocaust, with over 33,000 losing their lives at the camp itself and another 88,000 being deported to Nazi extermination camps. This makes it the greatest field of extermination within Czech territory during World War II.
The Nazis used Terezín as a propaganda tool to present to foreign visitors and international diplomacy as a humane ghetto, masking the horrific conditions and systematic extermination taking place within its walls. This deceptive presentation was used to deceive the world about Nazi treatment of Jewish prisoners.
Before the Nazi takeover in 1938, the Small Fortress was converted by the Habsburg monarchy in 1882 into a maximum security prison holding military prisoners and political opponents of the monarchy. The Fortress had already shifted from its original military defensive role to serve as a detention facility.
Yes, Terezín today is a sleepy countryside town that serves as a poignant Holocaust memorial site where visitors can explore both the Great Fortress and Small Fortress structures. The preserved fortress complex allows visitors to understand this dark chapter of history and bears witness to the 140,000 people deported there during Nazi occupation.