answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

It was a Nazi concentration camp in Lower Silesia. In January 1945 the SS forced many of the inmates of Auschwitz to move on foot, in the winter to Gross-Rosen. It was a death march.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What was Gross-Rosen?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Military History
Related questions

What are all the names of the concentration camps that were liberated?

Treblinka, Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz, Birkenau, Monowitz, Dachau, Buchenwald, Warschau, Krakow-Paszow, Soldau, Niederhagen, Dora, Flossenburg, Grossrosen, Janowska, Kaiserwald, Mauthausen, Neuengamme, Oranienburg, Plaszow, Ravensbruck, Stutthof, Terezin and Westerbork


What's the name of a concentration camp?

Auschwitz, Madjanek Answere:Treblinka, Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz, Birkenau, Monowitz, Dachau, Chelmno, Sobibor, Belzek, Majdanek, Buchenwald, Sashsenhausen, Theresienstadt, Warschau, Krakow-Paszow, Soldau, Niederhagen, Dora, Flossenburg, Grossrosen, Janowska, Kaiserwald, Mauthausen, Neuengamme, Oranienburg, Plaszow, Ravensbruck, Stutthof, Terezin and Westerbork MG42 Killer


What were the names of all gas chambers in Holocaust?

Treblinka, Bergen-Belsen, Auschwitz, Birkenau, Monowitz, Dachau, Chelmno, Sobibor, Belzek, Majdanek, Buchenwald, Sashsenhausen, Theresienstadt, Warschau, Krakow-Paszow, Soldau, Niederhagen, Dora, Flossenburg, Grossrosen, Janowska, Kaiserwald, Mauthausen, Neuengamme, Oranienburg, Plaszow, Ravensbruck, Stutthof, Terezin and Westerbork


What are the names of the concentration camps in the Holocaust?

AnswerThis is a partial list: Camp NameCountry (today)Camp TypeBreitenauGermany"Early wild camp", then labor campLangenstein-ZwiebergeGermanyBuchenwald subcampBergen-BelsenGermanyCollection pointBernburgGermanyCollection pointHinzertGermanyCollection point and subcampOranienburgGermanyCollective pointOsthofenGermanyCollective pointVaivaraEstoniaConcentration and transit campBanjicaSerbiaConcentration campBardufossNorwayConcentration campBogdanovkaMoldovaConcentration campBredtvetNorwayConcentration campCrveni krstSerbiaConcentration campHerzogenbusch(Vught)NetherlandsConcentration campOberer KuhbergGermanyConcentration campFort VII (Poznań)PolandConcentration, detention, transitBerlin-MarzahnGermanyEarly a "rest place" then labor camp for RomaAuschwitz-BirkenauPolandExtermination and labor campBełżecPolandExtermination campChełmno(Kulmhof)PolandExtermination campMajdanek(KZ Lublin)PolandExtermination campMaly TrostenetsBelarusExtermination campSajmisteSerbiaExtermination campSobibórPolandExtermination campTreblinkaPolandExtermination campJasenovac concentration campCroatiaExtermination camp for Jews, Serbs and Roma[7]Kauen(Kaunas)LithuaniaGhetto and internment campJanowska(Lwów)UkraineGhetto; transit, labor, & extermination campLe VernetFranceInternment campDrancyFranceInternment camp, transitOhrdrufGermanyLabor and concentration camp; Buchenwald subcampWarsawPolandLabor and extermination campMalchowGermanyLabor and Transit campArbeitsdorfGermanyLabor campBuchenwaldGermanyLabor campDachauGermanyLabor campFlossenbürgGermanyLabor campKaiserwald(Mežaparks)LatviaLabor campKaufering/LandsbergGermanyLabor campKloogaEstoniaLabor campMauthausen-GusenAustriaLabor campMittelbau-DoraGermanyLabor campNeuengammeGermanyLabor campPłaszówPolandLabor campSachsenhausenGermanyLabor campSalaspilsLatviaLabor campStutthofPolandLabor campRavensbrückGermanyLabor camp for womenGross-RosenPolandLabor camp; Nacht und Nebel campNatzweiler-Struthof (Struthof)FranceLabor camp; Nacht und Nebel camp; extermination campAlderneyChannel IslandsLabor campsSoldauPolandLabor; Transit campRisiera di San Sabba(Trieste)ItalyPolice detainment campBreendonkBelgiumPrison and labor campNiederhagenGermanyPrison and labor campFort de RomainvilleFrancePrison and transit campFossoliItalyPrison and transit campFalstadNorwayPrison campGriniNorwayPrison campBolzanoItalyTransitWesterborkNetherlandsTransit campTheresienstadt(Terezín)Czech RepublicTransit camp and GhettoAmersfoortNetherlandsTransit camp and prisonAnswerThere were three different camp functions: transit, labor and death or the extermination camps. Some camps served in more than one function and many camps had numerous sub camps. Labor camps could be located at factory sites or small plants and might have as few as 50 to 100 prisoners and for this reason they were represent the largest number that can be listed.Second, some camps were in use for only brief periods of time like those in North Africa (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya had 17 different labor camps, there were six in Croatia and three in Estonia and two in France. Alderney in the Channel Islands had the dubious honor of being located in England).Finally, some camps like Auschwitz were really four different camps of the same name. The other major camps include Belzec, Bergen Belsen, Buchenwald, Chelmno, Dachau, Dora, Flossenburg, Grossrosen, Janowska, Kaiserwald, Majdanek, Mauthausen, Neuengamme, Oranienburg, Plaszow, Ravensbruck, Sachenhausen, Sobibor, Stutthof, Terezin, Treblinka and lastly Westerbork.