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  2. Gardelegen massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardelegen_massacre

    The Gardelegen massacre was a massacre perpetrated by the locals ( Volkssturm, Hitlerjugend and local firefighters) of the northern German town of Gardelegen, with direction from the SS, near the end of World War II. On April 13, 1945, on the Isenschnibbe estate near the town, the troops forced over 1,000 slave laborers who were part of a ...

  3. Dora trial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dora_Trial

    Vans Maienschein, a prosecution witness, points out former camp doctor Heinrich Schmidt as the man who let patients die because of lack of medical care. September, 1947. The Dora Trial, also the "Dora"-Nordhausen or Dachau Dora Proceeding (German: Dachau-Dora Prozess) was a war crimes trial conducted by the United States Army in the aftermath of the collapse of the Third Reich.

  4. 102nd Infantry Division (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/102nd_Infantry_Division...

    The barn set on fire in the Gardelegen Massacre On 15 April the division discovered a war crime in Gardelegen : the Isenschnibbe Barn Atrocity . About 1,200 prisoners from the Mittelbau-Dora and Hannover-Stöcken concentration camps were forced from a train into an empty barn measuring approximately a hundred by fifty feet on the outskirts of ...

  5. War crimes in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_crimes_in_World_War_II

    Gardelegen (war crime): The German SS coerced 1,016 forced labourers who were part of transports evacuated from several sub-camps of Mittelbau-Dora Concentration Camp and from the sub-camp Hannover-Stöcken of Neuengamme Concentration Camp into a large barn which was then lit on fire. Most of the prisoners were burned alive; some were shot ...

  6. German war crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_war_crimes

    German war crimes. The governments of the German Empire and Nazi Germany (under Adolf Hitler) ordered, organized, and condoned a substantial number of war crimes, first in the Herero and Namaqua genocide and then in the First and Second World Wars. The most notable of these is the Holocaust, in which millions of European Jewish, Polish, and ...

  7. List of convicted war criminals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_convicted_war...

    This is a list of convicted war criminals found guilty of war crimes under the rules of warfare as defined by the World War II Nuremberg Trials (as well as by earlier agreements established by the Hague Conferences of 1899 and 1907, the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, and the Geneva Conventions of 1929 and 1949).

  8. War crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_crime

    A war crime is a violation of the laws of war that gives rise to individual criminal responsibility for actions by combatants in action, such as intentionally killing civilians or intentionally killing prisoners of war, torture, taking hostages, unnecessarily destroying civilian property, deception by perfidy, wartime sexual violence, pillaging, and for any individual that is part of the ...

  9. Allied war crimes during World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allied_war_crimes_during...

    Allied war crimes during World War II. During World War II, the Allies committed legally proven war crimes and violations of the laws of war against either civilians or military personnel of the Axis powers. At the end of World War II, many trials of Axis war criminals took place, most famously the Nuremberg Trials and Tokyo Trials.