Τόποι κράτησης και μνήμης: Nαζιστικά στρατόπεδα συγκέντρωσης στην Ελλάδα (1941-1944)
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/units/gr-006559-histauth_01 an entity of type: Record
Τόποι κράτησης και μνήμης: Nαζιστικά στρατόπεδα συγκέντρωσης στην Ελλάδα (1941-1944)
Topoi kratisis kai mnimis: Nazistika stratopeda sigkentrosis stin Ellada, 1941-1944
Places of Detainment and Memory: Nazi Concentration Camps in Greece, 1941-1944
Τόποι κράτησης και μνήμης: Nαζιστικά στρατόπεδα συγκέντρωσης στην Ελλάδα (1941-1944)
Topoi kratisis kai mnimis: Nazistika stratopeda sigkentrosis stin Ellada, 1941-1944
Places of Detainment and Memory: Nazi Concentration Camps in Greece, 1941-1944
Website
The project’s aim was the detailed description of three designated places of detention in Greece: the Pavlos Melas Camp in Stavroupoli, Thessaloniki, the Haidari Camp in Athens and the Larissa Camp.
An additional aim of the program was the scientific documentation of the camps’ characteristics, of their mode of operation and of the purpose they served, according to: a) the conclusions drawn from the living conditions and the experiences of prisoners in the camps and b) the categorization applied by the German authorities (places of detention, ghettos, transit centers, concentration camps, extermination camps). The research project thus participates in the international debate on the terminology of the Nazi camps and their categorization according to their uses.
The findings of the research are presented on the website, in which there is a separate field related to its pedagogical utilization.
The website contains information on the three camps, accompanied by digitized archival material from the following archival institutions:
- Thessaloniki History Centre
- Holy Diocese of Thessaloniki
- The Cartographic Heritage Archives
- Historical Archive of Macedonia
The website also contains lists with names of prisoners, of executed and of released persons from the Pavlos Melas camp. Among them there are some Jewish names, as well as some names of Christian Greek prisoners who seem to have been imprisoned for “Jewish matters”.