File:Treblinka II aerial photo (1944).jpg
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DescriptionTreblinka II aerial photo (1944).jpg |
English: Treblinka II extermination camp of the Operation Reinhard in German-occupied Poland. Aerial photograph of the camp perimeter taken in 1944; several months after the dismantling of the camp. All known structrures are gone except for the farmhouse built within it and lifestock shed (lower left). The photograp is overlayed with the known structures as described on the map of Treblinka drawn by Mr. Peter Laponder, builder of the Treblinka Model at the new Cape Town Holocaust Center, digitized by ARC and made available at the Mapping Treblinka webpage. On the left hand side, the color outlines show dismantled SS and Hiwi guards living quarters with most barracks clearly defined by the surrounding walkways. The railway unloading platform (lower centre) consisted of two parallel ramps visible in the bottom, marked with the red arrow. Location of new expanded gass chambers marked with a cross. Undressing barracks and sorting yard (separate for men and women with hair-cropping area) marked with two rectangles surrounded by solid fence with no view of the outside. The adjacent "Sluice" through the woods separated by barb-wire fence, marked with red dashed-line. Polski: Zdjęcie lotnicze przedstawiające teren, na którym w okresie od lipca 1942 roku do listopada 1943 roku istniał niemiecki nazistowski obóz zagłady Treblinka II. Zdjęcie wykonano w 1944 roku, już po likwidacji obozu i zatarciu śladów jego istnienia. Widać na nim zabudowania „farmy”, na której Niemcy osiedlili dwóch ukraińskich wachmanów z zadaniem strzeżenia terenu poobozowego (u dołu, po lewej stronie). Na zdjęciu przy pomocy kolorowych konturów i innych znaków zaznaczono granice obozu, wewnętrzne ogrodzenia oraz miejsca, gdzie znajdowały się najważniejsze obiekty. Cyframi od 1 do 3 oznaczono strefy obozowe.
Source: Aerial Photos from the National Archives, Washington DC. Ref. No. GX 12225 SG, exp. 259.1) Strefa administracyjno-mieszkalna 2) Strefa przyjęć 3) Obszar zagłady (Totenlager) |
Date | Before November 1944 (either September or October, according to different sources), roughly one month after the Soviet Army took over the area from under the Nazis. |
Source | National Archives and Records Administration (ARC 2005) or much larger scan (CODOH) with greatly reduced contrast. Original from the National Archives Air Photo library at Alexandria, Virginia, U.S.A. Cartographic Division (Record Group 373). Some 1.2 million Nazi German air photographs were released into the public domain in the 1970s and 1980s by the National Archives. Numerous authors laid claims to have published them for the first time ever, notably the Holocaust denier and author John C. Ball (Air Photo Evidence)[1] and Udo Walendy (Der Fall Treblinka) before him. |
Author | Unknown authorUnknown author, overlay legend in Photoshop by Poeticbent |
Permission (Reusing this file) |
PD-Polish and EU |
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
This photograph is in the public domain because according to the Art. 3 of copyright law of March 29, 1926 of the Republic of Poland and Art. 2 of copyright law of July 10, 1952 of the People's Republic of Poland, all photographs by Polish photographers (or published for the first time in Poland or simultaneously in Poland and abroad) published without a clear copyright notice before the law was changed on May 23, 1994 are assumed to be in the public domain in Poland.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it meets three requirements:
To uploader: Please provide where and when the image was first published.
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Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
I, the copyright holder of this work, release this work into the public domain. This applies worldwide. In some countries this may not be legally possible; if so: I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. |
SS quarters
Barracks for Sonderkommando prisoners
Victim's property warehouse disguised as a train station
Execution site disguised as a infirmary
10 new gas chambers
cremation pyres
3 old gas chambers
Barracks for Sonderkommando prisoners
ramp
Barracks where women victims undressed
Barracks where men victims undressed
Burial pits
Burial pits
Burial pits
Burial pits
Second storage barrack added in 1943
Sorting yard for victims' luggage
Sluice or 'the Road to Heaven'
Ukrainian guards' quarters
GoldJuden
Kitchen
Garage
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 17:42, 19 December 2013 | 1,000 × 890 (704 KB) | Poeticbent (talk | contribs) | missing barbed-wire fencing | |
19:20, 18 August 2013 | 1,000 × 890 (676 KB) | Poeticbent (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description={{en|1=Treblinka II extermination camp of the Operation Reinhard in occupied Poland. Aerial photograph of the camp perimeter taken in 1944; several months after the dismantling of the camp. All known structrures are gone exce... |
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