TRAVEL VLOG POLAND: FORT VII Concentration Camp
Today is the 5th edition of the Fortress Poznan day, and we went to visit the concentration camp in Poznan FORT VII where approximately 20,000 people died. Where the first test with Zyklon B gas took place, killing mental hospital patients and personnel. In this special occasion areas that were restricted to the public were open for this day. I love history, specially World War II history so for me being in this place and honoring all those poles who lost their lives in hands of the nazis it was a very touching experience.
I'll be posting more amazing places here around Poland I'm totally in love with this country I hope you can appreciate it as much as I do.
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Twierdza Poznań Fort VII
Fort VII w Poznaniu. Jeden z 18-tu fortów Twierdzy Poznań. Wybudowany w latach 1876-1880. A 7 lat Później zmodernizowany.
Otrzymał nazwę COLUMB w 1902 r. Pełnił ważną funkcję w Pruskich planach obrony miasta i wschodniej granicy II Rzeszy
do 1918r. W czasie powstania wielkopolskiego w forcie znajdowało się kilkaset ton bomb lotniczych. Gdy rozpoczęła się bitwa o
ŁAWICE przecięto kabel elektryczny i zablokowano łączność telefoniczną, co uniemożliwiło Niemcom wysadzenie składu.
Po I wojnie fort pełnił funkcje magazynu. W czasie II wojny
znajdował się tu obóz koncentracyjny
KL POSEN gdzie zamordowano około 4,5 tyś. więźniów. Część z nich stanowili pacjenci szpitala psychiatrycznego w Owińskach,
których zagazowano. Pod koniec wojny produkowano tu radiostacje TELEFUNKEN. Po zakończeniu działań wojennych miejsce to służyło jako magazyn dla Wojska Polskiego. Od lat 60-tych rozważano otwarcie fortu dla zwiedzających i tak w 1979 otwarto MUZEUM MARTYROLOGII WIELKOPOLAN które działa do dziś. Można tu zobaczyć ekspozycje i wystawy, jak i sam fort od środka.
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Fort VII Siódmy | Nasze Historie #3
Obozy koncentracyjne to nieśmiertelny dowód okrutnych możliwości człowieka. Sidła niewoli i poczucie bezkarności obudziły najgorsze demony. One nadal mogą być w ludziach zaklęte przypominają pracownicy Muzeum Martyrologii Wielkopolan. Czas zaciera ślady ale nie możemy pozwolić by wymazał z pamięci ludzkie tragedie. #Fort Siódmy VII. Nasze Historie | #3
zdjęcia: Tomasz Chruściel
Grafika: Marcin Mikołajczak
Dziękuje za pomoc Mateuszowi Góralowi. Dziękuje za uprzejmość Wielkopolskiemu Muzeum Niepodległości. Muzeum Martyrologii Wielkopolan - Fort VII.
German concentration camp in Poznan Fort VII
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TRAVEL VLOG POLAND: Fort VII concentration camp, part I
Hey guys! Thanks for watching!
Today was an special day because it is the anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, for this special day we went to visit the concentration camp in Poznan FORT VII where approximately 20,000 people died there. I love history, specially World War II history so for me being in this place and honoring all those poles who lost their lives in hands of the nazis it was a very touching experience.
I'll be posting more amazing places here around Poland I'm totally in love with this country I hope you can appreciate it as much as I do.
SUSCRIBE FOR MORE TRIPS WITH ME►
MUSIC►
Cryptic Sorrow - Atlantean Twilight av Kevin MacLeod er lisensiert under en Creative Commons Attribution-lisens (
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TRAVEL VLOG POLAND: Fort VII concentration camp, part II
Hey guys! Thanks for watching!
Today was an special day because it is the anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, for this special day we went to visit the concentration camp in Poznan FORT VII where approximately 20,000 people died there. I love history, specially World War II history so for me being in this place and honoring all those poles who lost their lives in hands of the nazis it was a very touching experience.
I'll be posting more amazing places here around Poland I'm totally in love with this country I hope you can appreciate it as much as I do.
SUSCRIBE FOR MORE TRIPS WITH ME►
MUSIC►
Cryptic Sorrow - Atlantean Twilight av Kevin MacLeod er lisensiert under en Creative Commons Attribution-lisens (
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FORT VII Poznań
Fort VII w Poznaniu. Miejsce martyrologii mieszkańców Poznania i nie tylko...
Fort VII
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Fort VII, officially Konzentrationslager Posen , was a German death camp set up in Poznań in German-occupied Poland during World War II, located in one of the 19th-century forts which ringed the city.According to different estimates, between 4,500 and 20,000 people, mostly Poles from Poznań and the surrounding region, died while imprisoned at the camp.
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Image source in video
Gas chamber first gassing in 1939 in poznan/poland Fort 7
Fist gas chamber in the third reich. Vermutlich erste Gaskammer im dritten Reich.
M.E. wurden hier für die Aktion T4 experimentiert. In Minsk-Mogilev (Albert Widmann ) wurde im Jahre 1941 mit Autoabgasen und Sprengstoff experimentiert. Dazu siehe hier unten in den Kommentaren.
Poznań, Poland 74 years after the Liberation from germans by Soviet Army and Polish People´s Army
The music is from Krakowski Chór Rewolucyjny (Varshavianka ) Cracovian Revolutionary Choir
Under the command of Soviet officer Vasily Chuikov
Polish People´s Army (2nd Polish Army ), Polish
civilians and the Red Army liberated Poznań
on 23 February 1945
Today, the Poznań Citadel site is a large park, in
which is situated a memorial to the Red Army
For centuries before the Christianization of Poland,
Poznań (consisting of a fortified stronghold between
the Warta and Cybina rivers, on what is now Ostrów
Tumski) was an important cultural and political centre
of the Polan tribe. Mieszko I, the first historically
recorded ruler of the Polans, and of the early Polish
state which they dominated, built one of his main
stable headquarters in Poznań. Mieszko's baptism of
966, seen as a defining moment in the
Christianization of the Polish state, may have taken
place in Poznań. In about 1249, Duke Przemysł I
began constructing what would become the Royal
Castle on a hill on the left bank of the Warta. Then in
1253 Przemysł issued a charter to Thomas of Guben
(Gubin) for the founding of a town under Magdeburg
law, between the castle and the river. Thomas
brought a large number of German settlers to aid in
the building and settlement of the city – this is an
example of the German eastern migration
(Ostsiedlung) characteristic of that period. However,
in 1793, in the Second Partition of Poland, Poznań,
came under the control of the Kingdom of Prussia,
becoming part of (and initially the seat of) the
province of South Prussia. In the Greater Poland
Uprising of 1806, Polish soldiers and civilian
volunteers assisted the efforts of Napoleon by driving
out Prussian forces from the region. The city became
a part of the Duchy of Warsaw in 1807, and was the
seat of Poznań Department – a unit of administrative
division and local government. However, in 1815,
following the Congress of Vienna, the region was
returned to Prussia, and Poznań became the capital of
the semi-autonomous Grand Duchy of Posen. A
Greater Poland Uprising during the Revolutions of
1848 was ultimately unsuccessful, and the Grand
Duchy lost its remaining autonomy, Poznań becoming
simply the capital of the Prussian Province of Posen. It
would become part of the German Empire with the
unification of German states in 1871. Polish patriots
continued to form societies (such as the Central
Economic Society for the Grand Duchy of Poznań),
and a Polish theatre (Teatr Polski, still functioning)
opened in 1875; however the authorities made efforts
to Germanize the region, particularly through the
Prussian Settlement Commission (founded 1886).
Germans accounted for 38% of the city's population
in 1867, though this percentage would later decline
somewhat, particularly after the region returned to
Poland.
During World War II Poznan was incorporated into
the Third Reich in the boundary of the so-called
Wielkopolska Country of Warta . Most of the Poles
were deported from the city to the General
Government , and in return Germans were brought in
as part of the colonization action of Heim ins Reich .
During the German occupation of 1939–1945, Poznań
was incorporated into the Third Reich as the capital of
Reichsgau Wartheland. Many Polish inhabitants were
executed, arrested, expelled to the General
Government or used as forced labour; at the same
time many Germans and Volksdeutsche were settled
in the city. The German population increased from
around 5,000 in 1939 (some 2% of the inhabitants) to
around 95,000 in 1944.[15][16] The pre-war Jewish
population of about 2,000[17] were mostly murdered
in the Holocaust. A concentration camp was set up in
Fort VII, one of the 19th-century perimeter forts. The
camp was later moved to Żabikowo south of Poznań.
The Nazi authorities significantly expanded Poznań's
boundaries to include most of the present-day area of
the city; these boundaries were retained after the
war. Poznań was liberated from german beast by the
Red Army, assisted by Polish volunteers, on 23
February 1945 following the Battle of Poznań, in
which the German army conducted a last-ditch
defence in line with Hitler's designation of the city as
a Festung. The Citadel was the last point to be taken,
and the fighting left much of the city, particularly the
Old Town, in ruins.
Fort VII Siódmy zapowiedź | Nasze Historie #3
Szarże SS przypominają grozę tego miejsca. Krzyż upamiętnia zamordowane ofiary. Ginęła tu wielkopolska elita.
Intelektualiści, Powstańcy Wielkopolscy, wszyscy angażujący się działalność patriotyczną. W murach fortu wybudowanego w XIX
wieku na zawsze utkwiły krzyk, ból, rozpacz i łzy.
300 lat Bambrów Poznańskich
Inscenizacja Poznanie, historyczny korowód Bambrów
Inscenizacja FORT VIIA POZNAŃ 28 KWIETNIA 2013
Fort VIIa Poznań za pół ceny 2013
Zbudowany został w latach 1887--1890, w drugim etapie budowy twierdzy fortowej wraz z 5 innymi fortami. Kaponiery były połączone poterną biegnącą pod fosą. W latach 1913-1914 na przeciwskarpie zbudowano dwa betonowe schrony oraz przemurowano niektóre wejścia. We wrześniu 1939 roku wybudowano dwa betonowe schrony oraz dwa pancerne stanowiska obserwacyjne ze stalowo-betonową kopułą[2]. Po wojnie fort był użytkowany przez wojska lotnicze. Obecnie obiekt jest użytkowany przez prywatną firmę.
FORT VII
Śmieszny filmik z fortu VII twierdzy Modlin HORROR!!!
TRAVEL VLOG POLAND: Exploring a World War I Fort
Today is the 5th edition of the Day of Poznan Fortress (Festung Posen) so they organized tour through all the Forts in the city, today we went to explore the 6th Fort, one of the 18 forts that surround the city.
I'll be posting more amazing places here around Poland I'm totally in love with this country I hope you can appreciate it as much as I do.
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In the Hall of the Mountain King (Norwegian: I Dovregubbens hall) by Edvard Grieg
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Słówko Wieczorne [Fort VII]
Fort VII was a place of the first imprisonment of the Five, now Museum of Martyrdom in Poznań
TAJEMNICE FORTU VII
Film Stanisława Barełkowskiego, Adama Sworackiego, Jakuba Hałasa i grupy przyjaciół z Przeźmierowa, opowiadający historię FORTU VII, pierwszego niemieckiego obozu koncentracyjnego w Polsce. W filmie występuje m.in. gen. Jan Podhorski z NSZ.