Category
page 1Executed Nazi concentration camp commandants

Rudolf Höss
German war criminal, commandant of Auschwitz (1901–1947)
Amon Göth
Austrian SS functionary, commandant of Plaszow concentration camp and convicted war criminal (1908-1946)

Josef Kramer
German SS officer, concentration camp commandant, and convicted war criminal (1906–1945)

Karl-Otto Koch
Karl-Otto Koch was a German military officer who was a mid-ranking commander in the Schutzstaffel (SS) of Nazi Germany, and the first commandant of the Nazi concentration camps at Buchenwald and Sachsenhausen. From September 1941 until August 1942, he served as the first commandant of the Majdanek concentration camp in German-occupied Poland, stealing vast amounts of valuables and money from murdered Jews. His wife, Ilse Koch, also participated in the crimes at Buchenwald.
Arthur Liebehenschel
SS officer (1901–1948)
Hans Aumeier
German SS officer (1906-1948)
Richard Thomalla
SS Officer (1903-1945)
Heinrich Schwarz
SS officer (1906-1947)
Max Pauly
SS Sturmbannführer; commandant of Stutthof concentration camp (1907–1946)
Miroslav Filipović
Bosnian Croat Franciscan friar, Ustashe military chaplain and convicted war criminal (1915-1946)
Martin Gottfried Weiss
German SS officer, concentration camp commandant (1905-1946)
Siegfried Seidl
SS officer (1911-1947)
Ljubo Miloš
Croatian fascist war criminal

Otto Förschner
German SS officer and concentration camp commander, convicted war criminal (1902-1946)
Hermann Florstedt
German Nazi leader (1895-1945)
Karl Rahm
Nazi concentration camp commandant (1907–1947)

Alexander Piorkowski
German Nazi concentration camp commandant
Fritz Suhren
SS officer (1908-1950)
Johann Schwarzhuber
Nazy German military officials (1904-1947)
Arnold Büscher
German Nazi concentration camp commandant (1899-1949)
Philipp Schmitt
Nazi concentration camp officer (1902–1950)
Ivica Matković
Ustaša lieutenant colonel and the administrator of the Jasenovac concentration camp
Karl Peter Berg
German concentration camp Commander and convicted war criminal (1907–1949)