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Walk in the footsteps of the thousands who suffered and resisted at Ravensbrück, the largest Nazi concentration camp for women. On this private full-day tour from Berlin, your expert guide will take you on a powerful and moving journey through original camp buildings, including the preserved prison block, crematorium, and the SS headquarters. Explore exhibitions that bring to life the experiences of women imprisoned here—from forced labour to medical experiments—and gain a deeper understanding of the moral complexities and historical legacy of this site. With hotel pickup, private transport, and thoughtful storytelling, this tour offers not just information, but reflection. A profoundly huma...
Points forts
8 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
8 heures
Proposé en Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
WiFi on board
Bottled water
Entry to the museum and memorial.
Ravensbrück Concentration Camp [Private Tour]
(3) Avis
Fürstenberg/Havel
À propos
Walk in the footsteps of the thousands who suffered and resisted at Ravensbrück, the largest Nazi concentration camp for women. On this private full-day tour from Berlin, your expert guide will take you on a powerful and moving journey through original camp buildings, including the preserved prison block, crematorium, and the SS headquarters. Explore exhibitions that bring to life the experiences of women imprisoned here—from forced labour to medical experiments—and gain a deeper understanding of the moral complexities and historical legacy of this site. With hotel pickup, private transport, and thoughtful storytelling, this tour offers not just information, but reflection. A profoundly huma...
As you approach the memorial, your guide will provide an overview of the camp’s structure, scale, and function within the Nazi regime.
We’ll begin our visit at the Visitor Centre, where you’ll be given maps and materials to accompany the experience.
The housing estate for SS members of the Ravensbrück concentration camp, which was never completed, is still mostly intact as an ensemble to this day.
Higher-level SS members lived in the houses with their families. It is unclear who these SS soldiers were and what their lives were like on this housing estate. According to reports, private businesses from the Fürstenberg area built the majority of the dwellings in the SS colony.
30 minutes
2
Memorial statue Tragende (Woman with Burden), 1959
Our first stop is the former SS administrative building, now a museum that sets the stage for what Ravensbrück was — and what it became.
Inside, you’ll explore the permanent exhibition, which provides essential context about the camp’s founding, operation, and liberation.
20 minutes
3
The monument Zwei Stehende
The monument Zwei Stehende (Two Women Standing) is located in front of the camp wall near the former cremation on the grounds of the Ravensbrück concentration camp in Fürstenberg, Germany. The SS created Ravensbrück concentration camp in 1939, and it was Germany's largest concentration camp for women during WWII.
10 minutes
4
Ravensbrück Concentration Camp Memorial Site
From 1939 to 1945, Ravensbrück was a German concentration camp for women in northern Germany, 90 km (56 mi) north of Berlin, in the village of Ravensbrück within Fürstenberg/Havel. The camp memorial estimates that 132,000 women were in the camp during the war, including 48,500 from Poland, 28,000 from the Soviet Union, almost 24,000 from Germany and Austria, nearly 8,000 from France, and thousands from other countries, including the UK and US. Over 20,000 (15%) were Jewish. Other races and cultures made up 85%. Over 80% were political prisoners.
The SS erected a tiny neighboring camp for male detainees in early 1941, who built and managed the gas chambers in 1944. About 50,000 female prisoners in Ravensbrück died, including 2,200 in the gas chambers.