The governments of the German Empire and Nazi Germany (under Adolf Hitler) ordered, organized, and condoned a substantial number of war crimes, first in the Herero and Nama genocide and then in the First and Second World Wars. The most notable of these is the Holocaust, in which millions of European Jews were systematically abused, deported, and murdered, along with Romani in the Romani Holocaust and non-Jewish Poles. Millions of civilians and prisoners of war also died as a result of German abuses, mistreatment, and deliberate starvation policies in those two conflicts. Much of the evidence was deliberately destroyed by the perpetrators, such as in Sonderaktion 1005, in an attempt to conceal their crimes.
Herero Wars
Considered to have been the first genocide of the 20th century, the Herero and Nama genocide was perpetrated by the German Empire between 1904 and 1907 in German South West Africa (modern-day Namibia), during the Scramble for Africa. On January 12, 1904, the Herero people, led by Samuel Maharero, rebelled against German colonialism. In August, General Lothar von Trotha of the Imperial German Army defeated the Herero in the Battle of Waterberg and drove them into the desert of Omaheke, where most of them died of thirst. In October, the Nama people also rebelled against the Germans only to suffer a similar fate.
In total, from 24,000 up to 100,000 Herero and 10,000 Nama died. The genocide was characterized by widespread death by starvation and thirst because the Herero who fled the violence were prevented from returning from the Namib Desert. Some sources also claim that the German colonial army systematically poisoned wells in the desert.
World War I
Documentation regarding German war crimes in World War I was seized and destroyed by Nazi Germany during World War II, after occupying France, along with monuments commemorating their victims.
Chemical weapons in warfare
Poison gas was first introduced as a weapon by Imperial Germany, and subsequently used by all major belligerents, in violation of the 1899 Hague Declaration Concerning Asphyxiating Gases and the 1907 Hague Convention on Land Warfare, which explicitly forbade the use of "poison or poisoned weapons" in warfare.
Belgium
In August 1914, as part of the Schlieffen Plan, the German Army invaded and occupied the neutral nation of Belgium without explicit warning, which violated a treaty of 1839 that the German chancellor dismissed as a "scrap of paper" and the 1907 Hague Convention on Opening of Hostilities. Within the first two months of the war, the German occupiers terrorized the Belgians, killing thousands of civilians and looting and burning scores of towns, including Leuven, which housed the country's preeminent university, mainly in retaliation for Belgian guerrilla warfare, (see francs-tireurs). This action was in violation of the 1907 Hague Convention on Land Warfare provisions that prohibited collective punishment of civilians and looting and destruction of civilian property in occupied territories.
Bombardment of English coastal towns
The raid on Scarborough, Hartlepool and Whitby, which took place on December 16, 1914, was an attack by the Imperial German Navy on the British seaport towns of Scarborough, Hartlepool, West Hartlepool, and Whitby. The attack resulted in 137 fatalities and 592 casualties. The raid was in violation of the ninth section of the 1907 Hague Convention which prohibited naval bombardments of undefended towns without warning, because only Hartlepool was protected by shore batteries. Germany was a signatory of the 1907 Hague Convention. Another attack followed on 26 April 1916 on the coastal towns of Yarmouth and Lowestoft but both were important naval bases and defended by shore batteries.
Unrestricted submarine warfare
Unrestricted submarine warfare was instituted in 1915 in response to the British naval blockade of Germany. Prize rules, which were codified under the 1907 Hague ConventionâÂÂsuch as those that required commerce raiders to warn their targets and allow time for the crew to board lifeboatsâÂÂwere disregarded and commercial vessels were sunk regardless of nationality, cargo, or destination. Following the sinking of the on 7 May 1915 and subsequent public outcry in various neutral countries, including the United States, the practice was withdrawn. However, Germany resumed the practice on 1 February 1917 and declared that all merchant ships regardless of nationalities would be sunk without warning. This outraged the U.S. public, prompting the U.S. to break diplomatic relations with Germany two days later, and, along with the Zimmermann Telegram, led the U.S. entry into the war two months later on the side of the Allied Powers.
World War II
Chronologically, the first German World War II era war crime, and the very first act of the war, was the bombing of WieluÃ
Â, a town where no targets of military value were present.
More significantly, the Holocaust of the European Jews, the extermination of millions of Poles, the Action T4 killing of the disabled, and the Porajmos of the Romani are the most notable war crimes committed by Nazi Germany during World War II. Not all of the crimes committed during the Holocaust and similar mass atrocities were war crimes. Telford Taylor (The U.S. prosecutor in the German High Command case at the Nuremberg Trials and Chief Counsel for the twelve trials before the U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunals) explained in 1982:
- German mistreatment of Soviet prisoners of war â at least 3.3 million Soviet POWs died in German custody, out of 5.7 million captured; this figure represents 57% POW casualty rate.
- Le Paradis massacre, May 1940, British soldiers of the Royal Norfolk Regiment, were captured by the SS and subsequently murdered. Fritz Knoechlein was tried, found guilty and hanged.
- Wormhoudt massacre, May 1940, British and French soldiers captured by the SS and subsequently murdered. No one was found guilty of the crime.
- Lidice massacre after assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in 1942, when the Czech village was utterly destroyed, and inhabitants murdered.
- Normandy Massacres, a series of killings in which up to 156 Canadian prisoners of war were murdered by soldiers of the 12th SS Panzer Division (Hitler Youth) during the Battle of Normandy
- Ardenne Abbey massacre, one of the Normandy massacres; June 1944 Canadian soldiers captured by the SS and murdered by 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend. SS General Kurt Meyer (Panzermeyer) sentenced to be shot 1946; sentence commuted; released 1954
- Graignes massacre, 11 June 1944, United States POWs that had surrendered were executed by 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division Götz von Berlichingen by shooting and stabbing.
- Malmedy massacre, December 1944, United States POWs captured by Kampfgruppe Peiper were murdered outside of Malmedy, Belgium.
- Wereth massacre. 17 December 1944, soldiers from 3./SS-PzAA1 LSSAH captured eleven African-American soldiers from 333rd Artillery Battalion in the hamlet of Wereth, Belgium. Subsequently, the prisoners were tortured, shot, and had their fingers cut off, legs broken, eyes gouged out, jaw broken and at least one was shot while trying to bandage a comrade's wounds.
- Wahlhausen massacre, January 1945, United States POWs from the 28th Infantry Division captured by German troops were summarily executed.
- Gardelegen massacre of April 1945 when Nazi concentration camp prisoners were herded into a barn, which was then set alight, killing all inside
- Oradour-sur-Glane massacre
- Massacre of Kalavryta
- Unrestricted submarine warfare against merchant shipping.
- The intentional destruction of major medieval churches of Novgorod, of monasteries in the Moscow region (e.g., of New Jerusalem Monastery) and of the imperial palaces around St. Petersburg.
- The campaign of extermination of Slavic population in the occupied territories. Several thousand villages were burned with their entire population (e.g., Khatyn massacre in Belarus). A quarter of the inhabitants of Belarus did not survive the German occupation.
- Soap made from human corpses produced on a small-scale by German scientist Rudolf Spanner.
- Commando Order, the secret order issued by Hitler in October 1942 stating that Allied combatants encountered during commando operations were to be executed immediately without trial, even if they were properly uniformed, unarmed, or intending to surrender.
- Commissar Order, the order from Hitler to Wehrmacht troops before the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 to shoot Commissars immediately on capture.
- Nacht und Nebel decree of 1941 for disappearance of prisoners.
War criminals
Massacres and war crimes of World War II by location
Austria
Belarus
1941
1942
- 26 March â 6 April, Operation Bamberg (HÃ
Âusk, Bobrujsk; 4,396 people, including children)
- April 29 and August 10, 1942, Dzyatlava massacre, DiatÃ
Âowo (Dzyatlava); 3,000- 5,000 people, including women and children
- 9 â 12 May, Kliczów-Bobrujsk massacre (520 people, including children)
- Beginning of June, SÃ
Âowodka-Bobrujsk massacre (1,000 people, including children)
- 15 June Borki (powiat biaÃ
Âostocki) massacre (1,741 people, including children)
- 21 June Zbyszin massacre (1,076 people, including children)
- 25 June Timkowiczi massacre (900 people, including children)
- 26 June Studenka massacre (836 people, including children)
- 18 July, Jelsk massacre (1,000 people, including children)
- 15 July â 7 August, Operation Adler (Bobrujsk, Mohylew, Berezyna; 1,381 people, including children)
- 14 â 20 August, Operation Greif (Orsza, Witebsk; 796 people, including children)
- 22 August â 21 September, Operation Sumpffieber (White Ruthenia; 10,063 people, including children)
- August, BereÃ
ºne massacre
- 22 September â 26 September (MaÃ
Âoryta massacre; 4,038 people, including children)
- 23 September â 3 October, Operation Blitz (PoÃ
Âock, Witebsk; 567 people, including children)
- 11 â 23 October, Operation Karlsbad (Orsza, Witebsk; 1,051 people, including children)
- 23 â 29 November, Operation Nürnberg (Dubrowka; 2,974 people, including children)
- December, Mirnaya massacre, Mirnaya (ÃÂÃÂÃÂýðÃÂ), Belarus (be); 147 including women and children
- 10 â 21 December, Operation Hamburg (Niemen River-Szczara River; 6,172 people, including children)
- 22 â 29 December, Operation Altona (SÃ
Âonim; 1,032 people, including children)
1943
- 6 â 14 January, Operation Franz (Grodsjanka; 2,025 people, including children)
- 10 â 11 January, Operation Peter (Kliczów, Kolbcza; 1,400 people, including children)
- 18 â 23 January, SÃ
Âuck-MiÃ
Âsk-CzerwieÃ
 massacre (825 people, including children)
- 28 January â 15 February, Operation Schneehase (PoÃ
Âock, Rossony, Krasnopole; 2,283 people, including children); 54; 37
- Until 28 January, Operation Erntefest I (CzerwieÃ
Â, Osipowicze; 1,228 people, including children)
- Jaanuar, Operation Eisbär (between BriaÃ
Âsk and Dmitriev-Lgowski)
- Until 1 February, Operation Waldwinter (Sirotino-Trudy; 1,627 people, including children)
- 8 â 26 February, Operation Hornung (Lenin, Hancewicze; 12,897 people, including children)
- Until 9 February, Operation Erntefest II (SÃ
Âuck, Kopyl; 2,325 people, including children)
- 15 February â end of March, Operation Winterzauber (OÃ
Âwieja, Latvian border; 3,904 people, including children)
- 22 February â 8 March, Operation Kugelblitz (PoÃ
Âock, OÃ
Âwieja, , Rossony; 3,780 people, including children)
- Until 19 March, Operation Nixe (Ptycz, Mikaszewicze, PiÃ
Âsk; 400 people, including children)
- Until 21 March, Operation Föhn (PiÃ
Âsk; 543 people, including children)
- 21 March â 2 April, Operation Donnerkeil (PoÃ
Âock, Witebsk; 542 people, including children)
- March 22, Khatyn massacre, Khatyn; 149 people including women and children
- 1 â 9 May, Operation Draufgänger II ( and Manyly forest; 680 people, including children)
- 17 â 21 May, Operation Maigewitter (Witebsk, SuraÃ
¼, Gorodok; 2,441 people, including children)
- 20 May â 23 June, Operation Cottbus (Lepel, Begomel, Uszacz; 11,796 people, including children)
- 27 May â 10 June, Operation Weichsel (Dniepr-Prypeàtriangle, South-West of Homel; 4,018 people, including children)
- 13 â 16 June, Operation Ziethen (Rzeczyca; 160 people, including children)
- 25 June â 27 July, Operation Seydlitz (Owrucz-Mozyrz; 5,106 people, including children)
- 30 July, Mozyrz massacre (501 people, including children)
- Until 14 July, Operation Günther (Woloszyn, Lagoisk; 3,993 people, including children)
- 13 July â 11 August, Operation Hermann (Iwie, Nowogródek, Woloszyn, StoÃ
Âpce; 4,280 people, including children)
- 24 September â 10 October, Operation Fritz (GÃ
ÂÃÂbokie; 509 people, including children)
- 9 October â 22 October, Stary Bychów massacre (1,769 people, including children)
- 1 November â 18 November, Operation Heinrich (Rossony, PoÃ
Âock, Idrica; 5,452 people, including children)
- December, Spasskoje massacre (628 people, including children)
- December, BiaÃ
Ây massacre (1,453 people, including children)
- 20 December â 1 January 1944, Operation Otto (OÃ
Âwieja; 1,920 people, including children)
1944
- 14 January, OÃ
Âa massacre (1,758 people, including children)
- 22 January, Baiki massacre (987 people, including children)
- 3 â 15 February, Operation Wolfsjagd (HÃ
Âusk, Bobrujsk; 467 people, including children)
- 5 â 6 February, (near Buczacz) massacre (126 people, including children; see )
- Until 19 February, Operation Sumpfhahn (HÃ
Âusk, Bobrujsk; 538 people, including children)
- Beginning of March, Berezyna-Bielnicz massacre (686 people, including children)
- 7 â 17 April, Operation Auerhahn (Bobrujsk; c. 1,000 people, including children)
- 17 April â 12 May, Operation Frühlingsfest (PoÃ
Âock, Uszacz; 7,011 people, including children)
- 25 May â 17 June, Operation Kormoran; (Wilejka, Borysów, Minsk; 7,697 people, including children)
- 2 June â 13 June, Operation Pfingsrose (Talka; 499 people, including children)
- June, Operation Pfingstausnlug (; 653 people, including children)
- June, Operation Windwirbel (Chidra; 560 people, including children)
Belgium
1940
1944
- August 18, Courcelles Massacre (Courcelles, Hainaut Province; 20 People, including children)
- December, Malmedy massacres (Malmedy and surrounding region; at least 373 American POWS)
- Dec 17, Baugnez crossroads massacre (Baugnez (near Malmedy), Liège Province; 81 American POWS)
- Dec 17, Wereth massacre (Wereth, Liège Province; 11 American POWS)
- Dec 24, (Bande, Luxembourg Province; 34 People aged between 17 and 32 years old)
Croatia
1943
1944
Czechoslovakia
Estonia
1941
1942
France
Germany
1945
Greece
- Massacre of Kleisoura (Macedonia, 270 women and children)
- Massacre of Kondomari (Crete, 60 men, mainly elder)
- Massacre of Pikermi (Pikermi, 54, including women and children)
- Pyrgoi (former Katranitsa) massacre (Pyrgoi, 346, including women and children)
- Razing of Kandanos (Crete, 180, including women and children)
- Holocaust of Viannos (Crete, 500+, including women and children)
- Distomo massacre (Central Greece, 218, including women and children)
- Drakeia massacre (Thessaly, 118 men)
- Holocaust of Kedros (Crete, 164, including women and children)
- Massacre of Kommeno (Epirus, 317, including women and children)
- Massacre of Kalavryta (Peloponnese, 1,200+, including women and children)
- Burnings of Kali Sykia (Crete, 13, women)
- Lyngiades massacre (Epirus), 92, mostly infants, children, women and elderly
- Massacre of the Acqui Division (Kefalonia, 5,000, Italian anti-fascist troops)
- Mesovouno massacre (Macedonia, 268, including women and children)
- Paramythia executions (Epirus, 201, including women and children)
- The Massacre of Chortiatis (Macedonia, 146, including women and children)
- Executions of Kaisariani (Athens, 200+, all civilians)
- Massacre of Mousiotitsa (Epirus, 153, including women and children)
- Malathyros executions (Malathyros, 61, including women and children)
- Executions of Kokkinia (Athens, 300+, all civilians, assisted by Security Battalions)
- Kallikratis executions (Crete, 30, including women and children)
- Alikianos executions (Crete, 118, all civilians)
- Razing of Anogeia (Crete, unknown, including women and children)
- Skourvoula (Crete, at least 36, all civilians)
In addition, more than 90 villages and towns are recorded from the Hellenic network of martyr cities. During the triple German, Italian and Bulgarian, occupation about 800,000 people lost their lives in Greece (see World War II casualties).
Italy
- , 12âÂÂ14 August 1943, Castiglione di Sicilia, 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring massacres 16 civilians and wounds 20.
- Boves massacre, 8 September 1943, Boves, Mass killing of 23 citizens (with another 22 wounded) by German 1st SS Panzer Division Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler occupation troops under Joachim Peiper
- Lake Maggiore massacres, SeptemberâÂÂOctober 1943, Lake Maggiore, Murder of 56 predominantly Italian Jews by the 1st SS Panzer Division despite strict German orders not to carry out any violence against civilians
- Caiazzo massacre, 13 October 1943, Caiazzo, Mass killing of 22 civilians by the German 29th Panzergrenadier Regiment occupation troops under Lt. Richard Heinz Wolfgang Lehnigk-Emden
- Ardeatine massacre (Rome, Lazio; 335 prisoners executed)
- Guardistallo massacre (Guardistallo, Tuscany; 46 civilians killed on 29 June 1944)
- Piazza Tasso massacre, 17 July 1944, Florence, 5 Italian civilians killed in massacre by Fascists and German Army
- 12 August 1944, Sant'Anna di Stazzema massacre (Sant'Anna di Stazzema, Tuscany; 560 people, including children)
- San Terenzo Monti massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 110 civilians and 52 political prisoners killed on 21 August 1944)
- Padule di Fucecchio massacre (Fucecchio, Tuscany; 176 civilians killed on 23 August 1944)
- Vinca massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; between 160 and 178 civilians executed on 24 August 1944)
- Certosa di Farneta massacre (Lucca, Tuscany; 60 civilians killed between 2 and 10 September 1944)
- 29 September â 5 October 1944, Marzabotto massacre (Marzabotto, Emilia-Romagna; between 770 and 1,830 civilians killed)
- 29 June 1944, Civitella-Cornia-San Pancrazio massacre (Abruzzo; 203 people, including children)
- Cuneo massacre (Cuneo, Piedmont; 189 civilians and partisans killed in two separate massacres)
- Cavriglia-Castelnuovo dei Sabbioni massacre (Tuscany; 173 civilians killed on 4 July 1944)
- Fosse del Frigido massacre (Massa, Tuscany; 146-149 prisoners murdered on 10 September 1944)
- Pietransieri massacre (Roccaraso, Abruzzo; 128 civilians killed on 21 November 1943)
- Stia massacre (Stia, Tuscany; 122 civilians killed between 12 and 15 April 1944)
- Valla massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 103 civilians killed on 19 August 1944)
- Serra di Ronchidoso massacre (Gaggio Montano, Emilia-Romagna; over 100 civilians killed on 28âÂÂ29 September 1944)
- Verghereto massacre (Verghereto, Emilia-Romagna; 96 civilians killed between 22 and 25 July 1944)
- Massacre of Monchio, Susano and Costrignano (Palagano, Emilia-Romagna; between 79 and 136 civilians killed on 18 March 1944)
- Leonessa and Cumulata massacre (Leonessa, Lazio; 51 civilians killed between 2 and 7 April 1944)
- Cumiana massacre (Cumiana, Piedmont; 51 civilians killed on 3 April 1944)
- Tavolicci massacre (Verghereto, Emilia-Romagna; 64 civilians killed on 22 July 1944)
- Forno massacre (Massa, Tuscany; 72 civilians killed on 13 June 1944)
- Gubbio massacre (Gubbio, Umbria; 40 civilians executed on 22 June 1944)
- Valdine massacre (Fivizzano, Tuscany; 52 hostages executed in August 1944)
- Casaglia massacre (Marzabotto, Emilia-Romagna; 42 civilians killed on 29 September 1944)
- massacre in Carrara (Carrara, Tuscany; 72 civilians killed on 16 September 1944)
- Madonna dell'Albero massacre (Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna; 56 civilians killed on 27 November 1944)
- "La Romagna" massacre (Molina di Quosa, San Giuliano Terme, Tuscany; 75 civilians killed on 11 August 1944)
- San Polo di Arezzo massacre (Arezzo, Tuscany; 65 civilians killed on 14 July 1944)
- Massaciuccoli-Massarosa massacre (Massaciuccoli, Massarosa, Tuscany; 41 civilians killed between 2 and 5 September 1944)
- Fossoli-Carpi massacre (Carpi, Emilia-Romagna; 67 civilians killed on 12 July 1944)
- Turchino Pass massacre (Fontanafredda, Liguria; 59 civilians executed on 19 May 1944)
- Pedescala massacre (Valdastico, Veneto; 82 civilians killed between 30 April and 2 May 1945)
Latvia
1941
- 30 November and 8 December, Rumbula massacre (25,000 people, including children)
Lithuania
1941
- 13 July â 21 August Daugavpils massacre by Einsatzkommando 3 (9,585 people, including children)
- JulyâÂÂAugust 1944, Ponary massacre (c. 100,000 people, including children)
- 18 August â 22 August, Kreis Rasainiai massacre (1,020 children)
- 19 August, UkmergÃÂ massacre (88 children)
- Summer-autumn-winter, Complete murder of native Jewish population in Estonia (900 individuals, including 101 children)
- 1 September, MarijampolÃÂ massacre (1,404 children)
- 2 September, Wilno massacre (817 children)
- 4 September, ÃÂekiÃ
¡kàmassacre (60 children)
- 4 September, SeredÃ
¾ius massacre (126 children)
- 4 September, Veliuona massacre (86 children)
- 4 September, ZapyÃ
¡kis massacre (13 children)
- 6 September â 8 September, Raseiniai massacre (415 children)
- 6 September â 8 September, Jurbork massacre (412 people, including children)
- 29 October, Kaunas massacre (4,273 children)
- 25 November, Kauen-F.IX massacre (175 children)
Netherlands
1940
- 14 May, Rotterdam bombing (nearly 1,000 people were killed and 85,000 made homeless.)
1944
Norway
Poland
1939
- 1 September, Bombing of WieluÃ
Â
- 1âÂÂ2 September, Torzeniec massacre (37 Poles)
- 2 September, Wyszanów massacre (24 Poles)
- 2 September, Zimnowoda and Parzymiechy massacre (113 Poles, including 30 children)
- 2âÂÂ6 September, Ã
Âaziska massacre (69 Poles, including 30 children)
- 3 September, Albertów massacre (159 Poles)
- 3 September, Krzepice massacre (30 Poles)
- 3 September, Ã
ÂwiÃÂta Anna massacre (29 Poles)
- 3 September, Ã
Âwiekatowo massacre (26 Poles)
- 3 September, MysÃ
Âów massacre (22 Poles, including 10 children)
- 3 September, PiÃ
Âczyce massacre (20 Poles)
- 4 September, Katowice massacre (about 80 Poles)
- 4 September, ZÃ
Âoczew massacre (200 Poles and Jews)
- 4 September, Pasternik massacre (29 Poles)
- 4 September, CielÃÂtniki massacre (28 Poles, including four children)
- 4 September, Kruszyna massacre (dozens of Poles, including 10 children)
- 4âÂÂ6 September, CzÃÂstochowa massacre
- 5 September, Kajetanowice massacre (over 70 Poles, including ten children under the age of 16)
- 5 September, Serock massacre (over 80 Polish POWs)
- 5âÂÂ6 September, Krasnosielc massacre (50 Jews)
- 6, 8 September, Uniejów massacre (50 people)
- 6, 9 September, BÃÂdzin massacres (20 Poles and 100 Jews)
- 7 September, WylazÃ
Âów massacre (24 Poles)
- 8 September, Ciepielów massacre (around 300 Polish POWs)
- 8 September, Tyszki massacre (33 Poles)
- 8 September, ChechÃ
Âo massacre, near Pabianice (30 Poles)
- 8 September, Dominikowice massacre (23 Poles)
- 8 September, Balin massacre (21 Poles)
- 8âÂÂ9 September, Lipsko massacre (66 people)
- 8, 11 September, Mszczonów massacre (11 Polish POWs and 20 Polish civilians)
- 9 September, SÃ
Âawków massacre (98 Jews)
- 9 September, Wyszków massacre (65+ Jews)
- 9âÂÂ10 September, Ã
ÂÃÂczyca massacre (29 Poles)
- 10 September, Rawa Mazowiecka massacre (40 people)
- 10 September, Zdziechowa massacre (24 Poles)
- 10 September, BÃÂ
dków massacre (22 Poles, including a 14-year-old boy)
- 10 September, Piaseczno massacre of 1939 (21 Polish POWs)
- 10 September, Stare Rogowo massacre (21 Poles)
- 10 September, Gniazdowo massacre (around 20 Poles)
- 10 September, Laski Szlacheckie massacre (20 Poles)
- 11 September, Karczew massacre (75 Poles)
- 11 September, Skierniewice massacre (60 people)
- 11 September, Obora massacre (22 Poles)
- 11 September, Niewolno massacre (18 Poles)
- 12 September, Szczucin massacre (around 40 Polish POWs and around 30 Polish civilians)
- 12 September, Parma massacre (32 Poles)
- 12 September, KoÃ
ºmice Wielkie massacre (32 Jews)
- 13 September, Ã
Âowicz massacre (21 people)
- 13âÂÂ14 September, Zambrów massacre (over 200 Polish POWs)
- 14 September, Olszewo massacre (30 Polish POWs and 23 civilians)
- 15 September, Sulejówek massacre (over 90 Poles)
- 16 September, Retki massacre (22 Poles)
- 17 September, Henryków massacre (76 Poles, including women and children)
- 17 September, Leszno massacre (around 50 Poles)
- 18 September, Ã
Âladów massacre (around 300 Poles, including POWs, refugees, women and children)
- 19âÂÂ21 September, GÃÂ
bin massacre (20 Poles)
- 20 September, Majdan Wielki massacre (42 Polish POWs)
- 22 September, Boryszew massacre (50 Polish POWs)
- 28 September, Zakroczym massacre (around 600 Poles, mostly POWs)
- 1 October, Szczuczki massacre (64 Poles, including ten boys)
- 7 November, Dalki massacre (24 Poles)
- 11 November, Ostrów Mazowiecka massacre (up to 600 Jews)
1940
1941
1942
1943
- January, SamoklÃÂski massacre (27 Jews and one Pole)
- 12 March, Murder of CzesÃ
Âawa Kwoka in KZ Auschwitz-Birkenau (1 child)
- 18 May, Szarajówka massacre (58âÂÂ67 Poles, including women and children)
- 23 May, Kielce cemetery massacre (45 children)
- 24 June, Majdan Nowy massacre (28âÂÂ36 Poles)
- 28 June, CegÃ
Âów massacre (26 Poles and an unknown number of Jews; including women and children)
- 3 July, Majdan Stary massacre (75 Poles, including women and children)
- 4 July, Liszki massacre (30 Poles)
- 12âÂÂ13 July, Michniów massacre (at least 204 killed, including 48 children)
- 13 July, Sikory-TomkowiÃÂta massacre (49 Poles)
- 13 July, Ã
Âysa Góra massacre, near Zawady (58 Poles)
- 17 July, Krasowo-CzÃÂstki massacre (257 people, including 83 children)
- 21 July, Wnory-Wandy massacre (32 Poles)
- 21 July, Radwanowice massacre (30 Poles)
- 2 August, Jasionowo massacre (58 Poles, including 19 children)
- 3 August, Szczurowa massacre (93 people, including children)
- 29 September, Ostrówki massacre (246 children)
- 29 September, Wola Ostrowiecka massacre (220 children)
- SeptemberâÂÂOctober, WodzisÃ
Âaw massacre of 1943 (318 Jews)
1944
- 2 February, Borów massacre (including 103 children)
- 28 February, Huta Pieniacka massacre
- 28 February, Wanaty massacre (108 Poles, including 35 women and 47 children)
- 8 March, JabÃ
ÂoÃ
Â-Dobki massacre (91 Poles, including 31 women and 31 children)
- 8 March, Jamy massacre (152 Poles, including women and children)
- 1 June, Sochy massacre (181âÂÂ200 Poles)
- 2 June, Murder of Yekusiel Yehudah Halberstam's children (9 children)
- 5 June, Olszanka massacre (around 100 people)
- 22 July, Lublin Castle massacre (over 300 Poles and Jews)
- 2 August, Mokotów Prison Massacre (c. 600 Poles)
- 4 August, Nur massacre (around 120 Poles)
- 4âÂÂ25 August, Ochota massacre (c. 10,000 people, including children)
- 5âÂÂ8 August, Wola massacre (40,000 up to 100,000 people, including children)
- 31 August, MaÃ
Âaszek massacre (over 30 Poles, including women and children)
- 2 September, Lipniak-Majorat massacre (around 450 Poles, including women and children)
- Planned destruction of Warsaw
- 23 December, Bloody Christmas Eve in Ochotnica Dolna (56 Poles, including 19 children and 21 women)
- 31 December, NieÃ
Âawice massacre (56 Poles, including children)
1945
- 21âÂÂ22 January, Marchwacz massacre (63 Polish civilians, 12 Soviet POWs)
- 31 January, Podgaje massacre (160âÂÂ210 Polish POWs)
- 9 February, LeÃ
Âno massacre (64 Jewish women)
Russia
Serbia
1941
Slovenia
1942
1945
Ukraine
1941
- June, Czechow massacre (6 children)
- JuneâÂÂJuly, Lviv pogroms
- August 27âÂÂ28, Kamianets-Podilskyi massacre; 23,600 people (including women and children)
- September 5, Pavoloch massacre; 1,500 people (including women and children)
- September 16âÂÂ30, Mykolaiv massacre; 35,782 people (including women and children)
- 29âÂÂ30 September, Babi Jar massacre (33,771 people, including children: List of victims of the Babi Yar massacre)
- October 5, Berdychiv massacre, 20,000âÂÂ38,536 people (including women and children)
- October 22âÂÂ24, 1941 Odesa massacre, 125,000-134,000 people (including women and children)
- December 15, Drobitsky Yar, 16,000 people (including women and children)
1943
1944
See also
Notes
References
Media (on-line)