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A Virtual Tour of Auschwitz

by Alan Jacobs and Krysia Jacobs

Start Auschwitz Virtual Tour   Start Birkenau Virtual Tour

Overview – Virtual Tour of Auschwitz Updates

The Virtual Tour of Auschwitz explores the concentration camp complex of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest killing center in Nazi-occupied Europe. Located in Southern Poland, on the outskirts of the town of Oswiecim, it consisted of the original camp, Auschwitz I , and the much larger second camp of Birkenau (Brzezinka), 2 miles away, plus over 40 sub-camps [ link ], the largest of which was Buna (Monovitz) [ link ].

We’ve updated the original Virtual Tour into videos, which allow a 360-degree view while touring the camp. We’ve added the same videos with captions so you can learn what you are seeing. Be sure to check the updated Tour at the Auschwitz Museum , which grew from this original project as well.

View the Virtual Tour on YouTube

Original Auschwitz Virtual Tour   Captions – Auschwitz Virtual Tour

Virtual Tour of Birkenau - Auschwitz II

Birkenau russian graveyard for pow’s, birkenau judenrampe – the first unloading ramp, birkenau woods incineration, birkenau sauna interior, birkenau sauna and kanada, birkenau krematorium v, birkenau ash pond, birkenau little wood, birkenau camp end, birkenau krematorium ii, birkenau krematorium ii model, birkenau penal company.

The camp was established in 1940, less than a year after Germany occupied Poland in WWII, and grew over the next few years into an entire complex providing slave labor for the German industrial facilities in the area. In 1942, it became the largest death camp, carrying out Hitler’s “final solution” – the plan to systematically kill all Jews in Europe.

It is estimated that between 1.1 and 1.5 million people died here. At its peak, Auschwitz I held as many as 20,000 prisoners at a time, Birkenau 90,000 and Buna 10,000.

Historians estimate that among the people sent to Auschwitz there were at least 1,100,000 Jews from all the countries of occupied Europe, over 140,000 Poles (mostly political prisoners), approximately 20,000 Gypsies from several European countries, over 10,000 Soviet prisoners of war, and over ten thousand prisoners of other nationalities.

Virtual Tour of Auschwitz I - Original Videos and New Videos with Captions

Auschwitz concentration camp virtual tour, virtual tour of auschwitz credits, auschwitz krematorium 1, auschwitz block 11 basement cell, auschwitz block 11, auschwitz krankenbrau prisoners hospital, auschwitz electrified fence, auschwitz appelplatz roll call square, auschwitz entrance street, auschwitz map and complete video list, virtual tour of auschwitz.

Auschwitz Aerial Photo June 1944 CIA

The majority of the Jewish deportees died in the gas chambers immediately after arrival. Of the estimated 400,000 people who were placed in the main concentration camp or one of the sub-camps, less than half survived.

The camp continued operation till its liberation by the Soviet Army in January 1945.

For more information about the history of Auschwitz, visit this [ link ] on the Auschwitz Museum website.

Today, the site is managed by the  Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum  in Poland which, in addition to maintaining the camps and providing visitor support, is also a very large research and publications center. Over 25 million people have visited the Auschwitz Museum since its establishment in 1947.

This virtual tour of both camps tries to give viewers a first-hand experience of visiting the actual sites. The photographs were taken in 2003 and 2004, by  Alan Jacobs .

About the Virtual Tour of Auschwitz Exhibition

The project was conceived some years ago when Alan (“Jake”) Jacobs first saw Quick Time Virtual Reality Films. Having photographed Auschwitz many times, it occurred to him that no matter how powerful a single photo, the observer is still outside the scene. This technology provided an opportunity for a photographer to lessen to some degree the viewer’s role as audience-observer, and enhance his perception as a participant-observer. As he already had a 35mm single-lens-reflex digital camera, a Canon D60, the next step was to purchase a solid tripod, and a Manfrotto Quick Time Virtual Reality Head, and practice, using a Canon EOS EF 17-35/2.8L USM wide angle zoom lens set to its widest at 17mm.

Krysia Jacobs

Krysia in Birkenau

Next Jake’s wife Krysia, the technical part of the team, purchased VR Worx, a program that stitched multiple photos, took out what wasn’t necessary, adjusted exposure from photo to photo, and produced in a very short time, maybe ten or fifteen minutes, a virtual reality 360º film. The photos were processed before this in full Photoshop on a variety of Macs.

alan Jacobs

Jake preparing to take aerial photographs in Auschwitz I

They went back to Auschwitz in 2003 and did some test shots with a Canon EOS 1D 35mm digital SLR and an EF 16-35mm f/2.8L USM wide angle lens set to 16mm. While there, they checked with Editor in Chief of Auschwitz Publications, Teresa Swiebocka, who introduced them to senior editor Jarek Mensfelt.

Both were interested and over the next few months test shots were sent and the invitation to come and do the work was made by Auschwitz Vice-Director, Krystyna Oleksy, this to share an exhibition jointly with Remember.org – Cybrary of the Holocaust.

Then it was a matter of getting expense money. Jake spoke with Michael Declan Dunn the creator of The Cybrary of the Holocaust. Michael has published several exhibitions of Jake’s Auschwitz photos and he set to work raising the money. He found two donors, Liz Edlic, Scott Isdaner, whose grants made the project possible.

Virtual Tour of Auschwitz Alan Jacobs photographer

From the time of the invitation through the shoot at the camps, Auschwitz Editor and web designer Jarek Mensfelt and Jake exchanged many ideas about the project: tone, content, logistics etc. During the shoot an EOS 1D Marc II, a 35mm digital SLR, and Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L USM, Canon EF 28-135 USM IS, Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8L USM lenses were used, along with a Canon EF 14mm f/2.8L USM Wide Angle Lens. Returning to the States, the project was now in the hands of Krysia Jacobs. This meant processing the photos in Photoshop CS, stitching them with VR Work 2.5, converting to Flash with qtvr2flash, and then… designing the exhibition for the Internet. The following equipment was used in taking the photographs:

  • Canon EF 14mm f/2.8L USM Wide Angle Lens
  • Canon EOS EF 17-35/2.8L USM
  • Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L USM
  • Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8L USM
  • Canon EOS 1D Marc II 35mm digital SLR
  • Canon EOS 1D 35mm digital SLR

For more info please visit the  Virtual Tour Credits .

Then and Now - paintings by survivors from experience with photos today of where they remember.

Then and now 3 | auschwitz birkenau daily life, then and now 2 | birkenau panorama of the camp, then and now auschwitz paintings by survivors and recent photos, alan jacobs.

Photographs taken in Auschwitz and Birkenau in the years 2003-2004 , then converted into a VR presentation with QuickTime, now updated to a video based Virtual Tour. © 2003, 2004 Alan Jacobs all rights reserved Credits Photographs and Captions: Alan Jacobs Photoshop, QuicktimeVR & Flash processing: Krysia Jacobs On Site Support and Consulting Jarek Mensfelt, Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museums This exhibition was prepared by invitation from Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Oswiecim, Poland Deputy Director: Krystyna Oleksy Editor in Chief: Teresa Swiebocka

auschwitz drone tour

Remember. Zachor. Sich erinnern.

Remember.org helps people find the best digital resources, connecting them through a collaborative learning structure since 1994. If you'd like to share your story on Remember.org, all we ask is that you give permission to students and teachers to use the materials in a non-commercial setting. Founded April 25, 1995 as a "Cybrary of the Holocaust". Content created by Community. THANKS FOR THE SUPPORT . History Channel ABC PBS CNET One World Live New York Times Apple Adobe Copyright 1995-2024 Remember.org. All Rights Reserved. Publisher: Dunn Simply

APA Citation

Dunn, M. D. (Ed.). (95, April 25). Remember.org - The Holocaust History - A People's and Survivors' History. Retrieved February 28, 2022, from remember.org

MLA Citation

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Steven Spielberg will be among the boldface names attending Tuesday's memorial service marking the 70th anniversary of the Soviet liberation of Auschwitz, the largest Nazi concentration camp. In a speech in Krakow on Monday night to some of the 300 Holocaust survivors also in Poland for the commemoration, Spielberg said that one important way to fight resurgent anti-Semitism is by "preserving places like Auschwitz so people can always see for themselves how hateful ideologies can become tangible acts of murder."

Assuming you didn't make it to Auschwitz for the service yourself, the BBC has a cinematic visual tour of the concentration camp and its pure-death-camp cousin, Birkenau (or Auschwitz II), that wouldn't look out of place in a Spielberg film, complete with aerial shots (from a drone) and soaring, melancholy soundtrack. The tour shows the railroad tracks that brought a million people to their deaths between 1940 and 1945, the converted Polish army barracks of Auschwitz and ruins of Birkenau's wooden bunkhouses, a courtyard where the Nazis frequently executed prisoners, and the cruel, mocking inscription above the death camp's welcome gate: "Work sets you free." —Peter Weber

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Chilling drone footage captures Auschwitz ahead of 70th anniversary of liberation

Over one million people were killed at the camp during the five years it was open, article bookmarked.

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Tomorrow marks the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz

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Chilling drone footage has been released showing the sheer scale of Auschwitz concentration camp ahead of Tuesday’s 70th anniversary marking the liberation of the Nazi regime’s largest death camp.

The eerie video taken over the weekend and featured on ITV’s lunchtime news show, shows an aerial view of the 40 square kilometres of inter-connected camps that imprisoned millions in southern Poland during the Second World War.

Also featured, is a bird’s eye view of Birkenau or Auschwitz ii, the extension in Auschwitz that was constructed from scratch in 1941 to facilitate mass murder.

Over one million people are said to have been killed at Auschwitz from the day it opened in May 1940, until the time it was liberated on 27 January 1945.

  • Spielberg tells Holocaust survivors of growing anti-Semitism
  • Woman sent to three Nazi death camps describes surviving gas chamber
  • 'In there you got used to anything'

An estimated 90 per cent of these victims were Jews, with Poles, Romani gypsies, Soviet Prisoners, homosexuals and others deemed “undesirable” making up the hundreds of thousands of non-Jewish victims that were killed at the hands of the Nazis.

Holocaust Memorial Day 2015: Haunting images of Auschwitz

Tomorrow marks the 70th anniversary of the moment where the advancing Allied troops liberated the camps and saw the horrors of Auschwitz for the first time.

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Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum introduces virtual tour

Israeli companies behind the project and holocaust survivors say the new virtual tour provides a modern solution to see the camp in a way that's accessible and convenient for everyone.

auschwitz drone tour

  • Real-life Casablanca: Moroccan-Israeli saved thousands of Jews during Holocaust
  • The power of a written word: Holocaust survivors convey messages for future generations
  • Berlin: A thriving modern capital confronting its dark past

סיור וירטואלי באושוויץ

The future of Holocaust education

מחויבות לדורות הבאים. סיור במחנה ההשמדה

"The idea was to make the place accessible so that it would not be closed off to the world. The tour provides a personal experience, and viewers can ask the guide questions, for example."

סיור וירטואלי באושוויץ

A new guide for a new tour

"It's a huge thing to bring Auschwitz to Africa or to countries in the Middle East, after the Abraham Accords. Auschwitz becomes accessible to new audiences."

סיור וירטואלי באושוויץ

Digital tour will lead to more physical tours

מתוך הסיור הווירטואלי

"We live in a digital world with Holocaust denial, hatred, racism, and antisemitism on the rise—and the internet plays a significant role in that.”

אורן קניאל, מנכ"ל AppsFlyer. דור שלישי לשואה

Drone captures never before seen concentration camp footage for new doco

NEW drone footage of Auschwitz concentration camp, where one million people were killed, has given a chilling new perspective of the grisly site.

Auschwitz From Above: Aerial Footage Shows Grand Scale of Concentration Camp. Credit - BiG Productions via Storyful

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AERIAL shots of Auschwitz concentration camp give a chilling new perspective of the historical site.

BiG Productions creative director Gi Orman and his crew were given permission to fly a drone over Auschwitz in Poland, with the footage being used as part of an upcoming documentary about the Holocaust.

More than one million people were killed at Auschwitz by the Nazis, with one in six of the Jewish people killed dying at the Nazi death camp.

Drone footage of Auschwitz concentration camp has been released.

The crew had two hours to shoot the footage before the camp opened to the public and Orman says the opportunity to gain vision with no visitors walking helped to capture the morbid history attached to the site.

The vision was captured hours before any visitors had arrived.

“When you read about it and you see pictures in a book it’s one thing. But when you see it from the air and you see how vast and huge the killing machine and you see how vast and huge the camps were that the Nazis built to murder the Jews there is no words to explain it.”

The video aims to give audiences a new understanding of the sheer scale of Auschwitz and the methodical nature of how it was set out.

The footage will be used in an upcoming documentary about the Holocaust.

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auschwitz drone tour

Basic information

•  Admission  to the grounds of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial is free of charge. The entry cards should be reserved on visit.auschwitz.org . For better understanding the history of Auschwitz we suggest a visit with an guide-educator

• The fees are charged for guided tours. Visitors in groups are required to engage an Auschwitz Memorial guide.  There is also possibility  for individual visitors to join a guided tour . 

• The Museum also organizes  online guided tours   for groups and individual visitors.

• While on the grounds of the Museum, you are required to observe the appropriate solemnity and respect. Before the visit please read " the rules for visiting ".

• Due to overwhelming demand, please book in advance and arrive at the Memorial at least 30 minutes before the start of the tour due to security checks. The main car park and entrance to the Museum is located at  55 Więźniów Oświęcimia Street .

• The grounds and buildings of the Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau camps are open to visitors. The duration of a visit is determined solely by the individual interests and needs of the visitors. As a minimum, however, at least three-and-a-half hours should be reserved.

• The maximum size of backpacks or handbags brought into the Museum does not exceed dimensions: 35x25x15 cm.

• Visitors may leave their luggage in paid luggage storage. The dimensions of the luggage storages expressed in centimeters are 90x50x22, 60x50x22 and 85x65x42, internal dimensions are: 90x50x30, 60x50x30 and 90x65x50, and their maximum load is 30 kg.

Taking pictures  on the grounds of the State Museum Auschwitz-Birkenau in Oświęcim for own purposes, without use of a flash and stands, is allowed for exceptions to a room with the hair of Victims (Block 4) and the basements of Block 11. Material may be used only in undertakings and projects that do not violate the good name of the Victims of Auschwitz. Photography and filming on the Museum grounds for commercial purposes, at spaces closed to visitors or with a drone , require prior approval by the Museum.

  • Guides . Visitors in groups are required to engage an Auschwitz Memorial guide; individual visitors may also  engage a guide-educator . For them we offer  organized tours .
  • Groups of more than 10 people  are required to hire a headphone guiding system.
  • Disabled . Because of the need to preserve the historical authenticity of the site of the Memorial it may be difficult for dissabled persons to move around the grounds and buildings. In order to help visitors with disabilities wheelchairs are available free of charge at the Visitor Service Centre. More information...
  • It is not recommended  that children under 14 visit the Memorial

While on the grounds of the Museum,  you are required to observe  the appropriate solemnity  and respect.

auschwitz drone tour

  • via @auschwitzmuseum" aria-label="Udostępnij na Twitter">

Images from www.auschwitz.org may be used only in publications relating to the history of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camp Auschwitz-Birkenau or the activities of the Auschwitz Memorial. Their use must not tarnish the good reputation of the victims of KL Auschwitz. Any interference in the integrity of the images – including cropping or graphic processing – is prohibited. The use of the images for commercial purposes requires the Museum’s approval and information about the publication. Publishers undertake to indicate the authors and origin of the images: www.auschwitz.org, as well as to inform the Museum of the use of the images ([email protected]).

Virtual Tour

Auschwitz i, in the neighborhood.

  • Oprowadzanie zdalne PE MCEAH
  • Auschwitz-Birkenau - Alte Judenrampe
  • Auschwitz II-Birkenau
  • Panorama of Auschwitz I - a bird's eye view
  • 'Arbeit Macht Frei' gate
  • View from a watchtower
  • March Of The Living 2013
  • SS barracks
  • Camp buildings
  • Camp blocks
  • Roll-call square
  • Camp hospital
  • so-called birch lane
  • Group gallows
  • Camp kitchen
  • Block 10. Corridor
  • Block 10. Toilets
  • Block 10. Prisoners' room
  • Block 10. Dissection room
  • Block 10. Second floor
  • Block 11. Court
  • Execution wall
  • Execution wall - ceremony of the anniversary of liberation
  • Block 11. First floor corridor
  • Block 11. SS office
  • Block 11. Summary court room
  • Block 7. Exhibition. Prisoners' bunks
  • Block 11. Exhibition. Drawings of executions
  • Block 11. Portable gallows
  • Block 11. Cellars
  • Block 11. Prison cell
  • Block 11. Standing cells
  • Block 11. Starvation cell
  • Gallows where camp commandant was executed
  • Crematorium I
  • Interior of gas chamber and crematorium I

auschwitz drone tour

The Holocaust: History and Memory

Virtual tour.

Suitable for classroom use or by families and individuals, this virtual tour, hosted on Google Arts & Culture , allows visitors to explore nine interactive galleries at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. The experience offers a chronological narrative of the Holocaust through encounters with historical artifacts and photographs. Visitors will also see one of the Museum’s conservation labs, allowing them to examine how staff preserve and present Holocaust history.

Preview scenes from the virtual tour

360 view of the Hall of Witness

360 view of a railcar used for deportations to killing centers

Historical photo: the Lodz ghetto

Artifact: Desecrated Torah scrolls

Artifact: a young boy's stuffed bear in one of the Museum's conservation labs

Lesson Plan

Lesson length: One to two class periods

In this lesson , students examine how the Museum uses artifacts and photographs from its collections to present the history of the Holocaust and memorialize its victims—including artifacts and photographs that illustrate important aspects of Holocaust history such as Torah scrolls rescued during Kristallnacht, a train car, prisoner barracks from Auschwitz, and a gas chamber model. Students also tour the Museum's architecture and discuss what makes the Museum a living memorial. Through their exploration of the Museum's exhibitions, students gain a greater understanding of key events and topics related to the Holocaust and are able to explain the systematic nature, scope, and consequences of the Holocaust.

Lesson Plan (PDF)

Worksheet (PDF)

This virtual field trip and lesson were adapted from an activity created in conjunction with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

A previous version of this virtual field trip hosted on Google Expeditions is no longer supported.

This Section

auschwitz drone tour

Explore lesson plans and training materials organized by theme to use in your classroom.

  • Online Tools for Learning and Teaching
  • Videos for Classroom Use

The BBC Flew a Drone Over Auschwitz — And the Result Is Haunting

auschwitz drone tour

Seventy years after the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, the pre-eminent symbol of the Holocaust's horrors, the BBC is giving the world a chance to see the haunting ruins as they've never seen it before.

The BBC deployed a camera-equipped drone over site, offering a chilling tour of where as many as 1.1 million people died at the hands of Nazis between 1940 and 1945.  Located in southern Poland, it was the largest death camp under Adolf Hitler's " final solution ."

While images of Auschwitz have permeated popular culture, the under three-minute video gives a sense of the scale of the Nazi regime's systematic murder. The footage shows the railroad tracks that brought people in, the red roofs of the prison blocks where "inmates" were forced to do slave labor and the Birkenau wooden huts where the Nazis executed prisoners. Perhaps the most daunting part, however, were the camp's entrance gates that displayed the German phrase "Arbeit macht frei," or "Work sets you free."

The release of the footage coincides with Tuesday's official memorial service making the 70th anniversary since Auschwitz was freed by the Soviets. Steven Spielberg spoke in the ceremony in Poland on Monday night, which was attended by 100 survivors, warning the attendees of the "anti-Semites, radical extremists and religious fanatics" who are reigniting terror threats, like the attack of the kosher supermarket in Paris earlier this month. Spielberg said the most effective way to stamp out this type of vitriol is to "remember and to never forget" — a mission that encompasses new endeavors, like the BBC's drone video.

"It means preserving places like Auschwitz so people can always see for themselves how hateful ideologies can become tangible acts of murder," Spielberg said. "It means sharing and sustaining the testimonies of witnesses so that they can endure for teachers and students around the world their testimonies give to each survivor everlasting life and give to all of us everlasting value."

Correction: Jan. 27, 2015

An earlier version of this article implied that Auschwitz was liberated from the Soviet Union. Troops from the Soviet Union were the first to liberate the camp.

auschwitz drone tour

From what time are free dates available?

Please be informed that booking of entry passes is available everyday from 12:00 noon (90 days in advance for individual visitors and organised groups)

Is entry to the premises of the Memorial free?

Entry to the premises of the Auschwitz Memorial is free. A fee is only charged for visits with a Museum educator, i.e., a person authorized and prepared to conduct guided tours on the premises.

Why have entry passes been introduced?

For the convenience of visiting and to ensure the safety of visitors the maximum number of persons that may enter the premises of the former Auschwitz I camp in one hour is specified. To this end, every visitor receives upon booking an individual entry pass, a document that grants entry into the premises of the Museum. The entry pass is issued to both individual visitors and those visiting with an educator.

Can I enter the Museum upon arriving without a pre-booked entry pass?

Entrance to the Museum is only possible with a personalized pre-paid entry pass. Reservations can be made at visit.auschwitz.org. The number of entry passes available is limited. We cannot guarantee the availability of entry passes on site on the day of the visit.

Should I have the entry pass on me?

Yes. Every entry pass has an individual bar code. The entry pass may be printed or saved, for example to a tablet PC or mobile phone. Entry Pass for Guided Tours for a tour without an Educator authorizes the holder indicated with a name and surname of proof of identity to explore the Museum upon presentation at the entrance to the Museum.

I paid for the reservation but have not received the entry pass, what should I do?

Entry passes are sent automatically by the system. If such an e-mail is not visible in your Inbox, it may have ended up in the spam folder. Check the spam folder. If you do not find the entry passes in your spam folder, contact us via email [email protected].

How do I book entry to the Museum without an educator?

In the system, select the following options: Visit for individual --> select a date --> Tour for individuals without an educator

How do I book a tour for an organised group?

In the system - after user registration - you should send a booking request via the booking form:  Visit for groups.  After sending the query you will receive an answer by e-mail.

Is there a tour organised with an educator for individual visitors?

Yes. Such tours are organised throughout the year in several languages and at specified hours. You can book such tours in the system. You should select the following options:

Visit for individuals --> select a date --> select language --> select the visiting hour --> basket

What should I do if I want to book an extended tour?

The panel has a “Visit for groups” tab, where you will find several tour options, e.g. 1- and 2-day study visits, tours for middle school groups etc. If you cannot find the desired tour option, please contact the visitors’ service centre:  [email protected]

Can I make changes to my reservation?

The system allows you to make changes to reservation parameters (day, hour or tour language). You can make changes within available dates. To effect changes, please contact our visitor’s service centre ([email protected]). Changes are limited to entry passes for organised groups.

Is the chosen hour of the visit the hour of entry into the Museum?

Yes. Please remember to leave bulky luggage in a car or bus before entering the Museum; organised groups must pick up their headsets and proceed to the security check. We recommend you arrive at least 30 minutes before the start of the tour.

What happens if I am late for my reserved hour?

An individual visitor will be able to enter the Auschwitz Memorial in the first available time slot in between the hours for individual visitors without an educator.

Visitors who made a group reservation with an educator will have to reserve another entry time. These groups must start the visit at the specified time.

Organised groups of individual visitors who made a reservation for a visit with an educator will be able to enter the premises in the first available hour. It may, however, result in a shorter visiting time or impossibility of entering the Museum.

Will I receive a refund if I am late for a booked tour with an educator and cannot enter the Museum?

Due to the limited number of entry passes, we recommend making a prior reservation. At the moment there is no possibility of refunding payment for a tour with an educator; therefore, we ask visitors to make an informed and thoughtful decision prior to the reservation.

Can I use a drone at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial?

The grounds of the Memorial are in the no-fly zone DRA-P EP P20. The permit to fly over the Museum grounds is issued only in special cases (e.g. TV programmes or documentaries). Permissions are not given to recreational and private flights over the Museum grounds. More at  http://auschwitz.org/epp20

Can I cancel my reservation?

Reservations can be cancelled, but the cost of  visits with an educator cannot be refunded.

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HIS 274 - Holocaust (East): Virtual Tours of Concentration Camps

  • Encyclopedias
  • Find Articles
  • Streaming Video

Virtual Tours of Concentration Camps

  • Primary Sources
  • Voices of the Holocaust
  • Write & Cite This link opens in a new window

There are numerous virtual tours of concentration camps on YouTube and elsewhere online. Feel free to explore them, or view some that we think are high quality, linked below.

A Virtual Tour of Auschwitz/Birkenau

auschwitz drone tour

  • Virtual Tour - Interior of gas chamber and crematorium

Auschwitz: Blueprint for Genocide (Documentary Film)

auschwitz drone tour

Experience Concentration Camps

auschwitz drone tour

  • Virtual Tour - Auschwitz I Interactive Panoramic VR tour through Auschwitz
  • Virtual Tour - Dachau
  • Virtual Tour of the Surrounding Area

Jewish Virtual Library: The Holocaust (Online Exhibits)

  • Jewish Virtual Library: The Holocaust History, reference sources, biographies, primary documents, and more - literally a one-stop site for information about the Holocaust
  • Jewish Virtual Library: The Holocaust: Concentration Camps background info, maps, eyewitness statements, and tons of primary documents on dozens of concentration camps.

Histories of the Holocaust - Buchenwald: 1937-1945 (Documentary Film)

Histories of the holocaust - dachau: state within a state (documentary film).

  • Histories of the Holocaust - Dachau: State Within A State
  • << Previous: Streaming Video
  • Next: Primary Sources >>
  • Last Updated: Jan 11, 2024 8:55 AM
  • URL: https://libguides.pima.edu/c.php?g=198704

IMAGES

  1. Auschwitz: Drone footage from Nazi concentration camp

    auschwitz drone tour

  2. Drone footage of Auschwitz concentration camp [Video]

    auschwitz drone tour

  3. Il campo di concentramento di Auschwitz visto dall'alto con un drone

    auschwitz drone tour

  4. Here's Drone Footage Of Auschwitz 70 Years After Liberation

    auschwitz drone tour

  5. Auschwitz drone video gives chilling new perspective of concentration

    auschwitz drone tour

  6. Drone view of Auschwitz concentration camp

    auschwitz drone tour

VIDEO

  1. Glasgow, UK Tour by drone [4k]

  2. The Beauty of SWITZERLAND

  3. Auschwitz (camp concentration nazi)

  4. 9949. Auschwitz-Birkenau Drone Stock Footage Video

  5. Austin, Texas

  6. EXPLORING BERN, SWITZERLAND 🇨🇭

COMMENTS

  1. Auschwitz: Drone video of Nazi concentration camp

    Drone video shows the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp as it is today - 70 years after it was liberated by Soviet troops. The camp in Poland is now main...

  2. Inside Auschwitz

    More than 70 years have passed since the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp. More than a million people were murdered....

  3. Auschwitz 70: Drone shows Nazi concentration camp (LONG VERSION

    An original composition by Ashley Kingsley for BBC News. One minute in Auschwitz was like an entire day. A day was like a year. A month, an eternity." Roman ...

  4. WATCH: This Haunting Drone Footage Shows Auschwitz 70 Years After

    It's been 70 years since the Soviet army liberated the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp on 27 January 1945, but the tragedies that occurred there are still fresh in people's minds. The BBC has now flown a drone over the top of the compound, which was once Germany's largest concentration camp, to get a bird's eye view of how it looks today.

  5. Virtual Tour of Auschwitz

    The Virtual Tour of Auschwitz explores the concentration camp complex of Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest killing center in Nazi-occupied Europe. Located in Southern Poland, on the outskirts of the town of Oswiecim, it consisted of the original camp, Auschwitz I, and the much larger second camp of Birkenau (Brzezinka), 2 miles away, plus over 40 ...

  6. Drone view of Auschwitz concentration camp

    Drone footage shows the sheer scale of the Auschwitz concentration camp, as the world prepares to mark 70 years since its demise. More than a million people died at the camp, which was built by ...

  7. Watch a moving, drone's-eye tour of Auschwitz, 70 years after

    The tour shows the railroad tracks that brought a million people to their deaths between 1940 and 1945, the converted Polish army barracks of Auschwitz and ruins of Birkenau's wooden bunkhouses, a ...

  8. Chilling drone footage captures Auschwitz ahead of 70th anniversary of

    Chilling drone footage has been released showing the sheer scale of Auschwitz concentration camp ahead of Tuesday's 70th anniversary marking the liberation of the Nazi regime's largest death camp.

  9. Visiting / Auschwitz-Birkenau

    Each includes tours of Auschwitz I and Auschwitz II-Birkenau. • General tours (2,5 h) • General tours (3,5 h) • Guided tours for individual visitors (3,5 h) • One-day study tours (6 h) • Two-day study tours (2x3 h) • Online tour (2 h) Because of a large number of visitors guides should be reserved at least two months before a ...

  10. Drone video shows scale of Auschwitz camp

    Since its liberation in January 1945, Auschwitz has become a symbol of the atrocities of the Holocaust. 01:45 - Source: CNN. 'Voices of Auschwitz' 10 videos. Drone video shows scale of Auschwitz ...

  11. News / Museum / Auschwitz-Birkenau

    News. News. "To reach people in the most remote corners of the world". The launch of the online tours of the Auschwitz Memorial. ps. 29-12-2023. "Auschwitz in Front of Your Eyes" is an application through which millions of people from around the world gain access to education conducted directly from the authentic Memorial Site.

  12. Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum introduces virtual tour

    The virtual tour lasts for one hour and 45 minutes, with a 15-minute break between the first part in Auschwitz and the second part in Birkenau. The camp can be explored in seven languages: Hebrew ...

  13. Auschwitz drone video gives chilling new perspective of concentration

    Drone captures never before seen concentration camp footage for new doco. NEW drone footage of Auschwitz concentration camp, where one million people were killed, has given a chilling new ...

  14. Basic information / Visiting / Auschwitz-Birkenau

    Visiting. Basic information. Basic information. • Admission to the grounds of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial is free of charge. The entry cards should be reserved on visit.auschwitz.org. For better understanding the history of Auschwitz we suggest a visit with an guide-educator. • The fees are charged for guided tours.

  15. Virtual Tour

    The Nazi German concentration camp and center for the extermination of Jews created during World War II on the outskirts of Oświęcim. Initially it consisted only of Auschwitz I, created in the spring of 1940, later also of the considerably larger Birkenau camp, and later still of Monowitz and almost 50 sub-camps of various sizes. Germans murder in Auschwitz at least 1,1 million people ...

  16. The Holocaust: History and Memory

    Virtual Tour. Suitable for classroom use or by families and individuals, this virtual tour, hosted on Google Arts & Culture, allows visitors to explore nine interactive galleries at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum. The experience offers a chronological narrative of the Holocaust through encounters with historical artifacts and photographs.

  17. The BBC Flew a Drone Over Auschwitz

    The BBC deployed a camera-equipped drone over site, offering a chilling tour of where as many as 1.1 million people died at the hands of Nazis between 1940 and 1945.

  18. FAQ

    A fee is only charged for visits with a Museum educator, i.e., a person authorized and prepared to conduct guided tours on the premises. ... Can I use a drone at the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial? The grounds of the Memorial are in the no-fly zone DRA-P EP P20. The permit to fly over the Museum grounds is issued only in special cases (e.g. TV ...

  19. HIS 274

    Auschwitz: Blueprint for Genocide Documents kept in Moscow's archives since the end of World War II are providing the complete story behind the planning, engineering, and building of the Auschwitz complex. These documents also describe its ultimate role as a means of advancing Hitler's final solution. This historical documentary provides insight into the role played by civilian firms and ...