The prisons listed are only those from which they left for concentration camps
Italian Prisons and the transports to the Third Reich’s concentration camps.
During the Nazi occupation (1943-1945), many Italian prisons and places of detention run by the Italian Social Republic (RSI) became collection and sorting centers for Jews, anti-fascists, political opponents and civilians rounded up for forced labor and destined for the Third Reich’s lagers. These places, in part already used by the regime for political and social repression, became crucial nodes of deportation from Italy. Prisons such as San Vittore, Le Nuove, Marassi and other institutions were intermediate stops on the way to the Nazi lagers. These institutions represented the first places of suffering for thousands of political and labor prisoners who paid with their lives for their rejection of fascism and Nazism. Their function went far beyond detention: they were an integral part of the repressive, extermination machine and exploitation system planned by the Third Reich, in which the complicity of the Italian Social Republic played a key role.
Major prisons and places of deportation
- San Vittore Prison (Milan):
- Role: Detention center for Jews, partisans and political opponents.
- Deportations: Inmates were sent to the Fossoli camp or directly to camps such as Auschwitz. In June 1944, out of about 1,000 inmates, 70 percent were transferred to Germany by July 20. Among them was Liliana Segre who was deported to Auschwitz on the January 30, 1944 transport that left from platform 21 of Milan station.
- Le Nuove Prison (Turin):
- Role: Used to imprison antifascists, partisans and Jews.
- Deportations: Prisoners were often transferred to Fossoli before deportation.
- Regina Coeli Prison (Rome):
- Role: Detention center for Jews, political opponents and resisters.
- Deportations: Many prisoners were sent to Auschwitz, especially after the Rome Ghetto roundup (October 1943).
- Risiera di San Sabba (Trieste):
- Role: Concentration and transit camp, prison and transit place for prisoners.
- Deportations: From here, prisoners were sent to Dachau, Mauthausen and Auschwitz. It is infamous for the crematorium used by the Nazis.
- Coroneo Prison (Trieste):
- Role: Collection point for Jews and opponents, especially in the Adriatic Coastal Zone of Operation.
- Deportations: Prisoners were transferred to the Risiera di San Sabba or directly to German lagers.
- Fossoli camp (Carpi, Modena):
- Role: Main transit camp in Italy for deportations.
- Deportations: Numerous convoys departed from Fossoli for Auschwitz and Mauthausen. Fossoli served as a link between local prisons, particularly with the prison of Sant’Eufemia in Modena, and the camps, making it a crucial node in the deportation system. On June 24, 1944, 475 prisoners left Fossoli for the Mauthausen concentration camp, 75% of whom did not survive.
- Via Tasso Prison (Rome):
- Role: Closely linked to Regina Coeli prison was the most infamous detention and torture center for partisans and political opponents.
- Deportations:. Some inmates after being tortured were transferred to other transit places before being deported to the camps.
- Bolzano-Gries field:
- Role: Transit and detention camp for political opponents and Jews.
- Deportations: Convoys, especially of political internees, departed from here to Dachau and Mauthausen.
- Castelfranco Emilia Prison:
- Role: Detention of captured antifascists, partisans and Jews in the Emilia region.
- Deportations: Many inmates were sent to Fossoli or deported directly to the camps. On June 26, 1944, 466 inmates were transferred to Germany, mainly for forced labor in war industries such as Schäffer & Budenberg in Magdeburg
- Murate Prison (Florence):
- Role: Place of detention for partisans, antifascists and Jews.
- Deportations: Many were transferred to Fossoli and deported to Nazi camps, such as Auschwitz and Mauthausen.
- Parma:
- Role: Sorting center for inmates from Portolongone and Pianosa.
- Numbers: After a bombing on May 13, 1944, many inmates were transferred to Fossoli or Castelfranco Emilia.
- Fate of the deportees: A portion of political prisoners were included in transports to Mauthausen.
- Prisons in Trentino-Alto Adige (Bolzano, Trento, Rovereto):
- Role: Detention and selection centers for transporting inmates to German prisons, including Coswig-Anhalt and Siegburg.
- Numbers: About 250 prisoners transferred for forced labor in summer 1944.
- Feature: Their proximity to the German border made them strategic for deportation logistics.
- Prisons in Friuli-Venezia Giulia (Trieste, Udine, Gorizia, Pordenone):
- Role: Stages for the transfer of common and political prisoners to German lagers.
- Period: September-December 1944.
- Fate of the deportees: Employment in forced labor camps in Germany.