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  1. La prison de Montelupich, ainsi appelée du nom de la rue dans laquelle elle se trouve, est une ancienne prison de Cracovie, en Pologne. Active au début du XX e siècle, elle est utilisée par la Gestapo pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Elle est considérée comme l'une des prisons nazies les plus terribles de la Pologne occupée.

  2. The Montelupich Prison, so called from the street in which it is located, the ulica Montelupich ("street of the Montelupi family"), is a historic prison in Kraków from early 20th century, which was used by the Gestapo in World War II.

  3. 23 févr. 2013 · Krakows Montelupich Prison has been the scene of some of the darkest moments in the city’s recent history. British and Soviet spies, anti-Communist activists, high ranking Nazis and the victims of Nazi oppression have all found themselves behind its walls in the company of common and uncommon criminals. Unlike many other ...

  4. This prison was operated by the Gestapo from 1940 to 1944. In this period, some 50,000 prisoners were held (mainly Poles and Jews). It was a place of mass execution and many prisoners were tortured before being deportated to the concentration camps of Auschwitz-Bireknau and Plaszow.

  5. La prison de Montelupich, ainsi appelée du nom de la rue dans laquelle elle se trouve, est une ancienne prison de Cracovie, en Pologne. Active au début du XX e siècle, elle est utilisée par la Gestapo pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Elle est considérée comme l'une des prisons nazies les plus terribles de la Pologne occupée.

  6. 7 déc. 2022 · This biography of Dr Garbień shows some of the landmarks in the history of Montelupich prison in 1941–1942, especially those connected with prisoners’ relief and their resistance operations. Of course, an account of these episodes cannot aspire to the status of a comprehensive study of this matter, which deserves a monograph of ...

  7. The Montelupich facility was the detention centre of the first instance used by the Nazis to imprison the Polish professors from the Jagiellonian University arrested in 1939 in the so-called Sonderaktion Krakau, an operation designed to eliminate Polish intelligentsia.