The 1st of September 1939. Nazi Germany invades Poland which marks the beginning of the Second World War. In May of the following year, the Germans establish Auschwitz concentration camp, located around 60 km west of Krakow.
The direct reason for the establishment of the camp is the fact that mass arrests of Poles are increasing beyond the capacity of existing "local" prisons. In October 1941, the Nazis begin construction of Birkenau, which will become the largest of more than 40 camps and sub-camps making up the Auschwitz complex. From March 1942, Auschwitz-Birkenau plays a central role in the German effort to kill the Jews of Europe and approximately 1 million people—probably about 90 percent of the victims of Auschwitz Concentration Camp – will die there.
When on 27 January 1945, the Red army enters Auschwitz, the Soviet soldiers liberate more than 7,000 surviving inmates, who are mostly ill and dying. The unspeakable conditions the liberators confront shed light on the full scope of Nazi horrors. One of the main perpetrators of these atrocities is the Auschwitz camp commandant Rudolf Höss.
Rudolf Franz Höss was born on 25 November 1901 in the town of Baden-Baden, then part of the German Empire. Höss was raised in a devout Catholic household. His father, Franz Xaver Höss, was a former soldier turned merchant who imposed strict discipline, hoping his son would enter the priesthood.
Yet even as a teenager, Rudolf gravitated toward military ideals, inspired by his father’s stories and Germany’s imperial culture. When the First world war broke out in July 1914, he left school early—reportedly volunteering in the cavalry. His own later accounts suggested he served in the Middle East, fighting alongside Ottoman forces.
There is some doubt about his claims, but there is no question that the war experience shaped Höss’s worldview. Following Germany’s defeat in 1918 and the end of the First World War, Höss drifted into right-wing paramilitaries. He joined the Freikorps Roßbach, a unit operating in the chaotic postwar environment, clashing with leftist revolutionaries and Polish forces in the border regions in Silesia and the Baltic area.
During one incident in 1923, he participated in the murder of a local schoolteacher Walther Kadow — an act that led to a ten-year prison sentence for manslaughter. Thanks to an amnesty, Höss was released in 1928, having served roughly five years. In August 1929 Rudolf Höss married Hedwig Hensel and they had 5 children.
The start of Höss’s formal journey into National Socialism came when he claimed to have joined the Nazi Party as early as 1922, though membership records are questionable. What is certain is that by the time Adolf Hitler seized power in January 1933, Höss was an enthusiastic supporter. He served in various paramilitary roles, eventually joining the SS in 1934.
His early SS service placed him in Dachau, the prototype concentration camp near Munich, where he learned the methods of controlling and terrorizing prisoners that would become integral to all Nazi camps. From his time in Dachau, in 1938 Höss transferred to another concentration camp - Sachsenhausen - as an adjutant to the camp commandant. He was soon promoted to a more direct supervisory role, including the oversight of executions.
In these formative years, Höss won the admiration of his superiors by demonstrating a willingness to enact repressive measures swiftly and by following orders without question. His methodical nature, combined with an apparent lack of personal sadism—he described himself as guided solely by duty—made him stand out in the eyes of the SS hierarchy. Indeed, many who worked in the concentration camp system sought to fuse terror with personal cruelty, but Höss seemed primarily focused on procedural “efficiency” rather than direct brutality.
The Second World War began on 1 September 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland. By 1940, the Nazi leadership decided to repurpose a former Polish military barracks in the town of Oświęcim into the new concentration camp. Recognizing Höss’s reliability and organizational skills, the SS assigned him to oversee this emerging site.
In May 1940, he arrived in southern Poland to assume command of what would become the most infamous concentration and extermination camp: Auschwitz. At first, Auschwitz I functioned much like other Nazi camps, holding political prisoners and forced laborers under harsh conditions. Yet the site’s location—easily reached by rail, and isolated enough to conceal large-scale atrocities—soon proved ideal for a more sinister purpose.
In 1941, when the Nazi regime shifted from persecution to the systematic mass murder of Europe’s Jews, Auschwitz became central to Hitler’s vision of genocide. Höss later claimed he personally received orders from Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, to expand Auschwitz and implement gassing as the primary killing method. Though the details remain subject to debate, there is agreement that Höss oversaw the planning and construction of new facilities—such as Auschwitz II-Birkenau, with large gas chambers and crematoria—capable of murdering thousands of people each day.
Zyklon B, initially used as a pesticide, was introduced as the primary agent of execution. Under Höss’s command, the SS developed a highly choreographed system: victims were told they were going to shower, then herded into large chambers, locked inside, and poisoned by gas. Their corpses were subsequently burned in nearby crematoria.
During 1942 and 1943, the camp’s killing capacity skyrocketed. Transports arrived from across all of German-occupied Europe: from France, the Netherlands, Slovakia, Greece, and especially Poland. By the time Höss left direct command of Auschwitz in late 1943, hundreds of thousands had perished.
A large portion of these victims were Jews, but significant numbers of Poles, Roma people, Soviet prisoners of war, and other groups the Nazis deemed undesirable also lost their lives. After the war Höss described himself as an obedient functionary, carrying out what he believed were necessary orders to “protect” Germany. He claimed no personal hatred toward the individuals he condemned, insisting he was motivated by duty to the Führer.
In practice, his managerial style was devastatingly efficient. From ensuring the supply of Zyklon B to orchestrating the disposal of bodies, Höss treated genocide as a logistical problem to be solved—forever establishing him as a defining figure of modern bureaucratic evil. In November 1943, as Auschwitz expanded its killing operations, SS authorities reorganized the camp structure.
Höss was transferred, also because of large problems with corruption within the camp structures, to Berlin to the SS administrative headquarters for all concentration and extermination camps. There he helped coordinate the broader concentration camp network, ensuring that the system of forced labor, torture, and mass execution kept functioning. However, he returned to Auschwitz briefly in May 1944 for the so-called “Hungarian Action,” when during 8 weeks from the 15th of May to 9 July 1944, the Nazis deported about 420,000 Hungarian Jews to Birkenau.
Once again, Höss’s precise oversight and logistical planning facilitated the swift murder of countless people. This period, from mid-1944, saw some of the highest daily death tolls the camp ever recorded. About 100,000 Jews from Hungary were selected for forced labor at Auschwitz and the remainder—approximately 330,000 Jews (about 75 percent)—were murdered in the gas chambers upon arrival.
The victims included men, women, and children. This was the deadliest period at Auschwitz-Birkenau. By early 1945, with the Red Army advancing rapidly from the east, the Nazis began evacuating Auschwitz.
Tens of thousands of prisoners were forced to march to their death on long marches during the harsh winter. At that time Höss was working at Ravensbrück concentration camp, which became his final posting. After the completion of the gas chamber there, Höss coordinated the operations of killing by gassing in a camp which was created exclusively for female prisoners.
In the final days of the war Höss tried to avoid responsibility for his actions. He fled adopting a false identity as “Franz Lang,” a navy non-commissioned officer. For several months, he avoided detection, living quietly on a farm in northern Germany.
His wife and children, abandoned in a small town, endured repeated interrogations by Allied forces. Eventually, in March 1946, British investigators located Höss when they threatened to deport his eldest son to the Soviet Union if his wife withheld information about his whereabouts. Höss was captured on 11 March 1946.
He was transferred to British custody and soon found himself at the center of postwar justice proceedings. Höss was interrogated extensively, first by British intelligence officers, then by the Allies at Nuremberg, where he appeared as a witness in the trials against major Nazi war criminals. His testimonies also shocked many of the defendants who had served the Nazi regime.
With disconcerting calm, Höss explained the day-to-day operation of Auschwitz, recounting how hundreds of thousands were killed by gas, shot, or worked to death. In a chilling, matter-of-fact tone, Höss confirmed the industrial process of mass extermination, describing how entire transports of Jews were exterminated upon arrival. His remarks left an unforgettable impression on prosecutors, journalists, and spectators: here was a man who admitted to orchestrating one of history’s greatest atrocities yet displayed minimal visible remorse.
Following his appearances at Nuremberg, Höss was extradited to Poland. There he stood trial before the Polish Supreme National Tribunal in Warsaw in March 1947, answering for his role in the genocide carried out at Auschwitz. This proceeding placed Höss face-to-face with Polish prosecutors and also surviving camp prisoners.
Over the course of a few weeks, the tribunal meticulously anatomized his command at Auschwitz, his awareness of ongoing crimes, and his personal responsibility. While Höss offered some measure of cooperation, describing details of mass murder, he continued to assert that he merely followed orders. He implied that his own moral qualms were secondary to an oath of obedience to Nazi regime and Adolf Hitler.
In his postwar writings—an autobiography drafted in Polish prison—he portrayed himself as a dutiful soldier, someone who believed in Hitler’s worldview without fully questioning the moral enormity of his tasks. He saw himself as "a cog in the wheel of the great extermination machine created by the Third Reich". On 2 April 1947, the court handed down a death sentence.
Like many other Nazi functionaries tried in Poland, Höss had little recourse to appeal and resigned himself to his fate. Höss, who during his reign of terror at Auschwitz oversaw the murder of hundreds of thousands of people, spent his final hours in relative calm, receiving a last confession from a Catholic chaplain despite having left the Church as a younger man. At the request of former camp prisoners, the execution was carried out in Auschwitz, the camp he once commanded.
On 15 April 1947, Höss was taken to the former Auschwitz-Birkenau camp in Oświęcim, to the commandant's office building. However, the angry crowd waiting outside, which included many former prisoners of the camp, pressed forward and there was fear that mob justice might be taken. The planned procedure was halted and Höss was returned to his cell in the basement of the building, while the soldiers pretended to drive him away.
However, Höss did not escape justice. His execution, which took place on the following day on 16 April 1947, was held publicly and became a theatre of horror. Approximately 100 people - among them a small group of officials and witnesses—survivors among them— gathered to witness the execution of a man who turned Auschwitz into one of history’s greatest machines of death.
For many of these onlookers, the moment was filled with a grim sense of retribution: the man who had once presided over a kingdom of death would now face the penalty for the atrocities committed under his watch. In his last words, the 45-year-old Höss sent his greetings to his wife and children. He also asked the Poles for forgiveness.
When the trapdoor on the gallows was released, the man behind Auschwitz’s killing apparatus met his end on the same soil he had once turned into a factory of destruction. His corpse was cremated and the ashes scattered in a nearby river. While overshadowed by men like Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Eichmann, Rudolf Höss is an important figure for understanding how “ordinary” bureaucracy can enable incomprehensible cruelty.
His life underscores how the Nazi system was built not just on fiery demagogues but also on disciplined, middle-ranking officials who quietly greased the wheels of genocide. There were no tears shed for Rudolf Höss. Thanks for watching the World History Channel be sure to like and subscribe and click the bell notification icon so you don't miss our next episodes we thank you and we'll see you next time on the channel.