The history of the Bergen-Hohne military training area and its barracks is inextricably linked
to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp and the prisoner-of-war camp that was located on the
training area. The military training area was built in 1935 as part of the Nazi regime's
military rearmament program. It was here that the Wehrmacht prepared for a war of aggression
one which claimed millions of victims combatants and non-combatants between 1939-1945
including tens of thousands of POWs who were housed in camps on the training area and more
than 52 000 prisoners in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.The history of the site as well as
the history of the Wehrmacht and the Wehrmacht's crimes is the subject of the exhibition
Armament War and Crime which was opened to the public in 2019 and which is set up in a
historical building of the Niedersachsen-Kaserne. The exhibition makes clear that warfare and
war crimes were planned from the very beginning of the Nazi regime. Vividly it shows that the
Wehrmacht was an essential pillar of the Nazi dictatorship. Moreover the exhibit addresses the
degree to which soldiers could defy criminal orders and how (West) German society and the
Bundeswehr dealt with the difficult legacy of the Wehrmacht after 1945. The present volume
conceived and implemented by students from the History Department at Leibniz University of
Hanover in cooperation with the Bergen-Belsen Memorial documents the central features of the
exhibition. The supplementary essays provide an in-depth look at the history of the Wehrmacht.