Karl Otto Koch

German Nazi commandant
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Quick Facts
Born:
August 2, 1897, Darmstadt, Germany
Died:
April 5, 1945, Weimar (aged 47)
Political Affiliation:
Nazi Party
Notable Family Members:
spouse Ilse Koch

Karl Otto Koch (born August 2, 1897, Darmstadt, Germany—died April 5, 1945, Weimar) was a German commandant of several Nazi concentration camps and husband of the infamous Ilse Koch.

Koch was a decorated veteran of World War I who had been wounded and captured by the British and held as a prisoner of war. He failed at several civilian jobs before joining the SS, the Nazi paramilitary corps, in March 1931. In September of that year he divorced his first wife, with whom he had had a son, Manfred. He worked at desk jobs and in the SS police apparatus before beginning a career as an administrator within the Nazi concentration-camp system, where he gained a reputation for ruthlessness and cruelty. After he ran a number of small camps, he was promoted in 1936 to become commandant of a large new camp, Sachsenhausen, built at Oranienburg, on the outskirts of Berlin.

In 1937, during his tenure at Sachsenhausen, he married Ilse Köhler, a woman nearly 10 years his junior whom he had met while he was stationed in Darmstadt. So well did he perform his duties at Sachsenhausen that he was rewarded with the command of another new camp, Buchenwald, being constructed on a hill near Weimar, Germany.

American infantry streaming through the captured town of Varennes, France, 1918.This place fell into the hands of the Americans on the first day of the Franco-American assault upon the Argonne-Champagne line. (World War I)
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Under Koch’s reign at Buchenwald (1937–41), prisoners were mistreated to a degree that was unusually severe even by Nazi standards. A variety of punishments—dangerous work in the camp’s quarry, beatings, torture, starvation, whippings, death by hanging—were meted out by the SS guards. Living conditions were abominable: the camp was overcrowded; prisoners barely existed on starvation rations; sanitation was primitive; disease was rampant; and medical care was virtually nonexistent. (Under the next commandant, Hermann Pister, Buchenwald would be used as a laboratory where medical experiments were carried out on live prisoners.) Koch’s wife also allegedly engaged in abusing the prisoners. Inmates felt that she was as much responsible for their terrible situation as he was, and they referred to her as the “commandeuse,” or “lady commandant.”

The Kochs, who had three children (although one died in infancy), lived exceedingly well at Buchenwald and enriched themselves through various schemes. Even much of the gold extracted from the mouths of dead inmates before they were sent to the camp’s crematorium ended up in the Kochs’ possession. The couple was investigated and tried by the SS, but the charges went unproved.

At the end of 1941, Karl received orders to report to Lublin, Poland, to take charge of the Majdanek camp, which, had it been finished, would have been the largest concentration, slave-labour, and extermination camp in the Nazi system. Leaving his wife and their children behind at Buchenwald, Koch ran Majdanek for only a few months before more evidence of his corruption surfaced. He was relieved of his command and eventually jailed in the SS prison at Weimar. On April 5, 1945, with the Allies coming ever closer to Weimar, Koch was taken from his cell, driven up to Buchenwald, and executed by an SS firing squad. His body was disposed of in the camp crematorium.

Flint Whitlock