General Government
The General Government (German: Generalgouvernement), formally the General Governorate for the Occupied Polish Region, was an unincorporated territory of Nazi Germany comprising the central and southern portions of occupied Poland during World War II, excluding areas annexed directly to the Reich, assigned to Slovakia, or initially ceded to the Soviet Union under the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.[1][2]Established on October 26, 1939, following the German invasion of Poland on September 1, it functioned as a quasi-colonial administrative unit under civilian control, with Hans Frank appointed as Governor-General and headquartered in Kraków.[3]
Initially spanning roughly 95,000 square kilometers with a population of about 12 million—including approximately 1.5 million Jews—the territory expanded in 1941 to incorporate the District of Galicia after the invasion of the Soviet Union, serving as a primary reservoir for forced labor extraction to support the German war effort and a central hub for implementing Nazi racial policies.[1][2]
Under Frank's regime, the General Government enforced brutal measures of economic exploitation, including the deportation of millions to labor camps, alongside systematic ghettoization, cultural suppression, and the elimination of Polish elites to eradicate potential resistance, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of non-Jewish Poles through executions, starvation, and disease.[4][2]
Most notably, it became the epicenter of the Holocaust in occupied Poland, hosting major extermination facilities such as Bełżec, Sobibór, Treblinka, and Majdanek, where Nazi authorities orchestrated the deportation and murder of nearly all its Jewish inhabitants, totaling around 1.5 million victims, as part of the broader Endlösung (Final Solution).[2]