Rudolf Höss
Rudolf Franz Ferdinand Höss (25 November 1900 – 16 April 1947) was a German SS officer and the longest-serving commandant of Auschwitz concentration and extermination camp.[1][2] Appointed in May 1940, Höss directed the camp's transformation into the Nazis' primary site for the mass murder of Jews during the Holocaust, implementing gas chambers using Zyklon B that facilitated the killing of an estimated 1.1 million people, predominantly Jews, between 1942 and 1944.[3][4] Under his oversight, Auschwitz expanded to include Birkenau as a dedicated extermination facility, where selections upon arrival determined immediate death for most deportees, while a minority were selected for forced labor.[5] Höss's own postwar affidavit and Nuremberg testimony provided detailed accounts of these operations, claiming responsibility for over two million gassings, though subsequent historical analysis based on transport records and camp documents revises the total victims to around 1.1 million.[5][6] Captured by British forces in March 1946, he was extradited to Poland, convicted of murder and war crimes by the Supreme National Tribunal, and hanged at Auschwitz on 16 April 1947.[7]