World War I casualties

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

British and German wounded, Bernafay Wood, 19 July 1916. Photo by Ernest Brooks.

The total number of

deadliest conflicts
in human history.

The total number of deaths includes from 9 to 11 million

civilian death toll was about 6 to 13 million.[1][2] The Triple Entente (also known as the Allies) lost about 6 million military personnel while the Central Powers
lost about 4 million. At least 2 million died from diseases and 6 million went missing, presumed dead. This article lists the casualties of the belligerent powers based on official published sources.

About two-thirds of military deaths in World War I were in battle, unlike the conflicts that took place in the 19th century when the majority of deaths were due to disease. Nevertheless, disease, including the

prisoners of war
, still caused about one third of total military deaths for all belligerents.

Classification of casualty statistics

Douaumont ossuary, which contains remains of French and German soldiers who died during the Battle of Verdun
in 1916

Casualty statistics for World War I vary to a great extent; estimates of total deaths range from 9 million to over 15 million.

noncombatant deaths is 6.5 million."[18]

Casualties in the borders of 1914–1918[clarification needed]

(when the number of deaths in a country is disputed, a range of war losses is given)
(sources and details of figures are provided in the footnotes)
Nation Population (millions) Combat deaths and missing in action (included in total military deaths) Total military deaths (from all causes) Civilian deaths (military action and crimes against humanity) Increase in civilian deaths (malnutrition and disease excluding Influenza pandemic) Total deaths Deaths as % of population Military wounded
Allies and co-belligerents of World War I
 Australia b 5.0 61,527[19] 59,330[20]
to 62,149[11]
59,330
to 62,149
1.2%
to 1.2%
152,171[21]
 Canada d 7.2 56,638[22] 56,639[21]
to 64,996[11]
1,963[23][24] 58,639
to 66,996
0.8%
to 0.9%
149,732[21]
 India g 315.1 64,449[21] 64,449[21]
to 73,905[11]
64,449
to 73,905
0%
to 0%
69,214[21]
 New Zealand l 1.1 18,166[25] 16,711[21]
to 18,060[11]
16,711
to 18,060
1.5%
to 1.6%
41,317[21]
 Newfoundland m 0.2 1,204[21] 1,204[21]
to 1,570[26](included with UK)
1,204
to 1,570
0.6%
to 0.8%
2,314[21]
 South Africa r 6.0 7,121[21] 7,121[21]
to 9,726[11]
7,121
to 9,726
0.1%
to 0.2%
12,029[21]
 United Kingdom (and colonies) s 45.4 744,000s1 887,858[11] 16,829[21][27] 107,000[28] 867,829
to 1,011,687
1.9%
to 2.2%
1,675,000s1
  • Sub-total
  • British Empire
380.0 953,104 949,454
to 1,118,264
18,829 107,000 1,077,283
to 1,244,093
0.3%
to 0.3%

2,101,077

 Belgium c 7.4 38,170[20] 38,170[29]
to 58,637[30]
23,700[31] 62,000[32] 123,870
to 144,337
1.7%
to 2%
44,686[33]
 France e 39.6 1,150,000[34][35] 1,357,000[20]
to 1,397,800[36]
40,000[18][37][38] 300,000[32] 1,697,000
to 1,737,800
4.3%
to 4.4%
4,266,000[33]
 Greece f 4.8 5,000[20] 5,000[20]
to 26,000[39]
150,000[40] 155,000
to 176,000
3.2%
to 3.7%
21,000[33]
 Italy h 35.6 460,000[29] 460,000[29]
to 709,000[41][42]
3,400[43] 589,000[44] 1,052,400
to 1,301,400
3%
to 3.7%
947,000[33] to 1,050,000[42]
 Japan i 53.6 300[33] 300[33]
to 4,661[45]
300
to 4,661
0%
to 0%
907[33]
 Montenegro k 0.5 3,000[33] 3,000[33]
to 13,325[45]
3,000
to 13,325
0.6%
to 2.7%
10,000[33]
 Portugal n 6.0 7,222[29] 7,222[29] 13[46] 82,000[47] 89,235 1.5% 13,751[29]
 Romania o 7.5 335,706[20] 250,000[45]
to 335,706[20]
130,000[48] 200,000[48] 580,000
to 665,706
7.7%
to 8.9%
120,000[33]
 Russia p 175.1 775,369 to 1,700,000[33][20] 1,700,000[33] to
2,254,369[49]
410,000[50] 730,000[50] 2,840,000 to
3,394,369
1.6% to 1.9% 3,749,000[49] to
4,950,000[33]
 Serbia q 4.5 127,500[20] 300,000[51]
to 450,000[52]
450,000[51]
to 800,000[52]
750,000
to 1,250,000
16.7%
to 27.8%
133,148[33]
 United States t 92.0 53,402[53] 116,708[54][55] 757[56] 117,466 0.1% 204,002[54]
  • Total
  • Allied Powers
806.6 4,833,404 5,186,854
to 6,433,692
626,699 3,420,000
to 3,770,000
9,235,553
to 10,080,391
1.1%
to 1.2%
11,611,271
to 12,812,271
Central Powers
 Austria-Hungary u 51.4 1,016,200[57][58] 1,200,000[33][59]
to 1,494,200[58]
120,000[60] 467,000[61] 1,787,000
to 2,081,200
3.5%
to 4%
3,620,000[21]
 Bulgaria v 4.5 87,500[33] 87,500[33][20] 100,000[62] 187,500 3.4% 152,390[33][20]
 Germany w 64.9 1,800,000[33][63][64] 2,037,000[65][66] 720[67] 424,000[68] to 763,000[69][70] 2,198,420
to 2,800,720
3.4% to
4.3%
4,215,662[65]
 Ottoman Empire x 21.3 305,085[71] 325,000[33]
to 771,844[72]
1,500,000[73] 1,000,000[74] 2,825,000
to 3,271,844
13.3%
to 15.4%
400,000[33]
to 763,753[72]
  • Total
  • Central Powers
142.1 3,208,785 3,386,200
to 4,390,544
1,620,720 1,991,000
to 2,330,000
6,997,920
to 8,341,264
4.9%
to 5.9%
8,388,052
to 8,751,805
Neutral nations
 Denmark y 2.8 See footnote re: Danes in German military 700[75] 700 0%
 Luxembourg j 0.3 2,800 See footnote
 Norway z 2.4 1,180[45] 1,180 0.1%
 Persia az 10.5[76] 2,000,000[77] 2,000,000 19%
 Sweden bz 5.6 800[45] 800 0%
 Albania cz 0.7 to 0.8[78] 70,000[79] 8.75% to 10%
 Liechtensteindz 0.0087[80] 4[81] 4 0.05%
Grand total 959.7 8,042,189 8,573,058
to 10,824,240
2,250,099 5,411,000
to 8,100,000
15,000,000 to 22,000,000[1] 1.7%
to 2.3%
22,101,100
to 23,665,873

The source of population data is: Haythornthwaite, Philip J., The World War One Source Book pp. 382–383[82]

Casualties by post-war (1924) borders

Europe 1914 and 1924

The war involved multi-ethnic empires such as Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, Austria-Hungary and Turkey. Many ethnic groups in these territories were conscripted for military service. The casualties listed by modern borders are also included in the above table of figures for the countries that existed in 1914. The casualty figures by 1924 post war borders are rough estimates by Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century, the sources of his figures were published in the Soviet era and in post-Soviet Russia.[83] According to the 1914–1918 Online Encyclopedia "In addition to losses suffered by African military personnel and the laborers supporting their operations, very large, but unknown numbers of African civilians perished during the war." They made an estimate of civilian losses in Africa of 750,000 based on the study by the Vadim Erlikman. They noted that Erlikman's figures are based on the work of the Russian demographer Boris Urlanis, they noted that these estimates were "imprecise" and "could be used to provide a frame of reference for further inquiry".[84] The Oxford History of World War One notes that "In east and central Africa the harshness of the war resulted in acute shortages of food with famine in some areas, a weakening of populations, and epidemic diseases which killed hundreds of thousands of people and also cattle."[85]

The following estimates of Austrian deaths, within contemporary borders, were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead 175,000: including military losses 120,000 with the Austro-Hungarian forces and POW deaths in captivity of 30,000. Civilian dead due to famine and disease were 25,000.[86]

The following estimates of Belarusian deaths, within contemporary borders, were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead 130,000: including military losses 70,000 with the Russian forces. Civilian dead were 60,000.[87]

The following estimates of Ukrainian deaths, within contemporary borders, were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead 590,000: including military losses 450,000,(Erlikman did not break out military losses between Austro-Hungarian and Russian armed forces). Civilian dead were 140,000.[88]

The Belgian Congo was part of the Kingdom of Belgium during the war. A Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century based on sources published in the Soviet Union and Russia estimated a total of 155,000 deaths in the Belgian Congo during the war.[89]

Czechoslovakia was part of Austro-Hungary during the war. The estimates of Czechoslovak deaths within 1991 borders were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead 185,000: including military losses 110,000 with the Austro-Hungarian forces and POW deaths in captivity of 45,000. Civilian dead due to famine and disease were 30,000.[90] The Czechoslovak Legions fought with the armies of the Allies during the war.

Austrian memorial commemorating soldiers from the village of Obermillstatt who died in World War I

Estonia was part of the Russian Empire during the war and about 100,000 Estonians served in the Russian Army. Of them about 10,000 were killed.[91]

From 1809 Finland was an autonomous Grand Duchy in the Russian Empire until the end of 1917. Finland's autonomous status meant that Finns were exempt from conscription into the Russian Army. Approximately 800 Finns voluntarily served during World War I.[92] According to data regarding Finnish war casualties, 317 Finns were killed between 1914 and 1917.[93]

The following estimates of deaths, within contemporary borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Erlikman's estimates are based on sources published in the Soviet Union and Russia.[94] These numbers only include military deaths, total civilian deaths in Africa could amount up to 750,000.[95]

 Algeria (1914 known as French Algeria): 26,000
 Vietnam (1914 known as French Indochina): 12,000
 Mali (1914 part of French West Africa): 10,000
 
French protectorate of Morocco
): 8,000
 Senegal (1914 part of French West Africa): 6,000
 Guinea (1914 part of French West Africa): 2,500
 Madagascar: 2,500 military
 Benin (1914 part of French West Africa): 2,000
 Burkina Faso (1914 part of French West Africa): 2,000
 Republic of the Congo (1914 part of French Equatorial Africa): 2,000
 Ivory Coast (1914 part of French West Africa): 2,000
 
French Tunisia
): 2,000
 Chad (1914 part of French Equatorial Africa): 1,500
 Central African Republic (1914 known as French Oubangui-Chari): 1,000
 Niger (1914 part of French West Africa): 1,000
 Gabon (1914 part of French Equatorial Africa): 500
 India (French Establishments in India): 195


Total: 82,000

The following estimates of Georgian deaths, within contemporary borders, were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Georgia was part of the Russian Empire during the war and about 150,000 Georgians served in the Russian Army. Of them about 10,000 were killed.[87]

The following estimates of deaths, within contemporary borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Erlikman's estimates are based on sources published in the Soviet Union and Russia.[96] These numbers only include military deaths, total civilian deaths in Africa could amount up to 750,000.[95]

Dying Soldier in a Trench (1915) by Willy Jaeckel
 Tanzania (1914 part of German East Africa): 20,000
 
German South-West Africa
): 1,000
 Cameroon (1914 known as Kamerun): 5,000 military and 50,000 civilian
 Togo (1914 known as German Togoland): 2,000
 Rwanda (1914 part of German East Africa): 15,000


Total: 48,000

The following estimates of Hungarian deaths, within contemporary borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead 385,000: including military losses 270,000 with the Austro-Hungarian forces and POW deaths in captivity of 70,000. Civilian dead due to famine and disease were 45,000.[97]

Ireland was a part of the United Kingdom during World War I. Five-sixths of the island left to form the Irish Free State, now the Republic of Ireland, in 1922. A total of 206,000 Irishmen served in the British forces during the war.[98] The number of Irish deaths in the British Army recorded by the registrar general was 27,405.[99] A significant number of these casualties were from what, in 1920, became Northern Ireland. While 49,400 soldiers died serving in Irish divisions (the 10th, 16th and 36th), although not all of the men serving in these divisions were natives of Ireland and many Irish who died in non-Irish regiments are not listed.[100][101] For example, 29% of the casualties in the 16th Division were not natives of Ireland.[99] Neither does it include Irish emigrants in Britain who enlisted there and are not categorised as Irish. Australia lists 4,731 of its first World War soldiers as having been born in Ireland and more than 19,000 Irish-born soldiers served in the Canadian Corps. According to research done by John Horne of Trinity College Dublin, there are at least 30,986 soldiers who were born in Ireland that died; however, that's considered a "conservative" estimate and is very likely to raise.[102]

The losses of Portuguese Mozambique were estimated by a Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Erlikman's estimates are based on sources published in the Soviet Union and Russia.[94] 52,000

Poland was territory of Germany, Austria-Hungary and partially annexed by Russia, from 1795 to 1918. By late 1915, Germany had complete control over modern-day Poland. A 2005 Polish study estimated 3,376,800 Poles were conscripted into the armed forces of these countries during World War I, an additional 300,000 were conscripted for forced labor by the Germans. The Russians and Austrians forcibly resettled 1.6 to 1.8 million persons from the war zone in Poland.[103] According to Micheal Clodfelter, Polish war dead were 1,080,000, whilst 200,000 Polish civilians were killed in the fighting on the Eastern Front; 870,000 men served in the German, Austrian and Russian armies.[18] Another estimate made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century, put total Polish war dead at 640,000, including military losses of 270,000 Poles conscripted, civilian losses of 120,000 due to military operations and 250,000 caused by famine and disease.[104] The ethnic Polish Blue Army served with the French Army. The ethnic Polish Legions fought as part of the Austro-Hungarian Army on the Eastern Front.

The territory of Transylvania was part of Austria-Hungary during World War I. The following estimates of Romanian deaths, within contemporary borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead: 748,000, including military losses of 220,000 with the Romanian forces, 150,000 with the Austro-Hungarian forces and POW deaths in captivity of 48,000. Civilian dead were as follows due to famine and disease: 200,000, killed in military operations 120,000 and 10,000 dead in Austrian prisons. [48]

Britain recruited Indian, Chinese, native South African, Egyptian and other overseas labour to provide logistical support in the combat theatres.[105] Included with British casualties in East Africa are the deaths of 44,911 recruited labourers.[106] The CWGC reports that nearly 2,000 workers from the Chinese Labour Corps are buried with British war dead in France.[107]

The following estimates of British Empire colonial military deaths, within contemporary borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian Vadim Erlikman in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Erlikman's estimates are based on sources published in the Soviet Union and Russia.[108]

 Ghana (1914 known as the Gold Coast): 1,200
 
British East Africa
): 2,000
 Malawi (1914 known as Nyasaland): 3,000
 Nigeria (1914 part of British West Africa): 5,000
 Sierra Leone (1914 part of British West Africa): 1,000
 
Uganda Protectorate
): 1,500
 Zambia (1914 known as Northern Rhodesia): 3,000
 Zimbabwe (1914 known as Southern Rhodesia): 5,716 persons of European origin served in the war, of whom about 700 were killed, or died of wounds or other causes. In explicitly Rhodesian units, 127 were killed, 24 died of wounds, 101 died of disease or other causes and 294 were wounded. Of the territory's black African servicemen, 31 were killed in action, 142 died of other causes and 116 were wounded.[109]


Total: 18,000

The following estimates are for Yugoslavia within the 1991 borders.

Macedonia, and Montenegro was an independent nation. The Yugoslav historian Vladimir Dedijer put the total losses of the Yugoslav lands at 1.9 million, of which 43% were from Serbia.[110] The following estimates of Yugoslav deaths, within 1991 borders, during World War I were made by a Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century. Total dead: 996,000 including military losses, 260,000 with the Serbian forces, 80,000 with the Austro-Hungarian forces, 13,000 with Montenegrin forces and POW deaths in captivity of 93,000. Civilian dead were as follows due to famine and disease: 400,000, killed in military operations: 120,000 and 30,000 dead in Austrian prisons or executed.[111]

During World War I, the Nepalese army was expanded and six new regiments, totaling more than 20,000 troops—all volunteers—were sent to India, most of them to the North-West Frontier Province, to release British and Indian troops for service overseas. Simultaneously, the Nepalese government agreed to maintain recruitment at a level that would sustain the existing British Gurkha units and allow the establishment of additional ones. The battalions were increased to thirty-three with the addition of 55,000 new recruits and Gurkha units were placed at the disposal of the British high command for service on all fronts. Many volunteers were assigned to non-combat units, such as the Army Bearer Corps and the labour battalions but they also were in combat in France, Turkey, Palestine and Mesopotamia. The Rana prime ministers urged Nepalese males to fight in the war. Of the more than 200,000 Nepalese who served in the British army, there were some 20,000 Gurkha casualties included above with the British Indian Army.[112]

Footnotes

Deaths by alliance and military/civilian. Most of the civilian deaths were due to war-related famine.
Deaths of the Allied powers
Deaths of the Central powers

^a East and Central Africa

Fallen British and Australian soldiers in a mass grave, dug by German soldiers, 1916 or 1917

^b Australia

^c Belgium

  • Belgian government figures for military losses in Europe were 40,367 (26,338 killed, died of wounds or accidents and 14,029 died of disease or missing). In Africa: 2,620 soldiers were killed and 15,650 porters died. The combined total for Europe and Africa is 58,637.[30]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Belgium are: Total mobilized force 267,000; total casualties 93,061 including killed and died 13,716; wounded 44,686; Prisoners and missing 34,659.[33]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed 93,061 casualties up until 11 November 1918 including 13,716 killed and died; 24,456 missing; 44,686 wounded and 10,208 POW. "These figures are approximate only, the records being incomplete."[20]
  • In 1924, the Belgian government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 365,000 men mobilized and 40,936 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Belgian military deaths are 35,000 killed and died of wounds[114]
  • Civilian deaths according to Belgian government statistics were 23,700 (6,000 killed in the 1914 German massacres and 17,700 victims in prisons, deportations and by military tribunals).[30] According to a demographic study, there were 92,000 indirect deaths in Belgium (62,000 deaths due to wartime privations and 30,000 in the Spanish flu pandemic).[32] John Horne estimated that 6,500 Belgian and French civilians were killed in German reprisals.[115]

^d Canada

^e France

  • French casualty figures up until 1 June 1919 were listed in a French government report of 1 August 1919 presented to the French Chamber of Deputies.
    French Colonial Forces, 35,900 "north Africans" and 4,600 French Foreign Legion personnel.[36]
  • According to the French Army official report "La Statistique médicale de l'armée" Total dead were 1,325,000 (675,000 killed in action, 225,000 missing and prisoners killed, 250,000 died of wounds and 175,000 died of disease.)[119]
  • A breakdown of French casualties published in the Official History of the Australian Army Medical Services, 1914–1918 lists 674,700 killed in action, 250,000 died of wounds, 225,300 missing and presumed dead and 175,000 dead from disease and injury. Wounded amounted to 2,300,000.[35]
  • United States War Dept. figures for French casualties are: Total mobilized force 8,410,000; total casualties 6,160,800 including killed and died: 1,357,800, wounded: 4,266,000, prisoners and missing: 537,000.[33]
  • The UK War Office put French dead, killed and missing at 1,385,300 dead and missing, including 58,000 colonial soldiers up until 1 November 1918. They noted that a government report of 1 August 1919, listed the number of killed and died at 1,357,000. There were no figures available of the wounded.[20]
  • In 1924, the French government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 7,935,000 men mobilized and 1,400,000 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The names of the soldiers who died for France during World War I are listed on-line by the French government.[120]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total French military deaths are 1,126,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • According to the French encyclopedia Quid 30–40,000 foreign volunteers from about 40 nationalities served in the French army, including 12,000 with the Czechoslovak Legion and the ethnic Polish Blue Army; 5,000 Italians served in a "Legion" commanded by Colonel Garibaldi. There were also 1,000 Spaniards and 1,500 Swiss in French service, 200 American volunteers served with the French from 1914 to 1916, including the Lafayette Escadrille.[121] Luxembourg was occupied by Germany during the war. According to the Mobile Reference travel Guide 3,700 Luxembourg citizens served in the French armed forces, 2,800 gave their lives in the war. They are commemorated at the Gëlle Fra in Luxembourg.[122] The French Armenian Legion served as part of the French armed forces during the war. French colonies, such as Algeria and Vietnam, also sent troops to fight and serve on the battlefront. American military historian Douglas Porch reported of the French Foreign Legion, in which most non-French nationals served, that some estimates put Legion casualties during the war as high as 31,000 of the 44,150 men who served in the Legion, a 70 per cent casualty rate.[123]
  • According to a demographic study, there were 500,000 indirect deaths in France (300,000 deaths due to wartime privations and 200,000 in the Spanish flu pandemic).[124] Another estimate of the demographic loss of the civilian population in the France during the war, put total excess deaths at 264,000 to 284,000, not including an additional 100,000 to 120,000 Spanish flu deaths.[125] Civilian dead include 1,509 merchant sailors and 3,357 killed in air attacks and long range artillery bombardments[126]
  • Tertiary sources put French civilian war dead at 40,000.[18][37][38]

^f Greece

  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated total military dead of 26,000, including 15,000 deaths due to disease and 11,000 killed and died of wounds[39][127][114]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Greek casualties are: Total mobilized force 230,000; total casualties 27,000 (killed and died 5,000; wounded 21,000; prisoners and missing 1,000).[33]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed 27,000 casualties (5,000 killed or died of wounds; 21,000 wounded and 1,000 prisoners and missing).[20]
  • In 1924, the Greek government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 355,000 men mobilized and no dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • Jean Bujac in a campaign history of the Greek Army in World War I, listed 8,365 combat related deaths and 3,255 missing.[128]
  • According to a demographic study there were 150,000 indirect deaths in Greece due to wartime privations.[40]

^g India (British)

  • The Commonwealth War Graves Commission figure for Indian war dead is 73,905.[11]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed 64,449 Army war dead, 69,214 wounded and 11,264 taken prisoner, these figures include British serving in the Indian Army (2,393 dead, 2,325 wounded and 194 taken prisoner).[21]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Indian military deaths are 27,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]

^h Italy

  • The Italian government put military war deaths at 651,000 (killed in action or died of wounds 378,000; died of disease 186,000 plus an additional 87,000 deaths of invalids from 12 November 1918 until 30 April 1920, due to war related injuries.) These official figures were published in an Italian study of war losses by G. Mortara, however he estimated actual losses until the war's end in Nov. 1918, at 600,000 (400,000 killed or died of wounds and 200,000 deaths due to disease).[41] A brief summary of data from this study can be found online.[129]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Italian casualties are: Total mobilized force 5,615,000; total casualties 2,197,000 (killed and died 650,000; wounded 947,000; prisoners and missing 600,000).[33]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed 1,937,000 casualties up until 11 November 1918 (460,000 dead; 947,000 wounded and 530,000 prisoners).[20]
  • In 1924, the Italian government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 5,615,000 men mobilized and 750,000 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Italian military deaths are 433,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • According to a demographic study there were 1,021,000 indirect deaths in Italy (589,000 deaths due to wartime privations and 432,000 in the Spanish flu pandemic).[44] Another estimate of the demographic loss of the civilian population in the Italy during the war, put total excess deaths at 324,000 not including an additional 300,000 Spanish flu deaths.[130] Civilian deaths due to military action were 3,400 (including 2,293 by attacks on shipping, 965 during air raids and 142 by sea bombardment).[131]

^i Japan

  • In 1924, the Japanese government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 800,000 men mobilized and 4,661 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Yasukuni Shrine lists 4,850 dead in World War I.[132]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Japanese casualties are: total mobilized force 800,000; total casualties 1,210 (including Killed and died 300; wounded 907; Prisoners and missing 3).[33]
German trench destroyed by a mine explosion, 1917

^k Montenegro

^l New Zealand

^m Newfoundland

  • The Dominion of Newfoundland was not part of Canada during World War I. The report of the UK War Office listed 1,204 Army war dead, 2,314 wounded and 150 taken prisoner.[21]
  • An academic journal published in Newfoundland has given the details of Newfoundland's military casualties. Fatalities totaled 1,570 The
    Merchant Navy.[26]

^n Portugal

  • United States War Dept. figures for Portuguese casualties are: total mobilized force 100,000; total casualties 33,291 (including killed and died 7,222; wounded 13,751; prisoners and missing 12,318).[33]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed 33,291 casualties: 7,222 dead (1,689 in Europe and 5,533 in Africa); 13,751 wounded (figure for Europe only) and 12,318 prisoners and missing (6,678 in Europe and "a large number of missing in Mozambique).[20]
  • In 1924, the Portuguese government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 100,000 men mobilized and 4,000 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Portuguese military deaths are 6,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[114]
  • According to a demographic study there were 220,000 indirect deaths in Portugal (82,000 deaths due to wartime privations and 138,000 in the Spanish flu pandemic).[47]
  • 13 Portuguese civilians that were killed during bombardment of Funchal, Madeira Island on 3 December 1916, and 12 December 1917, by German submarines.[134]
Re-educating wounded. Blind French soldiers learning to make baskets, World War I.

^o Romania

^p Russian Empire

  • According to the Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis the sources for Russian casualties are difficult to ascertain. Casualty figures, compiled from the field reports during the war, were published in 1925 by the Soviet Central Statistical office[137] They put Russia's total losses at 775,400 dead and missing, 348,500 disabled and 3,343,900 POW. Those evacuated to the rear area were 1,425,000 sick and 2,844,500 wounded. Included in these figures are battle casualties of 7,036,087. (626,440 killed in action, 17,174 died of wounds, 228,838 missing, 3,409,433 held as prisoners of war and 2,754,202 wounded in action).[138][139] Urlanis believes that the figures for those killed were considerably underestimated, because a large part of the reports were lost in retreats. Urlanis estimated the actual total military war dead at 1,811,000 (killed 1,200,000, died of wounds 240,000, gassed 11,000, died from disease 155,000, POW deaths 190,000, deaths due to accidents and other causes 15,000).[114]
  • A study by the Russian military historian
    G.F. Krivosheev estimated the total war dead at 2,254,369 (killed in action 1,200,000; missing and presumed dead 439,369; died of wounds 240,000, gassed 11,000, died from disease 155,000, POW deaths 190,000, deaths due to accidents and other causes 19,000). Wounded 3,749,000. POW 3,343,900. Total mobilized force 15,378,000.[49]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Russian casualties are: Total mobilized force 12,000,000. Total casualties 9,150,000 (including Killed and died 1,700,000, wounded 4,950,000, prisoners and missing 2,500,000).[33]
  • The UK War Office Based on a telegram from Petrograd to Copenhagen in December 1918 listed military casualties of 9,150,000 (including 1,700,000 killed, 1,450,000 disabled, 3,500,000 wounded and 2,500,000 POW).[20]
  • In 1924, the Soviet government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported for Russia 15,070,000 men mobilized and 1,700,000 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • According to the Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis there were 1,500,000 civilian deaths due to wartime privations up until the end of 1917.[140]
  • A Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century estimated 1,140,000 war related Russian civilian deaths, from 1914 to 1917 in 1914 borders (410,000 due to military operations and 730,000 caused by famine and disease).[141]

^q Serbia

  • Sources for total Serbian casualties range from 750,000 to 1,250,000.[51][142]
  • A demographic study in 1927, put total the war dead for Serbia and Montenegro at 750,000 (300,000 military and 450,000 civilians). The overall population loss from 1912 to 1920, based on the pre-war level was 1,236,000 persons (including 750,000 in World War I; 150,000 killed in the
    deaths by natural causes.[51]
  • According to Frédéric Le Moal, Serbian historian Dušan T. Bataković puts their losses at 1,250,000 (450,000 military and 800,000 civilians). These losses are from 1912 to 1918 and include the Balkan Wars.[142] In July 2014, Serbian poet and academic Matija Bećković said "that 402,435 Serbian soldiers have been killed and 845,000 civilians hanged or exterminated in concentration camps during WWI.[143] At a September 2014 conference sponsored by the Serbian Ministry of Defense, Dr. Alexander Nedok put Serbian war dead at 1,247,435 persons.[144]
  • According to the Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis regarding Serbia "it is particularly difficult to ascertain the number of killed". Based on a demographic analysis of the population, Urlanis estimated total Serbian and Montenegrin casualties of 728,000 including military dead: 278,000 (140,000 killed in action; 25,000 died of wounds; 50,000 disease; 60,000 POW and 3,000 from other causes) and total civilian dead of 450,000.[145]
  • In 1924, the Serbian government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 1,008,240 men mobilized and 365,164 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Serbian casualties are: total mobilized force 707,343; total casualties 331,106 (including killed and died 45,000; wounded 133,148; prisoners and missing 152,958).[33]
  • The report of the UK War Office listed military casualties of 331,106 including 45,000 killed, 133,148 wounded and 70,243 prisoners and 82,535 missing.[20]
  • A Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century, estimated 120,000 Serbian civilian deaths due to military activity and 30,000 executed (казнено и убито) by the Austro-Hungarians. His estimate for total Yugoslav civilian casualties including Austro-Hungarian territory was 550,000.[146]

^r South Africa

British pilot killed in action, 1917

^s United Kingdom

  • ^s1 UK military casualties were reported separately by branch of service: Total of 744,000 dead and missing from the British Isles: Army 702,410 "soldiers";[21] Royal Navy 32,287[148] Losses at sea were 908 UK civilians and 63 fisherman killed in U-boat attacks.[27]
  • Overseas labor units serving with the British and French forces. The UK employed about 300,000 Indian, Chinese, native South African, Egyptian and other nations as laborers during the war. By the end of 1917, there were 50,000 Chinese workers in France, rising to 96,000 by August 1918 (with another 30,000 working for the French). 100,000 Egyptians were working in France and the Middle East, alongside 21,000 Indians and 20,000 South Africans, who were also in East Africa.[14] A total of about 140,000 Chinese workers recruited in the Beiyang government, served on the Western Front during and after the war with the British and French Armed Forces.[149][150] According to the Commonwealth war Graves Commission "In all, nearly 2,000 men from the Chinese Labour Corps died during the First World War, some as a direct result of enemy action, or of wounds received in the course of their duties, but many more in the influenza epidemic that swept Europe in 1918–19"[15] One historical controversy is the number who died in the war. Some Chinese scholars say the number was as high as 20,000 but records kept by the British and French recruiters, show just under 2,000 lost their lives, many from the flu pandemic that swept the world starting in 1919.[151] According to the Commonwealrh War Graves Commission, "The African combatant troops raised for the East African campaign numbered 34,000. The non-combatant porters, stevedores and followers of the Military Labour Corps 600,000. Almost 50,000 of these men were lost, killed in action died of sickness or wounds"[13] According to The Africa Research Institute official British figures the death toll exceeded 105,000 native African troops and military carriers[152]

^t United States

  • US Dept. of Defense figures from 2010, list 116,516 war dead from all causes for the period ending 31 December 1918, including 106,378 in the Army, 7,287 in the Navy and 2,851 in the Marine Corps. There were 53,402 battle deaths, including 50,510 in the Army, 431 in the navy and 2,461 in the Marines. There were 63,114 non-combat deaths, 55,868 in the Army, 6,856 in the Navy and 390 in the Marines. Wounded: 204,002 (Army: 193,663, Navy: 819, Marines: 9,520).[54] The figures include 279 deaths during the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1920.[153] The U.S. casualty figures were revised by the US Dept. of Defense in 1957.[33] The US Coast Guard lost 192 dead (111 deaths in action and 81 from other causes).[55][154]
  • United States War Dept. figures from 1924 for U.S. casualties were: total mobilized force 4,355,000; total casualties 350,300 (including killed and died from all causes 126,000; wounded 234,300 (including 14,500 died of wounds); prisoners and missing 4,500).[155]
  • In 1924, the U.S. government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 4,272,521 men mobilized and 67,813 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • United States civilian losses include 128 killed in the sinking of the RMS Lusitania (before the U.S. became a belligerent) as well as 629 Merchant Mariners killed in enemy submarine attacks on their merchant ships.[56]
Fallen German soldier in France, 1917

^u Austria-Hungary

  • The official history of Austria-Hungary's involvement in the First World War put total military dead at 1,494,200: (1,016,200 killed and 478,000 while prisoners of war).[58][66]
  • In 1924, the Austrian government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 9,000,000 men mobilized and 1,542,817 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Austro-Hungarian casualties are: total mobilized force 7,800,000; total casualties 7,020,000 (including killed and died 1,200,000; wounded 3,620,000; prisoners and missing 2,200,000).[33]
  • The UK War Office estimate for Austro-Hungarian casualties up to 31 December 1918: total casualties of 7,020,000 including 1,200,000 killed, 3,620,000 wounded and 2,200,000 prisoners.[21] Preliminary figures up to the end of May 1918, given by the U. K. Director of Military Intelligence give the following estimated totals: 800,000 killed, 1,800,000 prisoners/missing, and 3,200,000 wounded/sick, for a total of 5,800,000. An additional 80,000 killed, 320,000 wounded/sick, and 20,000 prisoners are estimated in the Austrian offensive against Italy from 1 June to 24 October 1918. At the same time there 72,500 casualties on the Balkans and Western Fronts. Finally, during the last Italian offensive the prisoners claimed by the Italians amounted to 448,000, while a further 30,000 Austro-Hungarians were killed and 50,000 wounded.[156]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Austro-Hungarian military deaths are 900,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • A study published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace estimated that there were 467,000 civilian deaths attributable to wartime privations caused by the allied blockade.[61]
  • A Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century estimated 120,000 civilian deaths due to military activity in Austro-Hungarian Galicia.[146]

^v Bulgaria

  • United States War Dept. figures for Bulgarian casualties are: total mobilized force 1,200,000; total casualties 266,919 (including Killed and died 87,500; wounded 152,930; Prisoners and missing 27,029).[33]
  • The UK War Office listed casualties reported by the Bulgarian War Office: 87,500 total dead (48,917 killed, 13,198 died of wounds, 888? accidentally killed, 24,497 died of disease); 13,729 missing; 152,390 wounded and 10,623 prisoners. The Bulgarian War Office stated that "losses during the retreat from sickness and privations were much greater than the figures they possess".[21]
  • In 1924, the Bulgarian government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 400,000 men mobilized and 32,772 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Bulgarian military deaths are 62,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • According to the Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis there were 100,000 civilian deaths due to wartime privations.[62]
German dead scattered in the wreck of a machine gun post near Guillemont, 1916

^w German Empire

  • In 1934 the official German war history listed 2,037,000 military dead.[66] Confirmed dead from all causes 1,936,897 (Army 1,900,876, Navy 34,836, Colonial troops 1,185); wounded 4,215,662; prisoners and missing 974,977 of which an estimated 100,000 were presumed dead.[65]
  • United States War Dept. figures for German casualties are: total mobilized force 11,000,000; total casualties 7,142,558 (including Killed and died 1,773,700; wounded 4,216,058; prisoners and missing 1,152,800).[33]
  • The UK War Office listed official German figures from 1921 of 1,808,545 killed and 4,247,143 wounded, exclusive of 14,000 African conscript deaths during the war.[20]
  • In 1924, the German government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 13,250,000 men mobilized and 2,000,000 dead and missing in World War I.[45]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total German military deaths are 1,796,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • The UK War Office listed official German figures from 1919 of 720 German civilians who were killed by allied air raids.[157]
  • The figures for civilian deaths due to the Blockade of Germany are disputed. The German Board of Public Health in December 1918 maintained that 763,000 German civilians died from malnutrition and disease caused by the blockade up until the end of December 1918.[69][70][158] A German academic study in 1928 put the death toll at 424,000.[159] A study sponsored by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 1940, estimated the German civilian death toll due to the war at over 600,000. Based on the above-mentioned German study of 1928, they maintained that "A thorough inquiry has led to the conclusion that the number of "civilian" deaths traceable to the war was 424,000, to which number must be added about 200,000 deaths caused by the influenza epidemic".[68]
Erzinjan[160]

^x Ottoman Empire

  • Based on his analysis of the non-published individual World War I campaign histories in the
    Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War. The casualties included total war dead of 771,844, (243,598 killed in action, 61,487 missing action and 466,759 deaths due to disease). The number of wounded was 763,753 and POWs 145,104.[161]
  • The Ottoman official casualty statistics published in 1922 were: total dead 325,000 including (killed in action 50,000, 35,000 died of wounds, 240,000 died of disease). Wounded 400,000. POWs, sick and missing 1,565,000 and total mobilized: 2,850,000.[162]
  • United States War Dept. figures for Ottoman casualties are: total mobilized force 2,850,000; total casualties 975,000 (including killed and died 325,000; wounded 400,000; prisoners and missing 250,000).[33]
  • The UK War Office figures for Ottoman casualties were: total accounted for 725,000 (killed 50,000, died of wounds 35,000, died of disease 400,000, wounded 400,000). Total unaccounted for: 1,565,000 (prisoners, deserters, invalids and missing).[163]
  • The Soviet demographer Boris Urlanis estimated that included in total Ottoman military deaths are 318,000 killed and died of wounds.[114]
  • Estimates of Ottoman civilian casualties in western sources range from 2,000,000 to 2,150,000.[38][164][165][166] A Russian historian in a 2004 handbook of human losses in the 20th century estimated total Ottoman civilian dead from 1915 to 1918 at about 3.2 million including the deaths of 2.2 million Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek victims of genocides committed by the Ottomans and 1,000,000 war-related civilian deaths in the Ottoman Empire due to famine and disease.(In current borders Turkey 500,000; Syria 160,000; Lebanon 110,000; Iraq 150,000; Israel/Palestine 35,000 and Jordan 20,000)[167] According to the BBC 200,000 persons perished in the Great Famine of Mount Lebanon during the war.[168]
  • Civilian casualties include the
    Assyrians and Greeks. Some scholars consider those events to be part of the same policy of extermination.[169][170][171] The overwhelming majority of historians as well as academic institutions on Holocaust and Genocide Studies recognize the Armenian Genocide.[172][173][174][175] "Despite the vast amount of evidence that points to the historical reality of the Armenian Genocide, eyewitness accounts, official archives, photographic evidence, the reports of diplomats, and the testimony of survivors, denial of the Armenian Genocide by successive regimes in Turkey has gone on from 1915 to the present".[176]

^y Denmark

  • Denmark was neutral in the war but Germany at that time included part of Danish Schleswig. Men from this area were conscripted into the German forces and their losses are included with German casualties. Over 700 Danish merchant sailors and fisherman died, mostly due to vessels torpedoed by German submarines.[75]
  • The Danish National Archives estimated the losses of Danes in the German forces at 6,000.[177]

^j Luxembourg

  • Luxembourg remained under German occupation during the war. The government, led by Paul Eyschen, chose to remain neutral. This strategy had the approval of Marie-Adélaïde, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg. Some citizens were conscripted into the German forces and others escaped to volunteer for the Allies. According to the Mobile Reference travel Guide, 3,700 Luxembourgeois citizens served in the French armed forces and 2,800 gave their lives in the war. They are commemorated at the Gëlle Fra in Luxembourg.[122]

^z Norway

  • Norway was neutral in the war but lost ships and merchant sailors in trading through the war zones. Norway is at times referred to as
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 1,180 persons dead and missing in World War I.[45]

^az Qajar Persia

  • Though
    Persian Central Government Gendarmerie and Khamseh Tribesmen. The presence of British and Russian troops led to blockades of food distribution, which culminated into the Persian famine of 1917–1919, which under most modern estimates caused 2 million deaths.[77]

^bz Sweden

  • Sweden was neutral in the war but lost ships and merchant sailors in trading through the war zones. In 1924, the Swedish government in a reply to a questionnaire from the
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, reported 800 persons dead and missing in World War I.[45]

^cz Albania

  • Albania was invaded and occupied by both Allied and Central powers despite its neutrality. During occupation, Albanians were massacred on numerous occasions, both inside and outside of Albania. The total number of Albanian deaths is approximately 70,000 according to Spencer Tucker, roughly 8.75% to 10% of the pre-war population.[78][79]

^dz Liechtenstein

  • Liechtenstein was neutral in the war yet held sympathies to the Central Powers, particularly Austria-Hungary. As such, a number of Liechtensteiner citizens volunteered for both the German and Austro-Hungarian armies, of which 4 were confirmed to have been killed.[81]
  • Foreign nationals living in Liechtenstein who were conscripted into the armies of their home countries are not counted.

Sources

Graves of French soldiers who died on the Ypres Salient, Ypres Necropole National, Ypres, Belgium
The India Gate in Delhi commemorates the Indian soldiers who died during World War I.
  • The
    Merchant Navy
    .
  • Statistics of the Military Effort of the British Empire During the Great War 1914–1920, The
    Merchant Navy dead of 14,661.[21]
    The losses of France, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Greece, Russia, the USA, Bulgaria, Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey were also listed in the UK War Office report.[20]
  • The official "final and corrected" casualty figures for British Army, including the Territorial Force (not including allied British Empire forces) were issued on 10 March 1921. The losses were for the period 4 August 1914 until 30 September 1919, included 573,507 "killed in action, died from wounds and died of other causes"; 254,176 missing less 154,308 released prisoners; for a net total of 673,375 dead and missing. There were 1,643,469 wounded also listed in the report.[178]
  • Sources for British Empire casualties are divergent and contradictory. The report of the War Office published in 1922 put the total number of British Empire "soldiers who lost their lives" at 908,371.[179] On a separate schedule the War Office listed the losses of the Royal Navy at 32,237 dead and missing.[180] It is implicit in this presentation that the figures for "soldiers who lost their lives" do not include the Royal Navy. However many published reference works list total British Empire(including the Dominions) losses at 908,371, it is implicit in these presentations that the figures for total losses include the Royal Navy.[8][9][10]
  • The War Office report puts the number of "soldiers who lost their lives" from the British Regular Army and Royal Naval Division at 702,410.
    Royal Naval Division and deaths outside of combat theaters.[182]
  • Casualties and Medical Statistics published in 1931.
    Gallipoli Campaign are for British forces only, since records for Dominion forces were incomplete.[106] Figures do not include the Royal Navy
    .
  • Military Casualties–World War–Estimated," Statistics Branch, General Staff, U.S. War Department, 25 February 1924. This report prepared by the U.S. War Department estimated the casualties of the belligerents in the war. The figures from this report are listed in the Encyclopædia Britannica and often cited in historical literature.[33]
  • Huber, Michel La Population de la France pendant la guerre, Paris 1931.[118] This study published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, lists official French government figures for war-related military deaths and missing of France and its colonies.
  • Mortara, Giorgo La Salute pubblica in Italia durante e dopo la Guerra, New Haven: Yale University Press 1925.[186] The official government Italian statistics on war dead are listed here. A brief summary of data from this report can be found online. go to Vol 13, No. 15
  • The demographer Boris Urlanis, analysis of the military dead for the belligerents in the war including his estimates for the combat related deaths included in total deaths.[114]
  • The Belgian government published statistics on their war losses in the Annuaire statistique de la Belgique et du Congo Belge 1915–1919[30]
  • Heeres-Sanitätsinspektion im Reichskriegsministeriums, Sanitätsbericht über das deutsche Heer, (Deutsches Feld- und Besatzungsheer), im Weltkriege 1914–1918, Volume 3, Sec. 1, Berlin 1934. The official German Army medical war history listed German losses.
  • Grebler, Leo and Winkler, Wilhelm The Cost of the World War to Germany and Austria-Hungary This study published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace details the losses of Austria-Hungary and Germany in the war.[187]
  • Erickson, Edward J.
    Ordered to Die: A History of the Ottoman Army in the First World War The authors estimates were made based data from official Ottoman sources.[188]
  • Hersch, Liebmann, La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron. The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. No 1. This study published in an academic journal, detailed the demographic impact of the war on France, the UK, Italy, Belgium, Portugal, Serbia, Romania and Greece. The total estimated increase in the number of civilian deaths due to the war was 2,171,000, not including an additional 984,000 Spanish flu deaths. These losses were due primarily wartime privations.[189]
  • Dumas, Samuel (1923). Losses of Life Caused by War published by Oxford University Press. This study detailed the impact of the war on the civilian population. The study estimated excess civilian deaths at: France (264,000 to 284,000), the UK (181,000), Italy (324,000) and Germany(692,000).[190]
  • In The
    International Labour Office, an agency of the League of Nations, published statistics on the military dead and missing for the belligerents in the war.[191]

The source of population data is:

See also

References

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  2. ^ "War Losses | International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)". Encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Twentieth Century Atlas – Death Tolls". necrometrics.com. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  4. ^ Military Casualties – World War – Estimated. Statistics Branch, GS, War Department, 25 February 1924
  5. ^ The War Office, Statistics of the Military Effort of the British Empire During the Great War 1914–1920
  6. ^ "Military Casualties of World War One". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  7. ^ "World War One Casualty and death tables". PBS. Archived from the original on 16 October 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  8. ^
  9. ^ pp. 269–70
  10. ^ a b World War I: People, Politics, and Power, published by Britannica Educational Publishing (2010) p. 219
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2014–2015 p. 38". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 24 May 2016.Figures include identified burials and those commemorated by name on memorials
  12. ^ "World Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, Poperinge, Ypres Salient Battlefields, Belgium (The Chinese Labour Corps was used to clear battlefields, dig graves, trenches and carry out other such tasks which were often difficult and dangerous.)". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  13. ^ a b "Mombasa African Memorial (The non-combatant porters, stevedores and followers of the Military Labour Corps 600,000. Almost 50,000 of these men were lost, killed in action died of sickness or wounds)". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  14. ^ a b The Long, Long Trail is a personal website written by Chris Baker (26 April 2015). "The Labour Corps of 1917–1918". Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  15. ^ a b "The Chinese Labour Corps at the Western Front (In all, nearly 2,000 men from the Chinese Labour Corps died during the First World War, some as a direct result of enemy action, or of wounds received in the course of their duties but many more in the influenza epidemic that swept Europe in 1918–19" (PDF). Retrieved 26 April 2015.
  16. ^ "Soldiers died in the great war, 1914–1919, London : Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1920–1921, 80 pts. in 17 v (pt. 80. Labour corps, Royal army ordnance corps, veterinary corps and pay corps, Channel Isles militia, corps of army schoolmasters, military mounted police, military foot police)". FamilySearch. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  17. ^ "International Encyclopedia of the First World War, Antoine Prost, War Losses". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  18. ^ . p. 479
  19. ^ a b "Deaths as a result of service with Australian units | Australian War Memorial". Awm.gov.au. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Great Britain. War Office (14 April 2018). "Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War, 1914–1920". London H.M. Stationery Off. Retrieved 14 April 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Great Britain. War Office (14 April 2018). "Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War, 1914–1920". London H.M. Stationery Off. Retrieved 14 April 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  22. ^ Canada, Statistics (31 March 2008). "Canada Year Book (CYB) Historical Collection". www65.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  23. ^ a b "Website Update – Nova Scotia Archives". novascotia.ca. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  24. ^ "Wartime Tragedies – The Halifax Explosion – Canada and the First World War". Canada and the First World War. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  25. ^ a b "Auckland War Memorial Museum". aucklandmuseum.com. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  26. ^ a b "Newfoundland and Labrador Studies". journals.hil.unb.ca. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  27. ^ (908 civilians killed in naval attacks)
  28. ^ Hersch, L., La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron- The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. pp. 47–61
  29. ^ a b c d e f Great Britain. War Office (14 April 2018). "Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War, 1914–1920". London H.M. Stationery Off. Retrieved 14 April 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  30. ^ a b c d Annuaire statistique de la Belgique et du Congo Belge 1915–1919. Bruxelles. 1922 p. 100 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Per Annuaire statistique de la Belgique et du Congo Belge 1915–1919 figure of 58,637 includes 2,620 colonial troops and 15,650 porters in Africa
  31. ^ Annuaire statistique de la Belgique et du Congo Belge 1915–1919. Bruxelles. 1922 p. 100
  32. ^ a b c Hersch, L., La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron- The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. pp. 59–62
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al Military Casualties-World War-Estimated," Statistics Branch, GS, War Department, 25 February 1924; cited in World War I: People, Politics, and Power, published by Britannica Educational Publishing (2010) p. 219
  34. ^ Huber, Michel (1931). La Population de la France pendant la guerre. Paris. p. 420. The figure includes killed, missing in action and died of wounds excluding died of disease
  35. ^ a b Official History of the Australian Army Medical Services, 1914–1918 Volume III – Special Problems and Services (1st edition, 1943) p. 870
  36. ^ a b Huber, Michel (1931). La Population de la France pendant la guerre. Paris p. 414
  37. ^ , p. 269
  38. ^ p. 292
  39. ^ a b Urlanis, Boris (1971). Wars and Population. Moscow p. 209
  40. ^ a b Hersch, L., La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron- The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. pp. 80–81
  41. ^ a b Mortara, G (1925). La Salute pubblica in Italia durante e dopo la Guerra. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 28–29
  42. ^ a b "War Losses (Italy); International Encyclopedia of the First World War (WW1)". Encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  43. ^ Mortara, G (1925). La Salute pubblica in Italia durante e dopo la Guerra. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 56–57
  44. ^ a b Hersch, L., La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron – The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. pp. 52–59
  45. ^
    OCLC 6445561
  46. ^ Martins, Ferreira (1934). Portugal na Grande Guerra. Lisboa: Empresa Editorial Ática.
  47. ^ a b Hersch, L., La mortalité causée par la guerre mondiale, Metron- The International Review of Statistics, 1927, Vol 7. pp. 61–64
  48. ^ .
  49. ^ a b c "РОССИЯ И СССР В ВОЙНАХ XX ВЕКА. Глава II. ПЕРВАЯ МИРОВАЯ ВОЙНА". RUS†SKY (in Russian). Retrieved 11 August 2018.
  50. ^ .(Civilians killed on Eastern Front)
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