Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A summary of World War I casualties, complied by the U.S. Public Broadcasting Service, lists 1,773,700 German war dead, 4,216,058 wounded, 1,152,800 prisoners, for a total of 7,142,558 casualties, an amazing 54.6 percent of the 13,000,000 soldiers Germany mobilized for the war.

    • 1,500,000
    • 2,000,000
    • 1,700,000
    • 1,700,000
  2. Obviously, POWs have to be taken into account: they were soldiers, large numbers of whom died in the camps. In some cases, including them in the calculation of war losses makes a huge difference. For example, more than 180,000 Russian POWs died in German camps. It is therefore necessary to include them in any calculation of war losses.

  3. People also ask

  4. Jun 15, 2015 · Overall, the war resulted in a combined 37 million military and civilian casualties of which 17 million were killed and a further 20 million wounded. A pointless conflict that need not have happened, yet had been predicted 36 years earlier by German’s then Chancellor Otto Von Bismark (1878):

  5. Nov 17, 2020 · Epidemics affected a total of 3,188,000 people in the military personnel between 1914 and 1918. Further, according to this report, various lung infections and influenza led to the death of approximately 697,994 people during the war in the Austrian part of the empire.

  6. Jan 21, 2019 · When everything died down, the daughter of the cemetery gardener counted 612 people who died. However, according to other data from Demmin in those days, between 700 and 1,200 people committed suicide.

  7. Oct 16, 2018 · At precisely 10:45, a sniper’s bullet rang out killing the 40-year-old Trébuchon instantly. The message he carried read: “Muster at 11:30 for food.” More than 90 other men from the same unit died that morning in heavy fighting. It’s unclear how many Germans perished in the action.

  8. Jan 20, 2020 · Ultimately, the book is memorable, intriguing and thought-provoking, but readers are likely to come away still unclear on what exactly drove so many Germans to suicide in the spring of 1945. Promise Me You’ll Shoot Yourself: The Downfall of Ordinary Germans in 1945, by Florian Huber (London: Allen Lane, 2019; 304pp.; £20) Charlie Hall is ...

  1. People also search for