First World War: fatalities per country 1914-1918 | Statista (2024)

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Feb 2, 2024

The First World War saw the mobilization of more than 65 million soldiers, and the deaths of almost 15 million soldiers and civilians combined. Approximately 8.8 million of these deaths were of military personnel, while six million civilians died as a direct result of the war; mostly through hunger, disease and genocide. The German army suffered the highest number of military losses, totaling at more than two million men. Turkey had the highest civilian death count, largely due to the mass extermination of Armenians, as well as Greeks and Assyrians. Varying estimates suggest that Russia may have suffered the highest number of military and total fatalities in the First World War. However, this is complicated by the subsequent Russian Civil War and Russia's total specific to the First World War remains unclear to this day.

Proportional deaths

In 1914, Central and Eastern Europe was largely divided between the empires of Austria-Hungary, Germany and Russia, while the smaller Balkan states had only emerged in prior decades with the decline of the Ottoman Empire. For these reasons, the major powers in the east were able to mobilize millions of men from across their territories, as Britain and France did with their own overseas colonies, and were able to utilize their superior manpower to rotate and replace soldiers, whereas smaller nations did not have this luxury. For example, total military losses for Romania and Serbia are around 12 percent of Germany's total military losses; however, as a share of their total mobilized forces these countries lost roughly 33 percent of their armies, compared to Germany's 15 percent mortality rate. The average mortality rate of all deployed soldiers in the war was around 14 percent.

Unclarity in the totals

Despite ending over a century ago, the total number of deaths resulting from the First World War remains unclear. The impact of the Influenza pandemic of 1918, as well as various classifications of when or why fatalities occurred, has resulted in varying totals with differences ranging in the millions. Parallel conflicts, particularly the Russian Civil War, have also made it extremely difficult to define which conflicts the fatalities should be attributed to. Since 2012, the totals given by Hirschfeld et al in Brill's Encyclopedia of the First World War have been viewed by many in the historical community as the most reliable figures on the subject.

Number of military and civilian fatalities during the First World War, per country or world power, between 1914 and 1918

CharacteristicMilitaryCivilian
Germany*2,037,000700,000
Turkey*325,0002,000,000
Russia*1,811,000500,000
France1,327,000600,000
Austria-Hungary*1,460,000400,000
Great Britain and Ireland*750,000600,000
Italy460,000700,000
Serbia275,000300,000
Romania*250,000300,000
Bulgaria88,000300,000
British colonies180,000-
United States*117,000-
Belgium38,00050,000
French colonies78,000-
Greece25,000-
Montenegro13,000-
Portugal7,000-
Japan1,000-

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First World War: fatalities per country 1914-1918 | Statista (2024)
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