I can only speak from a UK allied force point of view. But from what I know, there is a memorial in London that states every fatality in WWI of anyone who was in the British Armed Forces at the time whose death was originally recorded during the war. There are also war memorials in the majority of British and French towns which state those who died fighting during the war. There are also the cemeteries where some were brought back from the battle fields to be buried. In regards to the American, Russian or countries that came under the axis e.g. Germany and Austria/Hungary, I do not have any information.
list of ww1 wounded solders at leckhampton court
Turkey, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland.
Austria-Hungary, Germany, and sort of Spain
http://www.historyonthenet.com/WW1/versailles.htm
See website: WW1 for a itemized list
Private James Anderson 13th Battalion Royal Scots ( Broomhouse) 1914-1918 France
They are known as the Blessed or Thankful Villages - 32 in the original list published by Arthur Mee in the 1930s. Subsequent research has increased this number to 52 - there is a list on Wikipedia.
what was the ink made from in WW1
There were 23 countries involved in WW1 and there is a list with all of the casulties on the web link.
There were no air attacks on London in WW1.
1. Tanks2. Machine guns3. Poison gas4. Trench warfareActually, only the first of the above list were "new" technologies. All of the others were invented long beforehand, and were used in other conflicts well before WW1.A list of technologies first effectively employed in WW1; that is, while the underlying technology was, in most cases, developed before the war, WW1 is the first time a practical version of the technology was widely used.tanksairplanesindirect-fire artillery with correction by a forward observersubmarinestelephone and wireless communicationsSee the Related Question link for more.
when the ww1 ended and if they were very hurt