15 million
About 50,000 on both sides.
None. It was a naval battle.
On both sides, they usually died. There was next to nothing in the way of medical supplies.
A lot. Pigs were used to feed the troops on both sides. And there were many, many troops.
On both sides approximately 11,000 died on D-Day. German death figures are difficult, but over 4,400 Allied soldiers died
about 7-10 million people died in world war one
about 5
Nothing, the two cultures were separated both geographically (the are from different sides of the world) and temporally (the Mycenaeans had died out well before the Mayans).
Figures are difficult. The military of both sides only reported "casualties" . Also many were wounded D-Day, but died later.
About 50,000 on both sides.
15,564 Canadian soldiers died at Passchendale along with 15,000 other combatants.
None. It was a naval battle.
ABOUT 75,000 soldiers on both sides. See the link below.
The fact that I remember best about the casualties (Not dead) at Shiloh is that the ~23,000 on both sides were more than those in all the wars the US had fought to that date. It was a real shock to those people on both sides who thought it would be a short war...
All the fighting men died; only non-combatants were permitted to leave.
58,159 U.S. soldiers died in the war. 3 to 4 million Vietnamese from both sides died and over 1.5 million from other countries also died.
The Canadian government runs a website Virtual War Memorial. Check the link below. It is a searchable database of all Canadian combatants who died.