450 ? was 700 when I joined 10% made up of no uk troops
The 39th Battalion was a regiment in the Australian Army. The group fought in both World Wars and by the time it was disbanded had, had 1666 men serve in it. There were only 32 men to survive the 39th Battalion, seven officers and 25 others.
there are 999,999,999 million men in the British army
around 2400 men
Roughly 700 men.
For the US Army, during the Vietnam War, a battalion was about 600 men. The US Marine Corps will be similar in organization (during the Vietnam era).
The Mormon Battalion brought a few women along as laundresses and cooks. Many of these women were the wives of men in the battalion.
On July 16, 1846, 541 men enlisted in the army and were organized into what was dubbed the Mormon Battalion. http://www.mormonwiki.com/Mormon_Battalion has full info.
You'll not always get an accurate answer for those statistical questions, for example a Mechanized Infantry battalion in Vietnam was roughly 900 men, a tank battalion in Vietnam was about 570 men, and a straight leg outfit (regular infantry) averaged about 600 men (some sources will state 700 or 800 men). Airborne battalion's in Vietnam averaged about 600 men (or more) per battalion.
IF you mean battalion...500-1000
None, Sword was all units of the British Army and British Commando forces.
Military units range in size from a Fire Team to an Army, from hundreds to thousands of men. Army Corps Division Regiment Brigade Battalion Company Platoon Squad Fire Team
A squad consisted of 10-12 men, a platoon was 40 men, a company was 150-200 men, a battalion was 600-1000 men, a regiment was around 2000-3000 men, a division was 10,000-15,000 men, an army was around 30,000 to 45,000 men, and army groups were of many different sizes. All of these figures are somewhat relative.