World War I resulted in approximately 16 million deaths, including about 9 million military personnel and 7 million civilians. In World War II, the death toll was significantly higher, with estimates ranging from 70 to 85 million casualties, including around 21 million military deaths and about 50 to 55 million civilian deaths. The numbers include both men, women, and children, with civilians suffering a disproportionate share of the losses, particularly during the Holocaust and other genocides.
6
The government in the UK (not the women) decided that children should be evacuated from large cities, especially from London, and accommodated in smaller communities in the countryside. That was quite a culture shock for the children and for the homes in which they were accomodated. After some months, many of the children drifted home to the cities.
The Holocaust was directed against ALL Jews - men, women and children, young, old, healthy and sick. So about half the six million slaughtered were female.
there were 5000 men killed and 200 women killed and 50 childern .
there job was to feed their children and look after their children to dress their children and , cook, clean and housework, also if you were rich you would attend balls and learn how to dance women had a very hard time some women died during child birth then if she did die the man would have a women right on his doorstep and he would marry again and have more children.
1 out of 6 first class children died. No second-class children died. 52 of 79 third-class children died. 4 out of 144 first-class women died. 13 out of 93 second-class women died. 89 out of 165 third-class women died. And 3 out of 23 women crew members died
From Third class women there were 67 people that died. There were 397 men that died. There were 52 children that died on the Titanic.
Of the 545 women-and-children sailing Titanic, 389 were survivors and 156 died.
Of the 545 women-and-children sailing Titanic, 156 died.
1,340 men died on Titanic (and 156 women and children).
Not including children, 106 out of 402 women passengers died
56 out of 109 children survived and 316 (20 crew members) out of 425 (23 crew members) women survived
There were 425 women:165 third class144 first class93 second class23 crewThere were 425 women:165 third class144 first class93 second class23 crew
It had a very big impact. they had to do all the work and take of the children. It was very emotional because the women who sent their husbands out to go to war and if they died then they would have tho live with it.
6
The government in the UK (not the women) decided that children should be evacuated from large cities, especially from London, and accommodated in smaller communities in the countryside. That was quite a culture shock for the children and for the homes in which they were accomodated. After some months, many of the children drifted home to the cities.
The Holocaust was directed against ALL Jews - men, women and children, young, old, healthy and sick. So about half the six million slaughtered were female.