Napoleonic Wars casualties
The casualties of the Napoleonic Wars, direct and indirect, are broken down below:
Note that the following deaths listed include both killed in action as well as deaths from other causes: diseases such as those from wounds; of starvation; exposure; drowning; friendly fire; and atrocities. Medical treatments were changed drastically at this time. 'Napoleon's Surgeon', Baron Dominique Jean Larrey, used horse-drawn carts as ambulances to quickly remove the wounded from the field of battle. This method became so successful that he was subsequently asked to organize the medical care for the 14 armies of the French Republic. With the partial exception of the United Kingdom, all of the states at the time did not keep especially accurate records, so calculating losses is to a certain extent a matter of conjecture.
France
- 306,000 French and 65,000 French allies killed in action, 764,000 French and 200,000 French allies wounded in action
- 1,000,000-1,200,000 French and allied total military dead
- 1,800,000 French and allies total dead, wounded, or missing
Jacques Houdaille later performed a more detailed study using the army's nominal rolls, taking a statistical sample of them at a scale of 1:500. According to his research, some 439,000 soldiers and officers from France were confirmed dead in combat or in hospital and 706,000 were declared missing. Houdaille then estimated, using a survey of civil registers, how many former soldiers returned home after 1815 without being registered by the military administration. Deducting these men, he concluded that some 900,000 to 1 million French soldiers died from 1800 to 1815, consistent with Bodart, Meynier, and Ulranis's shared range of 800,000 to 1,200,000 French dead for 1803-1815, and implying a roughly 2:1 rate of noncombat to combat deaths. Deaths were slanted heavily towards the later years of the conflict and roughly half of them happened in 1812-1814.
Naval, coastal, and colonial actions in 1803-1815 accounted for a total of 13,750 French and allied battle deaths, and therefore from 37,000 to 55,000 total military deaths. Inclusive of these, Bodart breaks down French and allied killed in action figures by year as follows:
- 1803-1804: 4,850
- 1805: 13,600
- 1806: 10,350
- 1807: 21,650
- 1808: 9,850
- 1809: 51,950
- 1810: 13,700
- 1811: 19,650
- 1812: 112,000
- 1813: 81,800
- 1814: 21,500
- 1815: 14,700Total: 370,750 killed in action
Peninsular War :
- 180,000–240,000 dead
- 91,000 killed in action
- 300,000 dead
- 100,000 killed in action
Coalition forces
The below figures only include casualties in major battles in the years of 1803 to 1815. Dumas suggests multiplying the former total by three to include minor battles and non-combat deaths. Urlanis states that Dumas was mistaken in his assumption and that the following figures refer to killed and wounded in those battles, rather than simply killed as Dumas had assumed.- Russian: 289,000 killed or wounded in major battles
- Prussian: 134,000 killed or wounded in major battles
- Austrian: 376,000 killed or wounded major battles
- Russia: 450,000 total military dead
- German : 400,000 total military dead
- Austrian: 200,000 total military dead
- Spanish: 300,000+ total military dead, more than 586,000 killed including civilians.
- Italian: 120,000 total military dead
- Portuguese: 50,000 total military dead, up to 250,000 dead or missing including civilians
- Other : 130,000 total military dead
- British: 311,806 total military dead or missing
- killed in action: 6,663
- shipwrecks, drownings, fire: 13,621
- wounds, disease: 72,102
British Army, 1804–1815:
- killed in action: 25,569
- died of wounds, accidents, disease: 193,851
- wounded and lived: 70,708
Other counts of total deaths
- Killed in battle: 560,000–1,869,000
- Total: 2,380,000–5,925,084
Total dead and missing
- 2,500,000 military personnel in Europe
- 1,000,000 civilians were killed in Europe and in rebellious French overseas colonies.
David Gates estimated that 5,000,000 died in the Napoleonic Wars. He does not specify if this number includes civilians or is just military.
Charles Esdaile says 5,000,000–7,000,000 died overall, including civilians. These numbers are subject to considerable variation. Erik Durschmied, in his book The Hinge Factor, gives a figure of 1.4 million French military deaths of all causes. Adam Zamoyski estimates that around 400,000 Russian soldiers died in the 1812 campaign alone. By contrast, Micheal Clodfelter gives the figure of 289,000 in Russian battles between 1805 and 1814. Civilian casualties in the 1812 campaign were probably comparable. Alan Schom estimates some 3 million military deaths in the Napoleonic wars. Common estimates of more than 500,000 French dead in Russia in 1812 and 250,000–300,000 French dead in Iberia between 1808 and 1814 give a total of at least 750,000, and to this must be added hundreds of thousands of more French dead in other campaigns—probably around 150,000 to 200,000 French dead in the German campaign of 1813, for example. Thus, it is fair to say that the estimates above are highly conservative.
Civilians deaths are impossible to accurately estimate. While military deaths are invariably put at between 2.5 million and 3.5 million, civilian death tolls vary from 750,000 to 3 million. Given the above estimates of military and civilian deaths, the total death count is between 3,250,000 and 6,500,000.