Special Report

Countries That Suffered the Most Civilian Casualties in World War II

RIA Novosti archive, image #2153 / Boris Kudoyarov / CC-BY-SA 3.0 / Wikimedia Commons

By one estimate, as many as 45 million civilians perished in humankind’s worst conflict, far more than the actual military deaths on the battlefield. As all-consuming as the war was, civilians in some countries fared much worse than others. Joseph Stalin, the leader of the Soviet Union during the Second World War, reportedly once said that “a single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic.” World War II produced some of history’s grimmest statistics.

To find the countries that suffered the most civilian deaths during World War II, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed casualty figures from The National WWII Museum, Britannica, the museum Centre Européen Robert Schuman, and World War II Database. We combined the different sources estimates and ordered countries by the lower estimate of civilian deaths due to military activities (as much as was clear). Total deaths include military deaths and civilian casualties from other war-related causes such as famine and disease. Estimates can vary widely between sources.

While there have always been civilian casualties in war, from about the time of the American Civil War, civilian populations suffered even more from the direct effects of warfare. Since that time, armed conflict has involved more civilian populations, because of, among other factors, artillery that can reach longer distances and the advent of air power. (Some of the largest armies fought in WWII. These are the largest armies in history.)

Terror bombing by the German Luftwaffe leveled cities such as Rotterdam and Athens. When the Allies gained air superiority, they laid waste to German and Japanese cities. In Japan, the U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey discovered that 30% of the urban population had lost its homes.

There also were ideological reasons for higher population deaths in World War II. Deaths as a percentage of the population by some estimates exceeded 10% in Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, and the Soviet Union. These nations had high Jewish populations that were killed in the Nazi quest of extermination of the Jews. Germany killed millions of non-Jewish Slavic people in Eastern Europe, believing that they (like the Jews) were subhuman. Other countries such as Greece and Yugoslavia suffered high civilian deaths due to German reprisals against partisan activity.

In the Pacific, Japan, fueled by nationalist ambitions to dominate the region, brutally occupied  countries such as Burma, the Philippines, Dutch East India, and large parts of China. It was in China that Japan committed one of the worst crimes against civilians during the “Nanjing Massacre” in which Japanese soldier killed an estimated 150,000 male “war prisoners” and massacred an additional 50,000 male civilians. (Find out which is the deadliest battle in world history.)

Click here to see the countries that suffered the most civilian casualties in WWII

 

bbsferrari / iStock via Getty Images

25. Belgium
> Civilian deaths: 74,000 – 76,000
> Military deaths: 12,000 – 12,100
> Total deaths: 86,100 – 88,000
> Est. population 1939: 8,387,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.02% – 1.05%

[in-text-ad]

Walter Mittelholzer / Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

24. Ethiopia
> Civilian deaths: 85,000 – 95,000
> Military deaths: 5,000 – 15,000
> Total deaths: 10,0000
> Est. population 1939: 17,700,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 0.6%

Joel Carillet / iStock via Getty Images

23. Philippines
> Civilian deaths: 91,000 – 943,000
> Military deaths: 27,000 – 57,000
> Total deaths: 118,000 – 1,000,000
> Est. population 1939: 16,000,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 3.5%

EOSdude / iStock via Getty Images

22. Malaya & Singapore
> Civilian deaths: 100,000
> Military deaths:
> Total deaths: 100,000
> Est. population 1939: 5,118,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.95%

[in-text-ad-2]

Stefan Rotter / iStock via Getty Images

21. Austria
> Civilian deaths: 123,700
> Military deaths: 261,000
> Total deaths: 384,700
> Est. population 1939: 6,653,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 5.8%

20. Italy
> Civilian deaths: 152,900 – 155,600
> Military deaths: 242,232 – 319,200
> Total deaths: 395,000 – 514,000
> Est. population 1939: 44,394,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.1% – 1.2%

[in-text-ad]

Lazaros Papandreou / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

19. Greece
> Civilian deaths: 171,800 – 780,000
> Military deaths: 20,000 – 35,000
> Total deaths: 300,000 – 807,000
> Est. population 1939: 7,222,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 4.2% – 11.2%

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

18. Netherlands
> Civilian deaths: 187,300 – 284,000
> Military deaths: 7,900 – 17,000
> Total deaths: 208,000 – 301,000
> Est. population 1939: 8,729,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 2.4% – 3.4%

unknown/uncredited - Matatias Carp, Cartea neagră. Suferinţele evreilor din România: 1940—1944. I: Legionarii şi rebeliunea, Dacia Traiană (Socec), Bucharest, 1947 (accessible through DacoRomanica (Bucharest City Library) / Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

17. Romania
> Civilian deaths: 200,000 – 533,000
> Military deaths: 300,000
> Total deaths: 500,000 – 833,000
> Est. population 1939: 15,970,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 3.1%

[in-text-ad-2]

andriano_cz / iStock via Getty Images

16. Czechoslovakia
> Civilian deaths: 215,000 – 320,000
> Military deaths: 10,000 – 46,000
> Total deaths: 225,000 – 345,000
> Est. population 1939: 14,612,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.5% – 2.4%

photoguns / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

15. Latvia
> Civilian deaths: 220,000 – 220,000
> Military deaths: 30,000
> Total deaths: 250,000
> Est. population 1939: 1,994,500
> Deaths as pct. of population: 12.5%

[in-text-ad]

chayuti / iStock via Getty Images

14. Burma
> Civilian deaths: 250,000 – 250,000
> Military deaths: 2,600
> Total deaths: 252,600
> Est. population 1939: 16,119,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.6%

Konoplytska / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

13. Hungary
> Civilian deaths: 264,000 – 664,000
> Military deaths: 200,000 – 300,000
> Total deaths: 464,000 – 864,000
> Est. population 1939: 9,129,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 5.1% – 9.5%

12. Dutch East Indies
> Civilian deaths: 300,000 – 4,000,000
> Military deaths: 11,500
> Total deaths: 3,000,000 – 4,000,000
> Est. population 1939: 69,435,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 4.3% – 5.8%

[in-text-ad-2]

diegograndi / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

11. Lithuania
> Civilian deaths: 345,000 – 353,000
> Military deaths: 25,000
> Total deaths: 353,000 – 370,000
> Est. population 1939: 2,575,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 13.7% – 14.4%

Archive Holdings Inc. / The Image Bank via Getty Images

10. France
> Civilian deaths: 350,000 – 390,000
> Military deaths: 213,324 – 217,600
> Total deaths: 563,000 – 600,000
> Est. population 1939: 41,680,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.4%

[in-text-ad]

USS San Francisco (CA-38) photographer - Official U.S. Navy Photograph. From National Archives collection (Photo #: 80-G-391464). Transferred from en.wikipedia to Commons. / Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

9. Korea
> Civilian deaths: 378,000 – 533,000
> Military deaths:
> Total deaths: 378,000 – 533,000
> Est. population 1939: 24,326,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 1.6% – 2.2%

Archive Holdings Inc. / The Image Bank via Getty Images

8. Japan
> Civilian deaths: 550,000 – 800,000
> Military deaths: 1,300,000 – 2,300,000
> Total deaths: 1,972,000 – 3,100,000
> Est. population 1939: 71,380,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 2.8% – 4.3%

Dragoncello / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

7. Yugoslavia
> Civilian deaths: 554,000 – 1,400,000
> Military deaths: 305,000 – 446,000
> Total deaths: 1,000,000 – 1,700,000
> Est. population 1939: 15,490,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 6.5% – 11.0%

[in-text-ad-2]

rglinsky / iStock via Getty Images

6. Germany
> Civilian deaths: 780,000 – 8,800,000
> Military deaths: 3,500,000 – 5,533,000
> Total deaths: 4,200,000 – 8,800,000
> Est. population 1939: 69,300,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 6.1% – 12.7%

Unknown author - © VARCHIV · Mesarchives · Nosarchives Le Catalogue général de la Bibliothèque nationale de France La maison d'édition "Politique nationale-Vérité" du Viêtnam / Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

5. French Indochina
> Civilian deaths: 1,000,000 – 1,500,000
> Military deaths:
> Total deaths: 1,000,000 – 2,200,000
> Est. population 1939: 24,664,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 4.1% – 8.1%

[in-text-ad]

pilesasmiles / iStock Unreleased via Getty Images

4. India
> Civilian deaths: 1,413,000 – 2,413,000 (mostly due to famine)
> Military deaths: 24,338 – 87,000
> Total deaths: 1,500,000 – 3,080,000
> Est. population 1939: 377,800,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 0.6%

3. Soviet Union
> Civilian deaths: 4,500,000 – 15,200,000
> Military deaths: 8,668,000 – 11,400,000
> Total deaths: 18,000,000 – 27,000,000
> Est. population 1939: 188,793,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 9.5% – 14.3%

slowcentury / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

2. Poland
> Civilian deaths: 5,360,000 – 5,820,000
> Military deaths: 123,178 – 240,000
> Total deaths: 5,600,000 – 6,000,000
> Est. population 1939: 34,849,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 16.9% – 17.2%

[in-text-ad-2]

DenGuy / iStock via Getty Images

1. China
> Civilian deaths: 7,357,000 – 17,000,000
> Military deaths: 1,310,000 – 4,000,000
> Total deaths: 15,000,000 – 20,000,000
> Est. population 1939: 517,568,000
> Deaths as pct. of population: 2.9% – 3.9%

Is Your Money Earning the Best Possible Rate? (Sponsor)

Let’s face it: If your money is just sitting in a checking account, you’re losing value every single day. With most checking accounts offering little to no interest, the cash you worked so hard to save is gradually being eroded by inflation.

However, by moving that money into a high-yield savings account, you can put your cash to work, growing steadily with little to no effort on your part. In just a few clicks, you can set up a high-yield savings account and start earning interest immediately.

There are plenty of reputable banks and online platforms that offer competitive rates, and many of them come with zero fees and no minimum balance requirements. Click here to see if you’re earning the best possible rate on your money!

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.