List of wars involving Germany

This is a list of wars involving Germany from 962. It includes the Holy Roman Empire, Confederation of the Rhine, the German Confederation, the North German Confederation, the German Empire, the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, the German Democratic Republic (DDR, "East Germany") and the present Federal Republic of Germany (BRD, until German reunification in 1990 known as "West Germany").

  Victory - 75
  Defeat - 27
  Another result - 22

Holy Roman Empire (962–1806) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Emperor/King
Otto I's raid on Poland (963)   Holy Roman Empire   Duchy of Poland Victory Otto I
German–Danish War of 974   Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Denmark
  Norwegian vasal
Victory Otto II
Franco-German War of 978-980   Holy Roman Empire West Francia Status quo ante bellum Otto II
Otto II's raid on Poland   Holy Roman Empire   Civitas Schinesghe Defeat Otto II
Slavic revolt of 983   Holy Roman Empire Wends

Lutici Obotrite

Defeat Otto II
Polish-Saxon Invasion of Veleti (985)   Duchy of Poland
  Holy Roman Empire
Veleti Victory Otto III
Polish–Bohemian War (990)   Duchy of Poland
  Holy Roman Empire
  Duchy of Bohemia Victory Otto III
Polish-German invasion of Veleti (992)   Duchy of Poland
  Holy Roman Empire
Veleti Victory Otto III
Polish-German invasion of Obotrites (995)   Duchy of Poland
  Holy Roman Empire
Obotrites Victory Otto III
German–Polish War (1003–1018)   Holy Roman Empire   Duchy of Poland Peace of Bautzen Henry II
Bolesław I's intervention in the Kievan succession crisis (1015–1019)   Duchy of Poland

 Kingdom of Hungary
 Holy Roman Empire
Pechenegs

Kievan Rus Victory
  • Temporary victory for Sviatopolk and Boleslaw
  • Polish sack of Kiev
Henry II
German–Polish War (1028–1031)  Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Poland
  Kingdom of Hungary (1029–1031)
Victory Conrad II
Emperor Conrad II's military campaign against Hungary

(1030–1031)

 Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Hungary (1029–1031) Defeat
  • The Hungarians occupied Vienna
Conrad II
German-Hungarian Wars (1042–1043)  Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Hungary (1029–1031) Victory Henry III
Henry III's military campaign against Hungary (1044)   Holy Roman Empire

  Peter Orseolo and his allies

  The army of King Samuel Aba Victory
  • Defeat of Samuel Aba, restoration of Peter
Henry III

War between King Peter and Prince Andrew (1046)

  King Peter's army

  Holy Roman Empire

  Prince Andrew's army

Kievan Rus'

Defeat Henry III
Emperor Henry III's military campaigns against Hungary (1051–1052)   Holy Roman Empire

  Duchy of Bohemia

 Kingdom of Hungary Defeat Henry III
German-Hungarian border War (1056–1058)   Holy Roman Empire  Kingdom of Hungary

Stalemate

  • Treaty of Marchfeld
Henry IV
Civil War between King Andrew I and his brother, Prince Bela (1060)   King Andrew I's army

  Holy Roman Empire

  Prince Béla's army

Kingdom of Poland

Defeat Henry IV
German invasion of Hungary (1063)   Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Hungary Victory Henry IV
Saxon revolt of 1073–1075   Holy Roman Empire   Duchy of Saxony Victory
  • Rebellion suppressed
Henry IV
Saxon revolt of 1077–1088   Holy Roman Empire German rebels Victory Henry IV
German-Flemish war   Holy Roman Empire County of Flanders Status quo ante bellum Henry V
Henry V's expedition to Poland   Holy Roman Empire
  Duchy of Bohemia
  Kingdom of Poland Defeat Henry V
War of Bohemian Succession (1125–1140)   Holy Roman Empire   Duchy of Bohemia Defeat Lothair III
Wars of the Guelphs and Ghibellines
  • 1125–1186
  • 1216–1392
Ghibellines'
1st phase

Guelphs'
1st phase

1st phase:Peace of Constance (1186) 2nd phase:Stalemate (1392)

Frederick I

Barbarossa

Frederick II

Henry VII

Louis IV

Wendish Crusade (1147) Victory
  • March of Brandenburg reconquers Havelberg, County of Holstein expels its Wends
Conrad III of Germany
Second Crusade

(1147–1150)

  Holy Roman Empire

Other Crusaders

Emirate of Damascus

other Muslim and Pagan entities in East Central Europe, Iberia and the Near East.

Indecisive
  • Victories in East Central Europe and Iberia. Defeat in the Holy Land.
Conrad III of Germany
Frederick I's expedition to Głogów   Holy Roman Empire
  Duchy of Bohemia
  Kingdom of Poland
  Cumania
Old Prussians
Victory Frederick I Barbarossa
Third Crusade

(1189–1192)

  Holy Roman Empire

Other Crusaders

Ayyubids Victory Frederick I Barbarossa
Henry VI's conquest of Sicily   Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Sicily Victory Henry VI
Crusade of 1197   Holy Roman Empire   Ayyubid Sultanate Victory Henry VI
Fourth Crusade

(1202–1204)

Crusaders from: In Europe: Victory Otto IV
Prussian Crusade   Holy Roman Empire

Other Crusaders

Baltic pagans:'

Allies of Prussians:

Victory
  • Teutonic Knights gain control of Prussia
Frederick II
Anglo-French War (1213–1214)   Angevin Empire

  Holy Roman Empire

  County of Flanders   County of Boulogne

  Kingdom of France Defeat Otto IV
Fifth Crusade Crusaders:

Levant:

Military orders:

Muslim forces: Defeat Frederick II
Sixth Crusade

(1227–1229)

  Holy Roman Empire

including in Personal Union:

Ayyubids Victory
  • Crusaders gains Jerusalem back
Frederick II
War of the Lombards   Holy Roman Empire
  Pro-Imperial faction in the Kingdom of Jerusalem


  Principality of Antioch and County of Tripoli
  Republic of Pisa
  Knights Hospitaller
  Teutonic Knights

  Kingdom of Cyprus
  Anti-Imperial faction in the Kingdom of Jerusalem


  Republic of Genoa
  Knights Templar
  Papacy

Defeat Frederick II
Mongol incursions in the Holy Roman Empire   Holy Roman Empire   Golden Horde Victory Frederick II
Great Interregnum[3]

1245/50–1273/5

  Hohenstaufen party   Welf party Compromise

?

Hussite Wars

(1419–1434)

Catholic Church, Crusades and Loyalists:

  Holy Roman Empire

Bohemian Wars:

Hussite Movement

Indecisive
  • Eventual defeat for Radical Hussites, Victory for Moderate Hussites and Catholics
Sigismund
Austrian–Hungarian War (1477–1488)   Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Hungary Defeat
  • The Black Army captures Vienna
Frederick III
Austrian–Hungarian War (1490–1491)   Holy Roman Empire   Kingdom of Hungary Victory Frederick III
Italian War of 1494–1498 1494:
  Kingdom of Naples
1495:
League of Venice
  Papal States
  Republic of Venice
  Kingdom of Naples
  Kingdoms of Spain
  Duchy of Milan
  Holy Roman Empire
  Republic of Florence

  England (1496–98)
  Margraviate of Mantua
  Republic of Genoa

  Kingdom of France

  Duchy of Milan (before 1495)
  Duchy of Ferrara (officially neutral)

Victory Maximilian I
Swabian War

(1499)

  Holy Roman Empire

Swabian League

  Old Swiss Confederacy

Three Leagues of the Grisons

Defeat Maximilian I
Italian War of 1521–1526   Holy Roman Empire
  Spain
  England
  Papal States (1521–1523 and 1525–1526)
  France

  Republic of Venice
  Papal States (1524–1525)
  Marquisate of Saluzzo

Victory Charles V
Knights' War   Holy Roman Empire   Brotherly Conventention of Knight's Victory Charles V
German Peasants' War   Holy Roman Empire
Swabian League
Peasant army Victory
  • Rebellion suppressed
Charles V
War of the League of Cognac Pro-Habsburg: League of Cognac: Victory Charles V
Little War in Hungary   Holy Roman Empire

  Royal Hungary
  Kingdom of Croatia
  Spain
  Papal States

  Ottoman Empire
  John Szapolyai's Hungarian kingdom
  Kingdom of France
Defeat Charles V
Conquest of Tunis (1535)   Spanish Empire

  Holy Roman Empire


  Kingdom of Portugal
  Papal States
  Knights of Malta

  Ottoman Empire
  Kingdom of France
Victory
  • Sack of Tunis
  • Muley Hassan of the Hafsid dynasty restored as client ruler of Tunis and Spanish-Imperial tributary.
Charles V
Italian War of 1542–1546   Holy Roman Empire
  Saxony
  Brandenburg
  Spain
  England
  France
  Ottoman Empire

  Jülich-Cleves-Berg
  Denmark-Norway (1542–1543)

Inconclusive Charles V
Schmalkaldic War

1546–1547

  Holy Roman Empire   Habsburg Spain
  Habsburg Hungary
Supported by:
  Papal States
Schmalkaldic League:

Supported by:
  England

Victory Charles V
Italian War of 1551–1559 Victory Charles V
Second Schmalkaldic War

March–August 1552

Imperial–Habsburg forces

  Holy Roman Empire

Protestant princes Protestant victory Charles V
Long Turkish War

(1593–1606)

  Ottoman Empire Inconclusive Rudolph II
War of the Jülich Succession

(1609–1614)

1609–1610:
  Holy Roman Empire
  Principality of Strasbourg
  Prince-Bishopric of Liège
  Catholic League
1609–1610:
  Margraviate of Brandenburg
  Palatinate-Neuburg
  United Provinces
  Kingdom of France
Protestant Union
Treaty of Xanten Rudolph II

Matthias

War of the Montferrat Succession Supporting the Duke of Mantua:
  Duchy of Mantua
  Montferrat
  Tuscany (1613)
  Spanish Empire
  France (1613–14)
  Holy Roman Empire
  Kingdom of Naples
  Genoa
Supporting the Duke of Savoy:
  Duchy of Savoy
  Montferrat
  Tuscany (1613)
  France (1615–17)
  Venice
Victory Matthias
Uskok War   Holy Roman Empire
  Kingdom of Croatia
  Spain
  Republic of Venice
  Dutch Republic
  England
Treaty of Madrid (1617)
  • Many Uskok pirates executed or exiled; Austrian garrison installed to check Uskoks.
Matthias
Thirty Years' War

1618–1648

Imperial alliance prior to 1635[a]

Post–1635 Peace of Prague

Anti-Imperial alliance prior to 1635[b] Post–1635 Peace of Prague Defeat
Consequences
Ferdinand III
Upper Austrian peasant war of 1626   Holy Roman Empire
  Bavaria
Austrian Rebels Victory Adam Von Herberstorff
Austro-Turkish War

(1663–1664)

League of the Rhine:

  Kingdom of France
  Holy Roman Empire

  Piedmont-Savoy
  Kingdom of Hungary
  Kingdom of Croatia
  Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

  Ottoman Empire Peace of Vasvár Leopold I
Franco-Dutch War

(1672–1678)

Treaty of Nijmegen Leopold I
War of the Reunions   Spain
Co-belligerent:
  Holy Roman Empire
  Genoa
  France Defeat Leopold I
Great Turkish War

(1683–1699)

  Holy Roman Empire

  Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

  Tsardom of Russia

  Republic of Venice

  Spanish Empire

  Ottoman Empire
Victory
  • Treaty of Karlowitz
  • The Habsburg monarchy wins lands in Hungary, the Principality of Transylvania and the Balkans.
  • Poland-Lithuania captures Podolia.
  • Russia captures the port of Azov.
  • Venice captures Morea and inner Dalmatia.
Leopold I
Nine Years War

(1688–1697)

Grand Alliance:
  Dutch Republic
  England
  Scotland
  Holy Roman Empire
  Spanish Empire
  Savoyard state
Victory Leopold I
War of the Spanish Succession

(1701–1714)

Indecisive

  • Treaties of Utrecht (1713), Rastatt (1714) and Baden (1714)
  • Philip is recognized as King of Spain, but once more renounces any claim to the throne of France
  • Austria gains the crowns of Naples and Sardinia as well as the duchy of Milan and the Spanish Netherlands
  • Savoy gains the crown of Sicily which is soon to be exchanged with Sardinia
Leopold I

Joseph I Charles VI

Rákóczi's War of Independence
Foreign mercenaries:
  • Swiss
  • Germans
  • Italians
  • Spaniards
Victory Leopold I

Joseph I Charles VI

War of the Polish Succession

(1733–1735)

Treaty of Vienna
  • Augustus III ascends the throne
  • Bourbon and Habsburg territorial gains
Charles VI
Liège Revolution

(1789–1791)

  Prince-Bishops of Liège

  Holy Roman Empire

Supported by:   Prussia (1789–1790)

  Liège rebels

  Republic of Liège (1789–1791)
  France (from 1792)

Supported by:   Prussia (from July 1790)[6]

Defeat
  • Foundation of Liège Republic (1789);

reversion to Prince-Bishopric(1791); annexation by France (1795)

Leopold II
War of the First Coalition
(mostly the Low Countries theatre)

1792–1797

First Coalition:
  Dutch Republic
  Holy Roman Empire

  Great Britain
  Spanish Empire (1793–95)

  Kingdom of the French (1792)
  French First Republic (from 1792)

  Spanish Empire (1796–97)

Defeat Francis II

Confederation of the Rhine (1806–1813) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Protector
War of the Fourth Coalition (1806-1807)   France

  Spain


  Polish rebels

Fourth Coalition:' Victory Napoleon I
Peninsular War

(1808-1814)


  Denmark-Norway (Evacuation of La Romana's division)

Defeat

Napoleon I
War of the Fifth Coalition

(1809)

  France Fifth Coalition:

Rebel groups

Victory

Napoleon I
French Invasion of Russia   France'

French allies:
  Austria
  Prussia
  Denmark-Norway[8][9]

  Russia Defeat Napoleon I
War of the Sixth Coalition

(1813-1814)

Original coalition

After the Armistice of Pläswitz

After the Battle of Leipzig

After 20 November 1813

After January 1814

  France

Until January 1814


Co-belligerent:

  United States (War of 1812 only)

Victory

Confederation of the Rhine dissolved

German states and Austria unite to form the German Confederation

Netherlands gains independence

Norway ceded to The King of Sweden

Napoleon I

German Confederation (1815–1866) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Head of the Presiding Power
War of the Seventh Coalition

(1815)

Victory Francis I
German revolutions of 1848–1849   German Confederation German Empire (1848–1849)

German Revolutionaries

Victory
  • Establishment of German state and introduction of liberal constitution
  • Dissolution of German Confederation
Ferdinand I

Archduke John of Austria

Frederick William IV

First Schleswig War (Part of the revolutions of 1848)   German Confederation   Denmark
Supported by:
  Russian Empire
  United Kingdom
  Sweden-Norway
  France
Defeat Ferdinand I of Austria

Franz Joseph I of Austria

Second Schleswig War   Kingdom of Prussia
  Austrian Empire
  Kingdom of Denmark Victory Otto von Bismarck
Austro-Prussian War

(1866)

  Austrian-led German Confederation states Prussian-led German states

  Italy

Italy

Victory Francis Joseph I

North German Confederation (1867–1870/71) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Chancellor
Franco-Prussian War

(1870–1871)

  North German Confederation

  German Empire

(after 18 January 1871)

  French Third Republic (Government of National Defense) Victory Wilhelm I

Post-unification (1871–present) edit

German Empire (1871–1918) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Reichskanzler (Imperial chancellor) German losses
Nauruan Civil War
(1878–1888)
Supporters of King Aweida
  Germany
Anti-Aweida Rebels Victory
?
First Samoan Civil War
(1886–1894)
  Supporters of Laupepa
  Germany
  Supporters of Mata'afa Compromise
Abushiri Revolt
(1888–1889)
  Germany
  United Kingdom
Arab Rebels led by al-Harthi Victory
  • Rebellion put down
?
Hehe Rebellion
(1891–1898)
  Germany Hehe Victory
  • Rebellion put down
?
Bafut Wars
(1891–1907)
  Germany Fondom of Bafut Victory
?
Cretan Revolt
(1897–1898)
  Cretan revolutionaries
  Kingdom of Greece
  British Empire
  France
  Italy
  Russian Empire
  Austria-Hungary (until April 12, 1898)
  German Empire (until March 16, 1898)
  Ottoman Empire Victory
  • Establishment of the Cretan State.
  • Withdraw of Ottoman forces from Crete.
?
Second Samoan Civil War
(1898–1899)
  Supporters of Mata'afa
  Germany
  Supporters of Tanumafili I
  United States
  United Kingdom
Compromise
?
Boxer Rebellion
(1899–1901)
  Russia
  Japan
  United Kingdom
  France
  United States
  Germany
  Austria-Hungary
  Italy
  Yihetuan Movement
  China
Victory
?
Adamawa Wars
(1899–1907)
  Germany
  United Kingdom
  Sokoto Caliphate
  Mahdist rebels
Victory
?
Venezuelan Crisis
(1902–1903)
  United Kingdom
  Germany
  Italy
  Venezuela Compromise
  • Venezuelan debt dispute resolved
?
Kavango Uprising[14]
(1903)
  German Empire Kavango rebels Victory
  • Uprising suppressed
?
Herero Wars
(1904–1908)
  Germany Herero
Namaqua
Victory
1,541 dead[15]
Maji Maji Rebellion
(1905–1908)
  Germany Qadiriyya Brotherhood
Matumbi
Ngoni
Yao
Victory
  • Rebellion put down
397 dead[16]
Sokehs Rebellion
(1910–1911)
  Germany Sokehs tribe Victory
  • Rebellion put down
5 dead[17]
World War I
(1914–1918)
  Germany
  Austria-Hungary
  Ottoman Empire
  Bulgaria
  France
  United Kingdom
   Russia (withdrew)
  United States
  Italy
  Canada
  Australia
  New Zealand
  India
  South Africa
  Serbia
  Montenegro
  Belgium
  Romania
  Greece
  Portugal
  Brazil
  Nepal
  Japan
  China
  Siam
  Hejaz
Defeat
2,198,420 to
2,800,720 dead[18]
Finnish Civil War Victory
  • Establishment of the Kingdom of Finland
  • German hegemony until November 1918
  • Division in Finnish society
  • Collapse of the Finnish Reds
450–500 killed in action
Ukrainian War of Independence

  Ukrainian State

  South Russia

  Germany

  Poland

Victory

(The Bolsheviks were forced out of Ukraine as long as Germany was stationed there)

?

Weimar Republic (1918–1933) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Reichskanzler German losses
German Revolution
(1918–1919)
  Germany   Revolutionaries Government victory
?
Greater Poland Uprising
(1918–1919)
  Germany   POW Defeat
?
Lithuanian–Soviet War Victory
?
First Silesian Uprising
(1919)
  Germany   POW-GS Victory
  • German forces crush uprising
?
Kapp Putsch   Weimar Republic
  • Striking workers
  Putschists Government victory
  • Collapse of the Putsch
  • General strike in opposition of the Putsch
  • Order restored and elections held
  • Amnesty for Putschists
  • Ruhr uprising
?
Ruhr Uprising
(1920)
  Germany   Ruhr Red Army Government victory
  • Uprising crushed
1,600+
(Both combatants)
Second Silesian Uprising
(1920)
  Germany   POW-GS League of Nations ceasefire
  • Order restored by Allied intervention
?
March Action   Germany   Communist Party
  Communist Workers Party
Government victory
31 Police dead
Third Silesian Uprising
(1921)
  Germany   POW-GS League of Nations ceasefire
?
Hamburg Uprising   Weimar Republic   Communist Party of Germany Government victory
17 dead, 61 civilians dead

Nazi Germany (1933–1945) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Führer German losses
German involvement in the Spanish Civil War
(1936–1939)
  Spanish Nationalists
  Italy
  Germany
  Portugal
  Spanish Republicans
  International Brigades
Victory
~300 killed[20]

Sudeten German uprising

  Sudeten Germans

Supported by:
  Germany

  Czechoslovakia Defeat

ca.200

Invasion of Czechoslovakia
(1939)
  Germany
  Hungary
  Poland
  Czechoslovakia Victory
21 killed and wounded[21]
World War II
(1939–1945)
  Germany
  Japan
  Italy
  Hungary
  Romania
  Bulgaria
  Slovakia
  Croatia
  Finland
  Thailand
  Soviet Union
  United States
  United Kingdom
  China
  France
  Poland
  Canada
  Australia
  New Zealand
  India
  South Africa
  Yugoslavia
  Greece
  Denmark
  Norway
  Netherlands
  Belgium
  Luxembourg
  Ethiopia
  Brazil
  Mexico
  Colombia
  Cuba
  Nepal
  Philippines
  Mongolia
Defeat
6,900,000 to
7,400,000 dead[22]

East Germany (1949–1990) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Leadership of East Germany German losses
East German uprising of 1953
(1953)

  East Germany
  Soviet Union

Demonstrators

Victory
5 police killed

Federal Republic of Germany (1949–present) edit

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Result Bundeskanzler (Federal Chancellor) German losses
Gulf War
Coalition:
  Iraq
Victory
?
Operation Deliberate Force
(1995)
  NATO
  Republika Srpska Victory
None
Operation Allied Force
(1999)
  NATO   FR Yugoslavia Victory
None
War in Afghanistan
(2001–2021)
  Afghanistan
  ISAF
  Taliban
  al-Qaeda
Taliban victory
Gerhard Schröder
(2001–2005)
Angela Merkel
(2005–2021)
59 dead[24]
War on ISIL
(2015–present)
  Iraq
  Iraqi Kurdistan
  Syrian Kurdistan
  CJTF–OIR
  ISIL
  al-Qaeda
Ongoing
Angela Merkel
(2015–2021)
Olaf Scholz
(2021–)
See below[j]
Mali War
(2017–2023)
  Mali
  MINUSMA
  al-Qaeda Compromise
  • The Foreign Minister of Mali requested that the United Nations terminate MINUSMA due to what he called its "failure" to stabilize the situation there on 16 June 2023
  • MINUSMA was officially terminated on 30 June 2023.
  • Dissolution of United Nations peacekeeping mission on 31 December 2023
  • Withdrawal of all contributing MINUSMA nations and retreat of their troops within 6 months
2 dead[25]

Notes edit

  1. ^ States that allied at some point between 1618 and 1635
  2. ^ States that fought against the Emperor at some point between 1618 and 1635
  3. ^ The Dutch Brigade
  4. ^ a b c d e Mikaberidze 2020, p. 309 states that the contributions of coalition members aside from Austria were "rather nominal". Englund 2004, p. 345 writes that "the only real coalition to be mounted in this nominal fifth war of that name was the coalition France created against unhappy Austria; it included the key German States and Italy."
  5. ^ in rebellion against the Confederation of the Rhine
  6. ^ in rebellion against Bavaria
  7. ^ in rebellion against France in Illyria
  8. ^ in rebellion against the Kingdom of Italy
  9. ^ Duchy of Warsaw as a state was in effect fully occupied by Russian and Prussian forces by May 1813, although most Poles remained loyal to Napoleon.
  10. ^ No German soldiers have been killed by ISIS, however, many German civilians have been killed in terror attacks claimed by ISIS. For details, see Islamic terrorism in Europe

References edit

  1. ^ Angelov, Dimiter (2019). The Byzantine Hellene: The Life of Emperor Theodore Laskaris and Byzantium in the Thirteenth Century. Cambridge University Press. p.89.
  2. ^ Byrne, Philippa (19 March 2023). "Translating German Emperors: A Staufen–Sicilian Synthesis under Henry VI?". The German Quarterly. 96 (2): 163–179. doi:10.1111/gequ.12333 – via CrossRef.
  3. ^ a b "Duitsland §6. Geschiedenis". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 2002.
  4. ^ Croxton 2013, pp. 225–226.
  5. ^ a b Heitz & Rischer 1995, p. 232.
  6. ^ Clark, Samuel (1995). State and Status: The Rise of the State and Aristocratic Power in Western Europe. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 65. ISBN 9780773512269.
  7. ^ Zamoyski 2004, p. 87.
  8. ^ Christian Wilhelm von Faber du Faur, Campagne de Russie 1812: d'après le journal illustré d'un témoin oculaire, éditions Flammarion, 1812, 319 pages, p. 313.
  9. ^ Eugène Labaume, Relation circonstanciée de la Campagne de Russie en 1812 Archived 2023-01-07 at the Wayback Machine, éditions Panckoucke-Magimel, 1815, pp. 453–54.
  10. ^ a b c Chandler 1981, p. 181.
  11. ^ Hofschroer 2006, pp. 82, 83.
  12. ^ Hervé de Weck: Franche-Comté expedition in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland, 8 May 2007.
  13. ^ Hempestall & Mochida, p. 54
  14. ^ "Uprisings against the German/South African Colonial Power". klausdierks.com.
  15. ^ Bridgman, Jon M. (1966) Revolt of the Hereros University of California Press. p. 164 (KIA: 676, MIA:76, WIA: 907, died from disease: 689, civilians: 100)
  16. ^ Gellately, Robert; Ben Kiernan (2003). The Specter of Genocide: Mass Murder in Historical Perspective. Published by Cambridge University Press. p. 161. ISBN 0-521-52750-3.
  17. ^ van der Vat, Dan. Gentlemen of War, The Amazing Story of Captain Karl von Müller and the SMS Emden. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc. 1984, p. 19
  18. ^ See World War I casualties
  19. ^ Including conspirative co-operation between Germany and Russian Bolsheviks 1914–1918, Pipes 1996, pp. 113–149, Lackman 2009, pp. 48–57, McMeekin 2017, pp. 125–136
  20. ^ Thomas, Hugh (2003) [1961, 1987, 2001]. The Spanish Civil War. London: Penguin. p. 634. ISBN 0-14-101161-0. OCLC 248799351.
  21. ^ Boje o československé hranice v roce 1939
  22. ^ See World War II casualties
  23. ^ "DESERT SHIELD AND DESERT STORM A CHRONOLOGY AND TROOP LIST FOR THE 1990–1991 PERSIAN GULF CRISIS" (PDF). apps.dtic.mil. Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 April 2019. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  24. ^ "Germany honors soldiers who fought in Afghanistan mission". dw.com. 13 October 2021. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  25. ^ "German military helicopter crashes in Mali, two peacekeepers killed". Reuters. 26 July 2017 – via www.reuters.com.

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