2017
DOI: 10.3917/popu.1701.0039
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Les pertes de l’armée italienne pendant la Première Guerre mondiale

Abstract: Le nombre le plus souvent avancé pour estimer les pertes de l’armée italienne durant la Première Guerre mondiale est celui de la commission des réparations de guerre de 1921 qui comptabilise 650 000 décès. Cet article a pour objectifs de critiquer cette estimation, d’en proposer une nouvelle, et de fournir des informations sur la structure par âge et l’âge au décès des soldats italiens tombés durant la guerre. Le tableau d’honneur des soldats morts au combat ( Albo d’oro ) est utilisé dans cette étude, avec d’… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Notably, the historical literature suggests that variation in experience, trauma, and memory of violence on the war front during the First World War shaped early PNF membership across Italy (Alcalde 2017). 21 We compiled the data on the First World War casualties of Italian soldiers using the 'Albo d'oro' of the Italian Ministry of Defence, the most reliable source of soldiers' causalities (Fornasin 2017). We include the residuals from the first stage in the count model to control for the potential endogeneity of PNF membership.…”
Section: Confounding Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, the historical literature suggests that variation in experience, trauma, and memory of violence on the war front during the First World War shaped early PNF membership across Italy (Alcalde 2017). 21 We compiled the data on the First World War casualties of Italian soldiers using the 'Albo d'oro' of the Italian Ministry of Defence, the most reliable source of soldiers' causalities (Fornasin 2017). We include the residuals from the first stage in the count model to control for the potential endogeneity of PNF membership.…”
Section: Confounding Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the Italian military effort did not reach the intensity of that of other powers engaged in the war, particularly France and Germany, there were more than five million Italian soldiers who took part in the conflict (Zugaro 1927): Even in the WWII Italy was unable to mobilise similar numbers. A total of 560,000 Italian servicemen died, and among the major European powers, Italy was the one that experienced the highest number of deaths due to illness among the its soldiers (Fornasin 2017a). In addition, about 50,000 deaths occurred in prison camps in Germany and Austria-Hungary, the largest contingent for any Western European country (Fornasin 2018a).…”
Section: Mortality and Differential Mortality In The Great Warmentioning
confidence: 99%