13.5% of Europe’s World War I recruits from Africa died in the war

  • Over 551,800 Africans were recruited by European powers during World War I.
  • Approximately 86,100 African recruits died, representing a 13.5% fatality.
  • North Africa supplied the most recruits (260,000), slightly ahead of West Africa (250,600).
  • West Africa recorded the highest deaths (36,500) among the regions.
  • East Africa contributed 117,900 recruits, with 13,200 deaths.
  • Southern Africa’s involvement was significantly smaller — 9,500 recruits and 560 deaths.
  • Africa’s participation was geographically uneven, shaped by colonial control and military strategy.
  • More than one in eight recruits did not return, highlighting the human cost beyond battlefield narratives.

World War I is often framed as a European conflict, yet more than 551,800 Africans were recruited by European colonial powers. Of those, an estimated 86,100 died — a mortality rate of roughly 13.5%. In absolute terms, that means over half a million men from across the continent were mobilised to fight a war that reshaped global power.

Source:

Source: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War

Period:

1914–1918
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