Paraguayan War casualties

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Paraguayan_War_casualties an entity of type: WikicatWarCasualtiesByWar

The number of people who died in the Paraguayan War (1864–1870) is unknown. Widely diverging estimates have been made. "Determining the size of Paraguay's population has always been an exercise in frustration." However, there is a widespread impression that the casualties (military and civilian) were immense; there was also some population loss from non-lethal causes such as migration. The Dutch human geographer Jan Kleinpenning thought that Paraguay lost between a quarter and a half of its population, but much higher and lower estimates have been made. No academic demographic scholarship makes it less than 7% (including migration) or greater than 69%. rdf:langString
Se desconoce el número de bajas de la Guerra de la Triple Alianza (1864-1870). Hay numerosas estimaciones hasta que se ha llegado a afirmar: «determinar el tamaño de la población de Paraguay siempre ha sido un ejercicio de frustración».​ rdf:langString
rdf:langString Bajas de la Guerra de la Triple Alianza
rdf:langString Paraguayan War casualties
xsd:integer 8216344
xsd:integer 1113856904
rdf:langString Se desconoce el número de bajas de la Guerra de la Triple Alianza (1864-1870). Hay numerosas estimaciones hasta que se ha llegado a afirmar: «determinar el tamaño de la población de Paraguay siempre ha sido un ejercicio de frustración».​ La impresión general es que las bajas civiles y militares fueron inmensas; también hubo pérdida de población por causas no letales, como migración. El geógrafo humano holandés Jan Kleinpenning pensaba que el país perdió entre un cuarto y la mitad de su población, pero se han hecho estimaciones mucho más altas, todas las académicamente aceptadas varían de un 7% a 69% (incluyendo por migración).
rdf:langString The number of people who died in the Paraguayan War (1864–1870) is unknown. Widely diverging estimates have been made. "Determining the size of Paraguay's population has always been an exercise in frustration." However, there is a widespread impression that the casualties (military and civilian) were immense; there was also some population loss from non-lethal causes such as migration. The Dutch human geographer Jan Kleinpenning thought that Paraguay lost between a quarter and a half of its population, but much higher and lower estimates have been made. No academic demographic scholarship makes it less than 7% (including migration) or greater than 69%.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 24712

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