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rissc.jo 18 June 2026 at 19:52

Body_Count-EN.pdf

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Trust Score

Low-to-Moderate Reliability

Confidence: Medium

Standard
Emotional Tone Moderate
How emotionally charged the language is (low is neutral)
Reading Level Academic
Suitable for age 21+ readers (grade 16)
Article Length Very long
6,410 words
Caps & Emphasis Normal
1.0% of words are capitalised (high can indicate sensationalism)

Executive Summary

The provided text is a verbatim extract of a 2009 booklet/report titled “Body Count: A Quantitative Review of Political Violence Across World Civilizations” attributed to Naveed S. Sheikh and associated with the Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought (Jordan). That document’s existence and many of its headline claims (the civilisation taxonomy, the 0–2008 scope, and the key quantitative conclusions such as “Christian civilisation is most violent/genocidal” and the quoted medians/percentages) are confirmable from an official-hosted PDF. However, the document’s most consequential assertions (aggregate death-toll totals across 2,000 years; civilisation-by-civilisation death-toll shares; and genocide tallies) are not independently validated in the text you provided because the underlying dataset, event-level sourcing, and calculation procedures are not reproducibly provided in the excerpt. External secondary commentary notes methodological concerns and contestable classifications (e.g., categorising Nazi genocide as “Christian”), indicating the conclusions are highly sensitive to coding choices and definitions. Net assessment: authentic document, but its sweeping comparative inferences are not independently verifiable from up-to-date, primary or widely-accepted scholarly reconstructions using transparent methods. Treat as a provocative, method-dependent compilation rather than a settled quantitative history.

Factual Verification

Verified Claims

  • A PDF titled “Body Count: A Quantitative Review of Political Violence Across World Civilizations” attributed to “naveed s. sheikh” and dated “2009 • jordan” exists online on the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre (rissc.jo) website.
  • The document presents a methodology claiming an aggregate list of over 3,000 violent clashes (0–2008 CE) and a subset of 276 conflicts with estimated death tolls over 10,000, then organises results by a modified ‘civilisational’ taxonomy.
  • The document includes a ‘civilisation’ taxonomy listing seven categories: Antitheist, Buddhist, Christian, Indic, Islamic, Primal-Indigenous, and Sinic (with brief locale descriptions).
  • The document’s conclusions section asserts a total death toll from political violence (war, civil war, democide, structural violence) of 449.38–708.61 million (median ~579.00 million) for 0–2008 CE.
  • The document asserts that 50.75 million of the median fatalities are ‘genocidal deaths’ and claims the ‘Christian civilisation’ accounts for 14 out of 30 genocides and 33.24 million deaths (65.50% of genocide deaths).
  • The document claims the ‘Christian civilisation’ has the largest median death toll (177.94 million; 30.73%) and the ‘Islamic civilisation’ a median of 31.94 million (5.52%) for 0–2008 CE.

Unverified Claims

  • The study’s event dataset truly contains “over 3,000” clashes and the subset is exactly “276” conflicts over 10,000 deaths, as these counts are not independently reproducible from the excerpt (no dataset release, no full sourcing, and no audit trail demonstrated in the provided text).
  • The aggregate totals by civilisation (e.g., Christian 119.323–236.5605 million; Islamic 21.964–41.923 million; etc.) accurately represent the best historical evidence for 0–2008 CE, because the underlying event selection, coding rules, and death-toll estimates are not transparently documented in a way that permits independent verification from primary records.
  • The claim that “the Christian civilisation … emerges as the most violent and genocidal in world history” is a valid inference rather than an artefact of classificatory choices (e.g., attributing entire multi-party wars to one ‘civilisation’, and including structural violence in totals).
  • The claim that “the Indic civilisation is not known to have perpetrated any genocide after year 0” (as stated in the document) reflects a comprehensive and widely accepted genocide historiography, because it depends on definitional thresholds, event inclusion/exclusion, and contested historical cases not evidenced in the excerpt.

Bias & Presentation

Detected Biases:

  • Civilisation-essentialism risk: treating ‘civilisations’ (especially religiously labelled ones) as coherent causal actors for heterogeneous political violence across 2,000 years.
  • Selection/coding bias risk: allocating ‘belligerent civilisation’ responsibility via simplified rules (e.g., initiator-of-hostilities, coloniser-by-definition, power-holder-by-default) can systematically skew attribution.
  • Outcome framing bias: strong comparative language (“most violent and genocidal”, “open secret”) encourages a ranked moral narrative rather than cautious quantitative historiography.

Language Patterns

Emotional manipulation: 0.36

Quality Assurance

Limitations: ['The excerpt lacks the underlying dataset and detailed per-event sourcing; therefore numerical accuracy cannot be independently confirmed beyond the existence of the claims in the document.', 'Some secondary sources used for context (e.g., Wikipedia) are not authoritative; they are used only for orientation, not for adjudicating quantitative history.']

Confidence

Level: Medium

Confidence is medium because authenticity and attribution of the document are strongly supported by an official-hosted PDF, and secondary commentary corroborates that the document exists and advances the cited conclusions. Confidence is not high regarding the truth of the quantitative rankings and totals because the excerpt (and the located PDF) do not provide a transparent, independently auditable dataset and complete sourcing sufficient to verify the historical casualty aggregates and civilisation attributions.

Search Journal

Query: "Body Count" "A Quantitative Review of Political Violence across World Civilizations" Naveed S. Sheikh Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute 2009 PDF

Located an official-hosted PDF matching the provided text.

Query: Naveed S. Sheikh "Body Count" Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought 2009

Found secondary commentary noting methodological/classification concerns.

Query: Royal Aal al-Bayt Institute for Islamic Thought English Series book 5 Body Count 2009

Checked institutional context and publication lists (context only).

Query: critique "Body Count" Naveed S. Sheikh death toll ranking civilizations

Located an academic repost/translation referencing the original booklet, but no full replication dataset.

Article Content

body count

the royal aal al-bayt institute for islamic thought

2009 • jordan

# a quantitative review

# of political violence across

# world civilizations

by

naveed s. sheikh

University of Louisville the royal aal al-bayt institute for islamic thought

2009 • jordan

# body count

# a quantitative review

# of political violence across

# world civilizations

by

naveed s. sheikh

University of Louisville 1

## contents

section 1

Introductions 3

Definitions 5

World civilizations 7

section ii

Table 1: A Death-Toll Ranking

of Major Violent Conflict (0–2008 ce) 9

Key Findings and Analysis 20

section iii

Table 4: Civilizations and Genocide

in History (by death toll) 23

Key Findings and Analysis 24

Conclusions 27

section iv

Table 1: The Growth of Religious Civilizations 32

Table 2: Religious Civilizations

in Proportion to World Population 33 3

SECTION I

## introduction

Background

In his seminal work The Clash of Civilizations and the

Remaking of World Order (1996), the Harvard political

scientist Samuel Huntington reinvented Arnold Toynbee’s

understanding of history as driven not only by impersonal

material structures—territory, capital, population, and

natural resources—but equally by interpersonal ide -

ational structures. This perception seemed supported by

empirical observation, and soon filled the intellectual and

political lacunae which had attained particular salience in

the wake of the implosion of Soviet-backed communism.

Oftentimes, the reinstatement of religion—as the single

most stable ideational structure in human history—was

referred to as ‘the revenge of God’, but for social scientists

and historians alike it became impossible to scientifically

isolate the divine variable from terrestrial imperatives in

the muddled socio-political praxes of earthlings. A casual

observation, nonetheless, would suggest that discursive

constructions about God (in politics, a short-hand for

absolute truth) have been a necessary corollary to nearly all

conflictual formations, from the substate to the transstate

levels. The intensity of this linkage, and its constancy, is

tested in this study. 4

body count

Objectives

The present study attempts to quantify the human death

toll of religious and political violence throughout the last

two millennia and relating these to religio-cultural civiliza -

tions. Adopting a modified version of Huntington’s civiliza -

tional taxonomy, the study progresses along the following

lines: First, a comprehensive data list of over 3,000 violent

clashes in history, 0–2008 ce was developed. We then pro -

ceeded to identify 276 of the most violent conflicts in his -

tory, all with estimated human death tolls over 10,000, and

ranked them by death toll. The result was then organized

along civilizational lines, in order to attain a comparative

understanding of socio-religiously conditioned violence.

The findings are represented in four tables, leading to a

comparative evaluation of civilizational violence.

Methodology

The study has first produced an aggregate list of major

violent con fl icts in the last two millennia, incorporating

four categories of violence, namely war, civil war, democide,

and structural violence. This shows the extent to which vio -

lence has been an almost universal form of ‘doing politics’

in all parts of the inhabited world for as long as history has

been recorded. The study then proceeded to quantify the

death tolls in the most violent episodes to produce a list of

the most violent conflicts in the last two millennia. These

conflicts were then organized along civilizational lines, 5

body count

thereby quantitatively delineating the frequency of major

conflict per civilization. Separately, we analyzed genocidal

violence (which may have been part of war or democide in

the first analysis) to seek to gauge the level of intensity of

violence.

## definitions

Civilizations: The social construct of civilization denotes

the historically conditioned and intersubjectively shared

norms—cultural, religious and societal—whereby a

substantial group of people develop a common cultural

in-group identity by means of socialization, pacific interac -

tion and isomorphism. Civilizations are aggregates of local

and regional cultures and are bound by shared religious or

ethical values.

War: By war is understood large-scale acts of aggression

and violence between two different (but equal) political

units, such as states. According to Clausewitz’s classic, On

War, warfare has three dimensions: political objectives,

strategy, and popular passion, whereas the equilibrium

between the three (by way or the subordination of passion

to the strategy and strategy to policy objectives) determines

the success or otherwise of any mission. Quantitatively,

statisticians insist that the death toll must exceed 1,000

direct deaths (combat related and collateral) in order for 6

body count

an armed conflict to count as a war. Subcategories include

interstate war, continental wars, colonial wars.

Civil War : Civil war are systematized acts of violence

perpetuated mutually by members of the same nation. By

nation in turn is understood adherence to same ethno-

linguist group or, in modern times, members of the same

territorial state. Subcatagories include revolutions, rebel -

lions, ethnic strife.

Democide : Democide is meant to convey politically moti -

vated murder by government forces or institutions. It can

take collective forms (most notably in the form of genocide

or lesser forms of mass-murder) or individual forms (such

as the systematic liquidation of opposition figures or politi -

cal/ethnic threats to the established order). Democide is,

moreover, enacted not only in direct action but also in

‘Structural Violence’.

Genocide : Genocide is a form of democide, where the

aggressor aims to eliminate a substantial portion of an

ethnic, linguistic, or religious group from a substantial

territory.

Structural Violence : As opposed to direct violence (direct

physical harm), structural violence is a concept promoted

by Scandinavian Peace Research to denote the violence

perpetuated by malign structures—whether they be of 7

body count

institutional or normative character (for example Apartheid

as institution vs. racism as norm). Structural violence is thus

the suffering which follows from exploitative or repressive

forms of social or political organization.

## world civilizations

The social construct of ‘civilization’ conveys a meaning

of common identity. This identity, in turn, is entailed in

shared social norms, societal values and cultural mores—all

repeated iterated in public discourses and institutions of

socialization. Organized religion, thus, emerges as the chief

signifier of civilization, both directly (as the repository of

identity and values) and indirectly (as shaper of institutions

and discourses). While a ‘civilization’ is not coterminous

with a religion, the latter is a necessary (but not sufficient)

component of the former. Where religion is relatively

homogenous (as in much of the Muslim world), we allow

for the conceptualization of a single civilization in the name

of Islam (or the umma, the Muslim body politic). Likewise,

‘associate’ members of the Muslim civilization are found

in Africa as well as Europe. The difference between a core

member and an associate member of a civilization is the

civilizational identity’s location on a spectrum from con -

testedness to hegemony. Likewise, some civilizations (as

the Primal-Indigenous) may simply be a residual category,

which lacks formal association and membership. 8

body count

The following seven civilizations are suggested and their

respective locales indicated:

civilization locale

Antitheist Communist block

Buddhist East Asia, parts of South Asia

Christian Europe, the Americas,

parts of Africa

Indic India, Nepal, Mauritius

Islamic Middle East, parts of Asia,

parts of Africa

Primal-Indigenous Parts of Africa, the Americas

before colonialism

Sinic China, some neighbouring states 9

SECTION II

## table 1: a death-toll ranking of

## major violent conflict (0–2008 ce)

A note on methodology: Estimating the death-toll of

conflicts is often fraught with dangers that derive both

from the absence of data as well as its (un)reliability.

Governments or other political groups often have vested

interests in suppressing information or releasing partial or

misleading information which either exaggerates or omits

death figures. The problem is augmented by the longevity

of the present study, as the reliability of information tends

to deteriorate over time. We have in each case attempted

to corroborate numbers from several sources and guessti -

mated a reasonable range, supported by scholarly accounts.

Although it generally holds true that the older the conflict,

the less reliable the data, even recent events sometimes have

death toll estimates that differ by a factor of 10 (for example

Operation Desert Storm of 1991). Where possible, we

have tried to narrow down the range, but on occasions the

range has been set wide in order to accommodate diverse

opinions and sources. A second-order problem arises from

a monocausal allocation of blame for acts of political vio -

lence, which often emerge out of complex historical and

political antecedents. Here we have not classed all engaged

parties as belligerent, but simply those who have initiated

hostilities in a particular given event. In particular complex 10

body count

cases, two or more parties have been deemed to be equally

responsible (and the figure is tabulated by dividing by two,

three or more as appropriate). If a war is a colonial war, the

colonizer or imperial power has by definition been classed

as the belligerent power, and likewise in cases of democide,

rebellions, revolts, and mutinies, the power-holder has by

default been held responsible for any ensuing violence,

unless the counter-hegemonic group has engaged in direct

action against third parties (e.g. terror tactics).

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>10 million) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

World War II (1939–1945) 55,000,000–72,000,000 War,

Democide Christian, Buddhist

People’s Republic of China (1949-1975) 44,500,000-77,000,000 Democide Antitheist

Three Kingdoms Wars (220-280) 40,000,000 War Sinic

Soviet Reign (1923-1954) 38,000,000-55,000,000 Democide Antitheist

An Shi Rebellion (755-763) 36,000,000 Civil War Buddhist

Mongol Conquests (from 1207) 30,000,000–50,000,000 War Primal-Indigenous

Manchu conquest of Ming China (1616–1662) 25,000,000 War Sinic

Tai Ping Rebellion (China, 1851–1864) 20,000,000-50,000,000 Civil War Sinic, Christian

World War I (1914–1918) 15,000,000–66,000,000 War Christian

Second Sino-Japanese War (1931–1945) 15,000,000-22,000,00 War Buddhist

Extermination of Native Americans

(C16th-19th) 13,000,000-16,000,000 Structural Christian

Nationalist China (1928-49) 10,075,000 Civil War Sinic

Conquests of Timur the Lame (1360-1405) 7,000,000-20,000,000 War Islamic

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>2 million) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Russian Civil War (1917–1922) 5,000,000–9,000,000 Civil War Christian, Antitheist

Conquests of Menelik II Ethiopia (1882- 1898) 5,000,000 War Christian 11

body count

Congo Free State colonial war (1885-1908) 4,500,000-12,000,000 War Christian

Dungan Revolt (1862-1877) 4,000,000 Civil War Sinic

Second Congo War (1998–2007) 3,800,000-5,400,000 War Christian

Napoleonic Wars (1804–1815) 3,500,000–6,000,000 War Christian

China Mao Soviets (1923-1949) 3,500,000 Democide Antitheist

Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) 3,000,000–8,000,000 War Christian

Yellow Turban Rebellion (China, 184–205) 3,000,000–7,000,000 Civil War Sinic

Korean War (1950–1953) 2,500,000–5,040,000 War Christian, Antitheist

Transatlantic Slave Trade (17th to 19th

centuries) 2,400,000-4,300,000 Structural

Violence Christian

Vietnam War (1945–1975) 2,300,000–5,100,000 War Christian, Antitheist

French Wars of Religion (1562–1598) 2,000,000–4,000,000 Civil War Christian

Mahmud of Ghazni‘s invasions, India

(1000-1027) 2,000,000 War Islamic

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>1 million) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Post-War Expulsion of Germans (1945-47) 2,100,000-3,000,000 Democide Christian

Young Turk Atrocities (1909-18) 1,800,000-2,000,000 Democide Islamic

Cambodia, Khmer Rouge (1975-79) 1,700,000-2,035,000 Democide Antitheist

North Korea (1948-1987) 1,500,000-1,600,000 Democide Antitheist

Afghan Civil War (1979-ongoing) 1,500,000–2,000,000 Civil War Islamic

Arab Slave Trade (7th to 19th centuries) 1,400,000-2,000,000 Structural

Violence Islamic

Chinese Civil War (1928–1949) 1,300,000–6,200,000 Civil War Sinic

Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) 1,000,000–2,000,000 Civil War Christian

Shaka‘s conquests (1816-1828) 1,000,000-2,000,000 Civil War Primal-Indigenous

Soviet Afghan intervention (1979–1989) 1,000,000–1,500,000 War Antitheist

Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970), Biafran 1,000,000-1,200,000 Civil War Islamic, Christian

Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988) 1,000,000 War Islamic

Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-1598) 1,000,000 War Buddhist

Second Sudanese Civil War (1983–2005) 1,000,000 Civil War Islamic, Christian

Crusades (1095-1272) 1,000,000 War Christian

Aztec Atrocities 1,000,000+ Structural

Violence Primal-Indigenous

Panthay Rebellion (1856-1873) 1,000,000 Civil War Sinic 12

body count

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>500,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Mozambique Civil War (1976–1993) 900,000–1,000,000 Civil War Christian,

Islamic, PI

Turkey under Ataturk (1919-23) 878,000 Democide Antitheist

Seven Years’ War (1756-1763) 868,000 - 1,400,000 War Christian

Rwandan Civil War (1990-1994) 800,000 - 1,000,000 Civil War Christian

Congo Civil War (1991–1997) 800,000 Civil War Christian

Great Irish Famine (1845-52) 750,000-1,500,000 Structural

Violence Christian

Indonesia political/ethnic strife (1965-87) 729,000-1,000,000 Democide,

Civil War Islamic

Iraq War (2003-Present) 614,000 – 1,100,000 War Christian

Russian-Circassian War (1763-1864) 600,000-1,500,000 War Christian

First Jewish-Roman War (66-73) 600,000 - 1,300,000 War Primal-Indigenous

Qing-Dzungar War (1755-57) 600,000-800,000 War Sinic, Buddhist

Second Jewish-Roman War (Bar Kokhba

132–135) 580,000 War Primal-Indigenous

Eritrean War of Independence (1961-1991) 570,000 War Christian, Islamic

Algerian War of Independence (1954–1962) 550,000–1,000,000 War Christian

Somali Civil War (1988 - ) 550,000 Civil War Islamic

Thuggee Cult Murders (17th to 19th centuries) 500,000-2,000,000 Ritual Murder Indic

Suttee (4th to 19th centuries) 500,000-800,000 Structural

Violence Indic

Partition of India (1947) 500,000-1,000,000 Civil War Islamic, Indic

Angolan Civil War (1975–2002) 500,000-550,000 Civil War Christian, Primal

First Sudanese Civil War (1955-1972) 500,000 Civil War Islamic, Christian

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>250,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

War of the Triple Alliance, Paraguay

(1864–1870) 350,000–610,000 War Christian

Miao, Nien and Muslim Rebellions (1850-77) 450,000 Civil War Sinic

Darfur conflict (2003-ongoing) 400,000 Civil war,

Democide Islamic

War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714) 400,000-700,000 Civil War Christian

Second Burundi Civil War (1993) 400,000 Civil War Christian

Continuation War (1941-1944) 371,000 War Christian 13

body count

French Revolutionary Wars (1792-1802) 350,000-663,000 War Christian

Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) 350,000-500,000 Civil War Christian

Great Northern War (1700-1721) 350,000-400,000 War Christian

Portuguese Colonialism (1900-25) 325,000 War Christian

American Civil War (1861–1865) 365,000-618,000 Civil War Christian

Wars of the Three Kingdoms (1639-1651) 315,000 - 735,000 War Christian

Caucasian War (from 1817) 300,000-1,500,000 War Christian, Islamic

Ugandan Civil War (1979–1986) 300,000-500,000 Civil War Christian

French Conquest of Algeria (1839-47) 300,000 War Christian

Mexican Yucatan Maya Campaign (1847-55) 300,000 Civil War Christian

Idi Amin’s Regime (1972-79) 300,000 Democide Islamic

Abyssinian War (1935-41) 275-000-400,000 War Christian

French Revolution (1793-1794) 263,000-600,000 Civil War Christian

Philippine-American War (1898-1913) 255,000-1,120,000 War Christian

Ethiopian Civil Wars (1962–1991) 230,000–1,400,000 Civil War Christian

Albigensian Crusade (1208-1244) 250,000-1,000,000 War Christian

Indian extermination, Brazil (1900 et seq.) 250,000-500,000 War,

Democide Christian

Iraq under Saddam Hussein (1979-2003) 250,000-1,300,000 Democide Antitheist

Cuban Revolution (1895-98) 250,000-300,000 War Christian

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>100,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Liberian Civil War (1989-1997) 220,000 Civil War PI, Christian

Russo-Turkish War (1877-78) 215,000-285,000 War Christian, Islamic

Bangladesh Liberation War (1971) 200,000–2,800,000 War,

Democide Islamic

Warlord era in China (1917–1928) 200,000–800,000 War Sinic

Yugoslavia under Tito (1944-87) 200,000-572,000 Democide Antitheist

East Timor (1975-99) 200,000-250,000 Democide,

Civil War Islamic

First Congo War (1996-97) 200,000 Civil War Christian

Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871) 185,000-204,000 War Christian

Sierra Leone Civil War (1991–2002) 180,000-200,000 Civil War Christian

La Violencia (1948-1958) 180,000 - 300,000 Civil War Christian

Maji-Maji Revolt, German East Afr (1905-07) 175,000-250,000 War Christian 14

body count

Mexican War of Independence (1810-21) 150,000-400,000 War Christian

Communist Vietnam (1975 et seq) 165,000-460,000 Democide Antitheist

Haitian Revolution (1791-1804) 160,000-350,000 War Christian

Algerian Civil War (1991 et seq) 160,000-200,000 Civil War Islamic

Mindanao Conflict (1969-ongoing) 160,000+ Civil War Islamic, Christian

Lebanese Civil War (1975–1990) 150,000-162,000 Civil War Islamic, Christian

Second Liberian Civil War (1999-2003) 150,000 Civil War Primal, Christian

Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905) 130,000-150,000 War Buddhist

Russo-Turkish War (1828-29) 130,000-191,000 War Christian, Islamic

Winter War (1939-1940) 148,000-1,000,000 War Christian

Ten Years’ War Cuba (1868-78) 200,000 War Christian

Balkan Wars (1912-13) 140,000-225,000 War Christian, Islamic

Guatemaltec Civil War (1960–1996) 140,000-200,000 Civil War Christian

Portuguese Colonial Wars 140,000 War Christian

Eritrean-Ethiopian War (1998–2000) 125,000-190,000 War Christian, Islamic

Great Turkish War (1683-1699) 120,000 - 384,000 War Islamic, Christian

War of the Austrian Succession (1740-48) 120,000-359,000 War Christian

Sichuan Revolt of the Peasants (1755-57) 120,000 Civil War Sinic

Bosnian War (1992–1995) 120,000 War, Civil War Christian

Chaco War (1932–1935) 100,500 War Christian

North Yemen Civil War (1962–1970) 100,000- 150,000 Civil War Islamic

War of the Two Brothers, Inca (1531–1532) 100,000 -1,000,000 Civil War Primal-Indigenous

Christian New Guinea (1984-) 100,000 - 400,000 Democide Islamic

Indonesian invasion of East Timor (1975-1978) 100,000 - 200,000 Democide Islamic

al-Anfal Campaign (1986-89) 100,000- 180,000 Democide Islamic

Franco’s regime (1939-75) 100,000-160,000 Democide,

Civil War Christian

Libya-Italian Wars (1911-1931) 100,000-125,000 War Christian

Persian Gulf War (1991) 100,000 War Christian, Islamic

Thousand Days War (1899–1901) 100,000-150,000 Civil War Christian

Peasants’ War (1524-1525) 100,000 Civil War Christian

Mad Mullah Jihad, Somalia (1899-1920) 100,000 War Islamic, Christian

Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212) 100,000 War Christian

Imperial Russia (1900-1917) 100,000 Democide Christian

Russo-Polish War (1918-1920) 100,000 War Christian 15

body count

Tyrone’s Rebellion/Nine Year’s War

(1594-1603) 100,000-130,000 War Christian

White Lotus Rebellion (1796-1805) 100,000 Civil War Sinic

Crimean War (1854–1856) 105,000–277,000 War Christian, Islamic

Event Est.Death Toll

(>50,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Second Chechen War (1999 et seq.) 80,000–210,000 War Christian, Islamic

Battle of Alarcos (1195) 80,000-150,000 War Christian

Equatorial Guinea (1968-1979) 80,000 War Primal Indigenous

Siege of Isfahan (1722) 80,000 War Islamic

Greek War of Independence (1821-1829) 75,000-120,000 War Islamic

Indonesian National Revolution 75,000 – 205,000 War, Civil War Christian, Islamic

El Salvador Civil War (1980–1992) 75,000 Civil War Christian

Second Boer War (1898–1902) 75,000 War Christian

Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) 75,000-250,000 War Christian, Islamic

Boxer Rebellion (1899-1901) 70,000-115,000 War Christian, Sinic

Boudica‘s uprising (60-61) 70,000 War Primal-Indigenous

Aceh War (1873-1914) 70,000 War Christian

Russo-Austro-Turkish War (1787-1791) 64,000-192,000 War Islamic

Mozambican War of Independence

(1964-1974) 63,500 War Christian

Mau Mau Uprising (1952-1960) 61,185 War Christian

First Chechen War (1994–1996) 60,000 - 200,000 War Christian

Romania (1948-89) 60,000-150,000 Democide Antitheist

Sri Lanka/Tamil conflict (1983-) 60,000-65,000 Civil War Indic, Buddhist

Tupac Amaru Rebellion (1780-83) 60,000-80,000 War Christian

Nicaraguan Rebellion (1972-91) 60,000 Civil War Christian

Battle of Yarmouk (636) 55,000-70,000 War Islamic

Egyptian-Ottoman War (1805-11) 56,000 War Islamic

Angolan War of Independence 52,000-80,000 War Christian

First Burundi Civil War (1972) 50,000-300,000 Civil War Christian

Tajik Civil War (1992–1997) 50,000 - 60,000 Civil War Islamic

Wars of the Roses (1455-1485) 50,000 Civil War Christian

Opium Wars (1839-1850) 50,000 War Christian 16

body count

Siege of Tabriz (1725) 50,000 War Islamic

Byzantine-Rashidun War (634) 50,000 War Islamic

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>20,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Greek Civil War (1945-1949) 45,000-160,000 Civil War Christian

Russo-Turkish War (1806-12) 45,000-170,000 War Islamic

Kashmiri insurgency (1989-) 41,000–100,000 Civil War Indic, Islamic

Herero Genocide (1904-07) 45,000-60,000 Democide Christian

Witch Hunts (15th-17th centuries) 40,000-60,000 Democide Christian

Maratha-Afghan War (1760-1761) 40,000 War Islamic

Bulgarian Uprising (1875-77) 40,000 War Islamic

Second Riffian War (1921-26) 40,000-100,000 War Christian

Nader Shah’s Invasion of India (1738) 40,400-70,000 War Islamic

Battle of Siffin (657) 40,000-65,000 Civil War Islamic

Chad under Habre regime (1982-1990) 40,000 Democide Primal-Indigenous

South Vietnam under Diem (1955-63) 39,000 Democide Buddhist

Russo-Austro-Turkish War (1736-39) 38,000 War Islamic, Christian

Grand Columbia Wars of Independence

(1810-21) 37,000-120,000 War Christian

Finnish Civil War (1918) 36,000 Civil War Christian

Mongolia under Communists (1936 et seq) 35,000 Democide Christian, Buddhist

Java War (1825-30) 35,000-180,000 War Christian

Siege of Malta (1565) 35,000 - 45,000 War Islamic

Sandinista Rebellion (1972-1979) 35,000-40,000 Civil War Christian

Peru’s Shining Path insurrections (1980

et seq) 45,000-69,000 Civil War Antitheist

Battle of Nihawand (642) 43,000-65,000 War Islamic

Ukrainian Pogroms (1919-21) 30,000-70,000 Democide Christian

First Carlist War, Spain (1832-1840) 33,000-125,000 Civil War Christian

Vietnamese Persecution of Christians

(1832-1887) 33,000-41,000 Democide Buddhist

Rashidun-Sassanid War (633) 32,000-40,000 War Islamic

Contra Rebellion (1981-90) 30,000-57,000 Civil War Christian

Irish Uprising (1798) 30,000-40,000 Civil War Christian

U.S. Invasion of Afghanistan (2001 – 2002) 30,000 - 50,000 War Christian, Islamic 17

body count

Mozambique Anti-Colonial War (1961-1975) 30,000-60,000 War Christian

Bulgaria under Communism (1948-1953) 30,000-50,000 Democide Antitheist

Hamidian Massacre of Armenians (1895-96) 30,000-200,000 Democide Islamic

Canudos War (1896-97) 30,000 Democide Christian

Turko-Syrian Wars (1831-32, 1839-40) 30,000 War Islamic

Poland under Communism(1948 et seq) 30,000 Democide Antitheist

Argentina under Military (1976-83) 30,000 Democide Christian

Turkey/PKK conflict (1984-) 30,000 Civil War,

Democide Islamic

Sino-Vietnamese War (1979) 30,000 War Sinic, Antitheist

Rhodesian Bush War (1964-1979) 30,000 War Christian

El Salvador Peasant Revolt (1931-32) 30,000 Civil War Christian

Seven Weeks’ War (1866) 27,900-79,000 War Christian

Bulavin’s Rebellion (1707-09) 28,000 Civil War Christian

Zulu Conflict (1856) 27,000 Civil War Primal-Indigenous

Venetian-Austro-Turkish War (1714-18) 27,000-45,000 War Islamic

American War of Independence (1775-83) 25,300-37,300 War Christian

Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 (December 1971) 23,384 War Islamic, Indic

Nagorno-Karabakh War (1988-1994) 23,000 War Christian, Islamic

Australian Frontier Wars (1788-1921) 23,000 War Christian

Venezuelan Federal War (1859-63) 20,000-50,000 Civil War Christian

Franco-Mexican War (1862-67) 20,000-50,000 War Christian

Pugachov Revolt (1773-74) 20,000 Civil War Christian

Six-Day War (1967) 22,000 War Christian

War of the Quadruple Alliance (1718-20) 20,000-25,000 War Christian

Italo-Turkish War (1911-12) 20,000 War Christian, Islamic

Siege of Erevan (1723) 20,000 War Islamic

Burmese-Chinese War (1765-1769) 20,000 War Buddhist

Portuguese Civil War (1829-34) 20,000 Civil War Christian

British-Afghan War (1838-42) 20,000-30,000 War Islamic

Persian massacres of Bahais (1848-54) 20,000 Democide Islamic 18

body count

Event Estimated Death Toll

(>10,000) Event Type Belligerent

Civilization

Righteous Army Uprising, Korea (1907-12) 18,000 War Buddhist

Transvaal Revolt (1880-81) 18,000 War Christian

Paris Commune (1871) 17,000-23,000 Democide Christian

Sikh Uprising (1982-91) 16,000-20,000 Civil War Indic

Iran under the Pahlevis (1953-1979) 16,000 Democide Islamic

Anglo-Burmese War (1823-1826) 15,000-20,000 War Christian

War of Italian Unification (1859) 15,000-22,500 Civil War Christian

Polish Insurrection (1830-32) 15,000-21,000 War Christian

Guinea-Bissau War of Independence

(1963-1974) 15,000 War Christian

Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) 15,000 War Buddhist, Sinic

Christian-Druze Wars, Lebanon (1860) 15,000 Civil War Christian, Unclas -

sified

War of the Pacific (1879–1884) 14,000 – 55,000 War Christian

Hungarian Insurrection (1703-1711) 14,000-43,000 War Christian

Battle of Walaya (633) 14,000-22,000 War Islamic

South Africa under Apartheid 14,000-19,000 Democide Christian

Russo-Turkish War (1768-1774) 14,000-20,000 War Christian, Islamic

Mexican-American War (1846-48) 13,000-49,000 War Christian

Namibia Civil War 13,000-20,000 Civil War Christian

South Yemen Civil War (1986) 13,000 Civil War Islamic

Bouganville Revolt, Papua New Guinea

(1989-98) 13,000 Civil War Christian

Czechoslovakia under Communism 13,000-60,000 Democide Antitheist

Nepal Civil War (1996-2006) 12,700 Civil War Indic

Sino-French War (1884-85) 12,000 War Christian

Battle of Poitiers (732) 12,000 War Islamic

Ottoman Invasion of Persia (1727) 12,000 War Islamic

Batavia Massacres (1740) 10,000-12,000 Civil War Christian

Israeli War of Independence 12,000-19,000 War Unclassified,

Islamic

Yom Kippur War (1973) 11,500-16,000 War Islamic, Christian

Malayan Emergency (1948-1960) 11,053 War Christian, Islamic

Madagascar Revolt (1947) 11,000-60,000 Civil War Christian 19

body count

Battle of Sekigahara (1600) 11,000-32,000 Civil War Buddhist

Croatian War of Independence (1991–1995) 11,000–16,000 War Christian

Hama Massacre (1982) 10,000-25,000 Democide Islamic

Anglo-American War (1812-1815) 11,000-20,000 War Christian

Kanto Massacres, Japan (1923) 10,000-20,000 Democide Buddhist

Haitian Massacres, Dominican Republic

(1937) 10,000-20,000 Democide,

Civil War Christian

Congo-Brazzaville Coup and Civil War

(1997-99) 10,000-20,000 Civil War Christian

Massacres of the Janisaries (1826) 10,000-20,000 Democide Islamic

Spanish-Moroccan War (1907-11) 10,000-15,000 War Christian

Western Sahara (1975 et seq) 10,000-16,000 War,

Democide Islamic

Cameroon Insurrection 10,000-15,000 War Christian

Seapoy Mutiny (1857) 10,000-15,000 Civil War Christian

Somali War (2006-) 10,000+ Civil War Islamic

Argentine Civil War (1845-51) 10,000 Civil War Christian

Amadu’s Jihad (1810-1818) 10,000 Civil War Islamic

Mexico (1926-30) 10,000 Civil War Christian

Russo-Swedish War (1741-43) 10,000 War Christian

Tay Son Revolution, Annam(1772-1802) 10,000 Civil War Sinic

Anglo-Sikh Wars (1846-48) 10,000 War Christian

Spanish-American War (1898) 10,000 War Christian

Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 8,000–15,000 War Islamic, Indic 20

body count

## key findings and analysis

table 2: 0–2008 ce

> Civilization Minimum Death Toll Maximum Death Toll Median Death Toll > Antitheist 96,786,000 153,789,000 125,287,500 > Buddhist 80,116,000 95,777,500 87,946,750 > Christian 119,323,000 236,560,500 177,941,750 > Indic 1,344,500 3,434,000 2,389,250 > Islamic 21,964,000 41,923,000 31,943,500 > Primal-Indigenous 34,232,000 56,890,000 45,561,000 > Sinic 95,612,500 120,235,000 107,923,750 > Total 449,378,000 708,609,000 578,993,500

Interpreting the results: Our findings show that, using the

entire data set for the period 0-2008, politically and reli -

giously motivated violence has cost between 449.38 mil -

lion and 708.61 million lives. The Christian civilization’s

share of this is the largest with between 119.32 million and

236.56 million victims (median 177.94 million). In second

place is the Antitheist civilization which has contributed

with a median figure of 125.29 million deaths. The Sinic

civilization is third with 107.92 million deaths (median).

Fourth is the Buddhist civilization with ca. 87.95 million

deaths. Fifth is the Primal-Indigenous civilization with

45.56 million deaths. Sixth is the Islamic civilization with

31.94 million deaths. Finally, seventh and last, is the Indic

civilization with just under 2.39 million deaths. 21

body count

DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE

> Antitheist Buddhist Christian Indic Islamic Primal-indigenous Sinic 125,285,007 8,794,670 177,941,750 2,389,250 31,943,500 45,561,000 107,923,750 FATALITIES > 100,000,000 200,000,000

table 3 : detailed results

No of Events Rank Median Death Toll Rank

Antitheist 19 (5.92%) 3 125,287,500 (21.64%) 2

Buddhist 15 (4.67%) 5 87,946,750 (15.19%) 4

Christian 166 (51.71%) 1 177,941,750 (30.73%) 1

Indic 9 (2.80%) 7 2,389,250 (0.41%) 7

Islamic 81 (25.23%) 2 31,943,500 (5.52%) 6

Primal-Indigenous 14 (4.36%) 6 45,561,000 (7.87%) 5

Sinic 17 (5.30%) 4 107,923,750 (18.64%) 3

Total 321 (100%) 578,993,500 (100%)

Interpreting Table 3 : The above table shows two sets of

ranking, one based on frequency (the number of incidents

in which a given civilization has been involved in violent 22

body count

episodes) and one based on intensity (the number of killed

in those episodes). In terms of frequency of bellicosity, the

most prolific civilizations are: (1) Christian, (2) Islamic,

(3) Antitheist, and (4) Sinic. The Christian civilization

accounts for over 50% of all incidents, whereas the Muslim

accounts for over 25%, the Antitheist and Sinic civiliza -

tions are down to nearly a fifth of the latter at just over 5%.

In terms of intensity, calculated on the basis of death toll,

however, the ranking is very different. Here the ranking

is as follows: (1) Christian, (2) Antitheist, (3) Sinic, and (4)

Buddhist. In terms of death-toll, the Christian civilization

accounts for over 30% of all killed, the Antitheist for over

21%, the Sinic for nearly 19%, and the Buddhist for approxi -

mately 15%. The Primal-Indigenous category is nearly half

of that and the Islamic is down at under 6%. The findings

are illustrated below:

> antitheist christian buddhist indic islamic primal-indigenous sinic > DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE > sinic 18.64% primal-indigenous 7.87% islamic 5.52% indic 0.41% antitheist 21.64% buddhist 15.19% christian 30.73%

23

body count

Date Event Perpetrators Victims Median

Death

toll

Civilization

1835 Moriori Genocide Maoris Morioris 1,500 Primal-

Indigenous

1995 Srebrenica Massacre Serbs Bosniaks 8,000 Christian

1854-64 Yuki Genocide Californian settlers Yuki Indians 10,000 Christian

1904-07 Herero and Namaqua

Genocide Germany Herero and

Namaqua 45,000 Christian

1919-21 Ukrainian Pogroms Ukraine nationalists Jews 50,000 Christian

1963 West Papuan genocide Indonesia Papuans 100,000 Islamic

1894-96 Hamidian Massacres Ottoman Turkey Armenians 115,000 Islamic

1986-1988 Anfal Campaign Baathist Iraq Kurds 140,000 Islamic

1972 Burundi Genocide Tutsi Hutu 175,000 Christian

1975-99 East Timor Genocide Indonesia East Timorese 200,000 Islamic

1937-38 Rape of Nanking Imperial Japan Chinese 300,000 Buddhist

1914-23 Pontic Greek Genocide Young Turks Greek Minorities 380,000 Islamic

1864-67 Circassian Genocide Czarist Russia Circassians 400,000 Christian

1919-20 Don Cossack Genocide Soviet Russia Don Cossack 400,000 Antitheist

1993 Burundi Genocide Hutu Tutsi 400,000 Christian

2003-08 Darfur Conflict Janjaweed, Sudan Darfur tribes 400,000 Islamic

1941-45 Serb Genocide Ustasha Serbs, Jews,

homosexuals 465,000 Christian

1899-1902 American-Philippine War U.S.A. Filipinos 600,000 Christian

1208-44 Albigensian Crusade Roman Church Cathars 625,000 Christian

1914-20 Seyfo (Assyrian

Genocide) Young Turks Syriac-Chaldeans 625,000 Islamic

SECTION III

## table 4: civilizations and

## genocide in history(by death toll) 24

body count

1915-23 Armenian Genocide Young Turks Armenians 900,000 Islamic

1994 Rwandan Genocide Hutu Tutsi 900,000 Christian

1856-1873 Panthay Rebellion Qing Dynasty Hui Muslims 1,000,000 Sinic

1971 Bengali Genocide West Pakistan Bengalis, Hindus 1,100,000 Islamic

1975-79 Cambodian Genocide Khmer Rouge Cambodian

Populus 1,850,000 Antitheist

1862-1877 Dungan Revolt Qing Dynasty Hui Muslims 4,000 000 Sinic

1493-96 Hispaniola Genocide Columbus Arawaks 5,000,000 Christian

1933 Holodomor Famine Soviet Russia Ukrainian/

Kazakh 6,000,000 Antitheist

1880-1910 Congo Free State Belgium Congolese 8,250,000 Christian

1940-45 Nazi Genocides Nazi Germany Jews, Slavs,

Roma, homo -

sexuals

16,315,000 Christian

No of Events Rank Median Death Toll Rank

Antitheist 3 (10.00%) 3 8,250,000 (16.25%) 2

Buddhist 1 (3.33%) 5/6 300,000 (0.59%) 5

Christian 14 (46.67%) 1 33,243,000 (65.50%) 1

Indic 0 (0%) 7 0 (0%) 7

Islamic 9 (30%) 2 3,960,000 (7.80%) 4

Primal-Indigenous 1 (3.33%) 5/6 1,500 (0.00%) 6

Sinic 2 (6.67%) 4 5,000,000 (9.85%) 3

Total 30 (100%) 50,754,500 (100%)

## key findings and analysis

## table 5: detailed results

Interpreting Table 5 : Genocides are particular instances of

political violence, driven by hateful aggression and strate -

gies of willful elimination. Our list of 30 genocides in world 25

body count

history, with a total death toll of 50.75 million, displays some

remarkable facts: The Christian civilization has been the

most genocidal civilization, accounting for 14 instances of

genocides with over 33 million deaths. As the total deaths

derived from genocides are just over 50 million, the Chris -

tian share is nearly 2/3 of all genocide deaths. Although

the Islamic civilization is second in numbers of genocidal

acts, the Antitheist group as well as the Sinic civilization

has higher death-tolls at respectively 8.25 million and 5.00

million, whereas the Islamic civilization’s genocide death

toll is under 4 million. The Antitheist and Sinic civiliza -

tions rank, respectively 3 and 4 in terms of acts of genocide,

whereas the Buddhist and Primal-Indigenous Civilizations

share the fifth place with a single instance of genocide in

each civilization (although the Buddhist cost 300,000 lives,

whereas the death toll in the Primal-Indigenous category

was the lowest in the genocide category with 1,500 deaths).

The Indic civilization is not known to have perpetrated any

genocide after year 0.26

body count

DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE

Antitheist Buddhist Christian Indic Islamic Primal-indigenous Sinic 8,250,000 300,000 5,000,000 1,500 3,960,000 0FATALITIES

> 5000000 10000000 15000000 20000000 25000000 30000000 35000000 > 33,243,000

antitheist christian buddhist indic islamic primal-indigenous sinic

GENOCIDE DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE

sinic 9.85% islamic 7.80% antitheist 16.25% buddhist 0.59% christian 65.50% 27

body count

## conclusions

The present study has, on the basis of empirical examina -

tion of political violence in the last two millennia, made

some startling findings.

1. We have found that the total death toll from acts of

political violence (war, civil war, democide, and structural

violence) has been between 449.38 million and 708.61

million in the years 0-2008. The median figure of nearly

579.00 million amounts to twice the U.S. population in

the year 2000.

2. The distribution of the median death-toll is illustrated

below, expressed first in absolute figures and next in

percentage of the total.

DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE

> Antitheist Buddhist Christian Indic Islamic Primal-indigenous Sinic 125,285,007 8,794,670 177,941,750 2,389,250 31,943,500 45,561,000 107,923,750 FATALITIES > 100,000,000 200,000,000 28

body count

3. Of these 579.00 million fatalities, 50.75 million are geno -

cidal deaths. Their distribution, in turn, is represented

below:

4. In comparative terms, we have found the open secret

of world history to be that the Christian civilization is

the most bellicose on all counts: It is the civilization

which is responsible for the highest number of death in

world history, between 119.32and 236.56 million (median:

177.94 million). This is over 30% of global fatalities for

the period 0-2008 CE. In terms of number of instances

of political violence, the Christian share is even higher,

accounting for 166 events out of 321 in total (nearly 52%).

Thus more than half of all major acts of political violence

antitheist christian buddhist indic islamic primal-indigenous sinic

DEATH-TOLL DISTRIBUTION | WORLD CIVILIZATIONS 0-2008CE

> sinic 18.64% primal-indigenous 7.87% islamic 5.52% indic 0.41% antitheist 21.64% buddhist 15.19% christian 30.73% 29

body count

can be attributed to the Christian civilization. Finally,

in terms of genocides too the Christian civilization has

perpetrated nearly half of all genocides (14 out of 30, or

46.67%). Still, these 14 genocides have had a total death

toll of 33.24 million, a whopping 65.50% of all genocide

deaths. The Christian civilization, therefore, emerges as

the most violent and genocidal in world history.

5. Christian apologetics often charge anti-religious ide -

ologies with perpetrating more violence than religious

civilizations. Taking a broad view of history, rather than

a perspective constrained to the Cold War period, our

study does not confirm this hypothesis. Instead, the

Antitheist civilization is second in terms of death toll

contributions, ranging from 96.79 million to 153.79

million (a mean of 125.29 million, amounting to 21.64%

of the total death toll across civilizations over the time

period 0-2008 CE). As these deaths are spread over a

mere 18 events, it is true that the average death-toll per

event is higher than in any other civilizational category.

In terms of genocidal events, the Antitheist category

is overall second as well, having produced 8.25 million

deaths, again over relatively few events: namely three.

6. The Sinic civilization is the third most violent civiliza -

tion, both in terms of overall death-toll (at 107.92 mil -

lion, or 18.64% of total deaths) and in terms of genocidal

deaths (at 5.00 million or 9.85% of total genocide deaths). 30

body count

With the Communist Revolution in China, the Sinic

civilization largely merged into the Antitheist civiliza -

tion, just as Communist Eastern Europe was part of the

Antitheist civilizational category until it re-joined the

Christian civilization after the Cold War. Had this not

been the case, the Sinic civilization could have surpassed

the Christian as the most belligerent civilization.

7. It is safe to say that the Islamic civilization has, before

and after 9/11, been on the receiving end of media

charges of violence and bigotry. This may be due to the

large number of events in which the Muslim world has

been involved: 81 acts of political violence, including 9 of

genocidal character (in both instances ranking second in

terms of number of events). However, in terms of death-

toll the Muslim world’s share of death toll is ranked at the

bottom, with only the Indic civilization as more pacific.

The Islamic death toll of 31.94 million (mean figure)

amounts to 5.52% of the total world death-toll, and is

thus around a sixth of the Christian civilization’s share

and around a quarter of the Antitheist contribution. In

the genocide category, however, the Islamic death toll is

somewhat higher at 7.80%.

8. Contrary to the Islamic civilization, the Buddhist

civilization has enjoined an exceptional good press in

the West. Yet, the Buddhist contribution to the world

death-toll is almost three times the Islamic, at 87.95 31

body count

million (or 15.19% of the total death toll). It should be

noted that many instances of violence from the Buddhist

civilization derive from Japanese actions, including the

sole engagement of genocidal violence with the death

toll of 300,000.

9. Finally, the Indic civilization is the most pacific civiliza -

tion with no instance of genocidal violence (despite the

Bombay and Gujurat Riots in recent years). It is at the

bottom of all tables, with only 7 instances of large-scale

political violence, out of 321, and less than half a per -

centage of the total death toll (although that remains a

sizeable 2.39 million). 32

body count

Year World

Population Sinic Christian Primal Indic Islamic Buddhist Antitheist

1 213 million 53 0 87 24 0 19 __

200 223 million 59 3 89 29 0 24 __

400 198 million 55 16 69 26 0 28 __

600 203 million 45 21 64 32 0 34 __

800 222 million 50 26 47 43 11 39 __

1000 276 million 66 35 44 52 23 43 __

1100 311 million 98 40 42 66 32 45 __

1200 380 million 115 53 40 73 44 46 __

1300 396 million 86 76 37 77 52 44 __

1400 362 million 81 60 34 82 56 40 __

1500 443 million 108 81 40 93 71 42 __

1600 562 million 146 106 41 104 98 48 __

1700 645 million 160 131 46 122 114 57 4

1800 927 million 292 219 54 132 162 73 18

1850 1,221 million 384 332 65 158 215 96 32

1900 1,645 million 435 552 71 193 282 107 50

1950 2,514 million 405 887 62 410 478 167 100

1975 4,068 million 390 1,333 59 637 852 228 555

2000 6,000 million 661 1,972 76 816 1,290 390 600

2010 6,800 million 739 2,219 78 842 1,588 449 662

TABLE 1: THE GROWTH OF RELIGIOUS

CIVILIZATIONS (IN MILLION)

SECTION IV 33

body count

TABLE 2: RELIGIOUS CIVILIZATIONS IN

PROPORTION TO WORLD POPULATION

Year World

Population

Sinic Christian Primal Indic Islamic Buddhist Antitheist

1 213 million 24.9% 0% 40.8% 11.3% 0% 8.9% 0%

200 223 million 28.3% 1.4% 39.9% 13.0% 0% 10.8% 0%

400 198 million 26.7% 8.1% 36.4% 12.1% 0% 15.7% 0%

600 203 million 22.2% 10.3% 31.5% 15.7% 0% 16.7% 0%

800 222 million 22.5% 11.7% 21.2% 19.4% 5.0% 17.6% 0%

1000 276 million 23.9% 12.8% 15.9% 18.8% 8.3% 15.6% 0%

1100 311 million 31.5% 12.9% 13.5% 21.2% 10.3% 14.5% 0%

1200 380 million 30.3% 13.9% 10.5% 19.2% 11.6% 12.1% 0%

1300 396 million 21.7% 19.2% 9.3% 19.4% 13.1% 11.1% 0%

1400 362 million 22.4% 16.6% 9.4% 22.6% 15.5% 11.0% 0%

1500 443 million 24.4% 18.3% 9.0% 21.0% 16.0% 9.5% 0%

1600 562 million 26.0% 18.9% 7.3% 18.5% 17.4% 8.5% 0%

1700 645 million 24.8% 20.3% 7.1% 15.5% 17.7% 8.8% 0.6%

1800 927 million 31.5% 23.6% 5.8% 13.6% 17.5% 7.9% 1.9%

1850 1,221 million 33.2% 27.2% 5.3% 12.9% 17.6% 7.7% 2.6%

1900 1,645 million 26.4% 33.6% 4.3% 11.7% 17.9% 7.1% 3.0%

1950 2,514 million 16.1% 35.3% 2.5% 16.3% 19.0% 6.6% 4.0%

1975 4,068 million 9.6% 32.8% 1.5% 15.7% 20.9% 5.6% 13.6%

2000 6,000 million 11.0% 32.9% 1.2% 13.6% 21.5% 6.5% 10.0%

2010 6,800 million 10.9% 32.6% 1.1% 12.4% 23.3% 6.6% 9.7%

Discussion: The demographic balance between the world

civilizations has seen several tectonic shifts in the last

2,000 years. In the period 0-800, ethno-tribal belief sys -

tems, here known as Primal-Indigenous religions, were 34

body count

the chief socio-religion dispensation among humankind.

As the Christianization of Europe merged with the

Islamization of the Middle East and North Africa, the

Primal-Indigenous dominance was weakened. This gave

way to the Sinic civilization, which became the numeri -

cally largest, followed until the turn of the millennium

closely by the Indic civilization. The Sinic civilization

remained the dominant until medical advances in Europe

resulted in decreased child mortality, courtesy of the In -

dustrial Revolution, and by 1870 Christiandom were the

largest civilization, a privilege it retains till this day.

However, while all civilizations are increasing in absolute

terms, as a result of population growth, only Islam is grow -

ing in relative terms. Future projections anticipate that

Islam will attain parity with Christianity by 2050, as Islam

is the only civilization whose growth rate is in excess of

the generic growth rate of the world population at large.

Islam has not before reached parity with Christianity, with

the exception of narrowing the gap considerably around

the time of the Black Death in Europe (a gap which since

widened, even with the 30-Year War in Europe).

The most dramatic decline over the two thousand years

is found in the Primal-Indigenous group, where evange -

lization and death at the hand of colonialists entirely

eradicated parochial forms of religiosity. Buddhism, too,

has seen considerable demographic decline; from having

been more numerous than Hindus, Buddhists suffered

from loss of dynastic support in India and the spread of 35

body count

Islam in central Asia. Likewise, the Communist take-over

of China, sounded the death-knell of Sinic civilization

which quickly deteriorated. Like the Sinic civilization, the

Buddhist too suffered from the institutional imposition

of Antitheism, a blow which either is still to recover from,

even as Antitheism has recently seen a decline with the fall

of the Soviet block. english series - book 5

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