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The total number of French casualties cannot be calculated precisely, so complete was the collapse of the Franco-Bavarian army that day.
David G. Chandler ’ s Marlborough as Military Commander and A Guide to the Battlefields of Europe are consistent with regards to French casualty figures i. e., 12, 000 dead and wounded plus some 7, 000 taken prisoner.
James Falkner, in Ramillies 1706: Year of Miracles, also notes 12, 000 dead and wounded and states ‘ up to 10, 000 ’ taken prisoner.
In The Collins Encyclopaedia of Military History, Dupuy puts Villeroi ’ s dead and wounded at 8, 000, with a further 7, 000 captured.
John Millner ’ s memoirs – Compendious Journal ( 1733 ) – is more specific, recording 12, 087 of Villeroi ’ s army were killed or wounded, with another 9, 729 taken prisoner.
In Marlborough, however, Correlli Barnett puts the total casualty figure as high as 30, 000 – 15, 000 dead and wounded with an additional 15, 000 taken captive.
Trevelyan estimates Villeroi ’ s casualties at 13, 000, but adds, ‘ his losses by desertion may have doubled that number ’.
La Colonie omits a casualty figure in his Chronicles of an old Campaigner ; but Saint-Simon in his Memoirs states 4, 000 killed, adding ' many others were wounded and many important persons were taken prisoner '.
Voltaire, however, in Histoire du siecle du Louis XIV records, ' the French lost there twenty thousand men '.

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