The names Great Britain and United Kingdom are often used interchangeably. However, they are not actually synonymous. The reason for the two names, and the difference between them, has to do with the expansive history of the British Isles.

The British Isles are a group of islands off the northwestern coast of Europe. The largest of these islands are Britain and Ireland. (Smaller ones include the Isle of Wight.) In the Middle Ages, the name Britain was also applied to a small part of France now known as Brittany. As a result, Great Britain came into use to refer specifically to the island. However, that name had no official significance until 1707, when the island’s rival kingdoms of England and Scotland were united as the Kingdom of Great Britain.

Ireland, meanwhile, had effectively been an English colony since the 12th century, and after the emergence of Great Britain, it remained under the influence of the British crown. In 1801 it formally joined with Great Britain as a single political entity, which became known as the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland—or the United Kingdom for short. However, the union lasted only until 1922, when Ireland (with the exception of six counties in the north) seceded. Ireland soon became a sovereign republic, and its former partner took on the official name of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

Great Britain, therefore, is a geographic term referring to the island also known simply as Britain. It’s also a political term for the part of the United Kingdom made up of England, Scotland, and Wales (including the outlying islands that they administer, such as the Isle of Wight). United Kingdom, on the other hand, is purely a political term: it’s the independent country that encompasses all of Great Britain and the region now called Northern Ireland.

This graph provides a comparison of the estimated battle casualties during the Normandy Invasion, which began on D-Day (June 6, 1944), and the subsequent Allied campaign that liberated Paris several months later, in August—a crucial period that helped bring World War II to an end in Europe the following year.

The figures given in this graph were selected from official histories or provided by advisers as generally agreed-upon estimates. They are presented mainly for purposes of comparison and to give a sense of the scale of the human losses.

The estimated total battle casualties for Germany were 320,000, including 30,000 killed, 80,000 wounded, and 210,000 missing. More than 70 percent of the missing were eventually reported as captured.

German casualties were extrapolated from a report of German OB West, September 28, 1944, and from a report of a German army surgeon for the period June 6–August 31, 1944.

The estimated total battle casualties for the United States were 135,000, including 29,000 killed and 106,000 wounded and missing.

United States casualties are taken from Office of the Adjutant General, Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths in World War II: Final Report, 7 December 1941–31 December 1946, page 92. Figures are for U.S. Army and Army Air Forces casualties in Normandy and northern France, June 6–September 14.

The estimated total battle casualties for the United Kingdom were 65,000, including 11,000 killed and 54,000 wounded or missing.

British casualties are taken from L.F. Ellis et al., Victory in the West, vol. 1, The Battle of Normandy (1962, reissued 1993), page 493. Figures are for 21st Army Group, June 6–August 31, minus Canadian numbers given in C.P. Stacey, below.

The estimated total battle casualties for Canada were 18,000, including 5,000 killed and 13,000 wounded or missing.

Canadian casualties were taken from C.P. Stacey, The Victory Campaign: The Operations in North-West Europe, 1944–1945 (1960), page 271. Figures are for June 6–August 23. Under Canadian command were the Poles, who suffered some 1,350 casualties from August 1 to August 23, 1944.

The estimated total battle casualties for France included 12,200 civilians killed or missing.

French casualties were provided by the Mémorial de Caen, France. Figures are for the départements of Calvados, Manche, and Orne from June 6 to August 31, 1944.

The combined battle casualties of the Normandy Invasion were 550,200.

(Find out how the D-Day landings at Normandy happened.)