1: Shensi, China, Jan. 23, 1556
  
Magnitude about 8, about 830,000 deaths. 
This earthquake occurred in the Shaanxi province (formerly Shensi),  China, about 50 miles east-northeast of Xi'an, the capital of Shaanxi.  More than 830,000 people are estimated to have been killed. Damage  extended as far away as about 270 miles northeast of the epicenter, with  reports as far as Liuyang in Hunan, more than 500 miles away.  Geological effects reported with this earthquake included ground  fissures, uplift, subsidence, liquefaction and landslides. Most towns in  the damage area reported city walls collapsed, most to all houses  collapsed and many of the towns reported ground fissures with water  gushing out.
2: Tangshan, China, July 27, 1976 
 Magnitude 7.5. Official casualty figure is 255,000 deaths. Estimated death toll as high as 655,000.  
Damage extended as far as Beijing. This is probably the greatest  death toll from an earthquake in the last four centuries, and the second  greatest in recorded history.
3: Aleppo, Syria, Aug. 9, 1138 
Magnitude not known, about 230,000 deaths.
Contemporary accounts said the walls of Syria’s second-largest city  crumbled and rocks cascaded into the streets. Aleppo’s citadel  collapsed, killing hundreds of residents. Although Aleppo was the  largest community affected by the earthquake, it likely did not suffer  the worst of the damage. European Crusaders had constructed a citadel at  nearby Harim, which was leveled by the quake. A Muslim fort at  Al-Atarib was destroyed as well, and several smaller towns and manned  forts were reduced to rubble. The quake was said to have been felt as  far away as Damascus, about 220 miles to the south. The Aleppo  earthquake was the first of several occurring between 1138 and 1139 that  devastated areas in northern Syria and western Turkey.
4: Sumatra, Indonesia, Dec. 26, 2004
  
Magnitude 9.1, 227,898 deaths.
This was the third largest earthquake in the world since 1900 and the  largest since the 1964 Prince William Sound, Alaska temblor. In total,  227,898 people were killed or were missing and presumed dead and about  1.7 million people were displaced by the earthquake and subsequent  tsunami in 14 countries in South Asia and East Africa. (In January 2005,  the death toll was 286,000. In April 2005, Indonesia reduced its  estimate for the number missing by over 50,000.)
5: Haiti, Jan 12, 2010 
Magnitude 7.0. According to official estimates, 222,570 people killed.
According to official estimates, 300,000 were also injured, 1.3  million displaced, 97,294 houses destroyed and 188,383 damaged in the  Port-au-Prince area and in much of southern Haiti. This includes at  least 4 people killed by a local tsunami in the Petit Paradis area near  Leogane. Tsunami waves were also reported at Jacmel, Les Cayes, Petit  Goave, Leogane, Luly and Anse a Galets.
6: Damghan, Iran, Dec. 22, 856
  
Magnitude not known, about 200,000 deaths.
This earthquake struck a 200-mile stretch of northeast Iran, with the  epicenter directly below the city of Demghan, which was at that point  the capital city. Most of the city was destroyed as well as the  neighboring areas. Approximately 200,000 people were killed.
7: Haiyuan, Ningxia , China, Dec. 16, 1920 
7.8 magnitude, about 200,000 deaths.
This earthquake brought total destruction to the  Lijunbu-Haiyuan-Ganyanchi area. Over 73,000 people were killed in  Haiyuan County. A landslide buried the village of Sujiahe in Xiji  County. More than 30,000 people were killed in Guyuan County. Nearly all  the houses collapsed in the cities of Longde and Huining. About 125  miles of surface faulting was seen from Lijunbu through Ganyanchi to  Jingtai. There were large numbers of landslides and ground cracks  throughout the epicentral area. Some rivers were dammed, others changed  course.
8: Ardabil, Iran, March. 23, 893
Magnitude not known, about 150,000 deaths
The memories of the massive Damghan earthquake (see above) had barely  faded when only 37 years later, Iran was again hit by a huge  earthquake. This time it cost 150,000 lives and destroyed the largest  city in the northwestern section of the country. The area was again hit  by a fatal earthquake in 1997.
9: Kanto, Japan, Sept. 1, 1923
   
7.9 magnitude, 142,800 deaths. 
This earthquake brought extreme destruction in the Tokyo-Yokohama  area, both from the temblor and subsequent firestorms, which burned  about 381,000 of the more than 694,000 houses that were partially or  completely destroyed. Although often known as the Great Tokyo Earthquake  (or the Great Tokyo Fire), the damage was most severe in Yokohama.  Nearly 6 feet of permanent uplift was observed on the north shore of  Sagami Bay and horizontal displacements of as much as 15 feet were  measured on the Boso Peninsula.
 10: Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, Oct. 5, 1948
7.3 magnitude, 110,000 deaths.
This quake brought extreme damage in Ashgabat (Ashkhabad) and nearby  villages, where almost all the brick buildings collapsed, concrete  structures were heavily damaged and freight trains were derailed. Damage  and casualties also occurred in the Darreh Gaz area in neighboring  Iran. Surface rupture was observed both northwest and southeast of  Ashgabat. Many sources list the casualty total at 10,000, but a news  release from the newly independent government on Dec. 9, 1988, advised  that the correct death toll was 110,000. (Turkmenistan had been part of  the Soviet Union, which tended to downplay the death tolls from man-made  and natural disasters.)
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