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League of Nations

A Wisdom Archive on League of Nations

League of Nations

A selection of articles related to League of Nations

We recommend this article: League of Nations - 1, and also this: League of Nations - 2.
More material related to League Of Nations can be found here:
Index of Articles
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League Of Nations
League of Nations

ARTICLES RELATED TO League of Nations

League of Nations: American History Dictionary - League of Nations

Definition and meaning of League of Nations:

 

League of Nations

The League of Nations was President Wilson's fourteenth point in his plan for a "peace without victory." He proposed the League as an international peacekeeping organization, and it was incorporated into the 1919 Treaty of Versailles that ended World War I. But questions about League membership caused the U.S. Senate to refuse to ratify the treaty and to reject U.S. membership in the League.

(Source: Madrid Waddington High School )

 

Also see these pages:  American History, American History Sitemap, History, History Sitemap

 

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - League of Nations - Specific failures

The general weaknesses of the League are illustrated by its specific failures. League of Nations - Cieszyn. Cieszyn (German Teschen, Czech Těšín) is a region between Poland and today's Czech Republic, important for its coal mines. Czechoslovakian troops fought moved to Cieszyn in 1919 to take over control of the region while Poland was defending itself from invasion of Bolshevik Russia. The League intervened, deciding that Poland should take control of most of the town, but that Czechoslovakia should ta ...

See also:

League of Nations, League of Nations - Origins, League of Nations - Symbols, League of Nations - Languages, League of Nations - Structure, League of Nations - Secretariat, League of Nations - Council, League of Nations - Assembly, League of Nations - Other bodies, League of Nations - Mandates, League of Nations - Successes, League of Nations - Åland Islands, League of Nations - Albania, League of Nations - Upper Silesia, League of Nations - Memel, League of Nations - Greece and Bulgaria, League of Nations - Saar, League of Nations - Mosul, League of Nations - Other successes, League of Nations - General weaknesses, League of Nations - Specific failures, League of Nations - Cieszyn, League of Nations - Vilna, League of Nations - Ruhr, League of Nations - Corfu, League of Nations - Manchuria Crisis, League of Nations - Chaco War, League of Nations - Spanish Civil War, League of Nations - Italian invasion of Abyssinia, League of Nations - Axis re-armament, League of Nations - Demise and Legacy

Read more here: » League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - League of Nations - Specific failures

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - International law - History

See main article: history of international law. Through the ages a code developed for the relations and conduct between nations. Even when nations were at war, envoys were often considered immune to violence. The first formal attempts in this direction, which over time have developed into the current international law, stem from the era of the Renaissance in Europe. In the Middle Ages it had been considered the obligation of the Church to mediate in international disputes. During the Council of Constance (1414) Pawel Wlodkowic, ...

See also:

International law, International law - The scope of international law, International law - Fundamental conflicts over international law, International law - Sources of international law, International law - Interpretation of International Law, International law - Enforcement by states, International law - Enforcement by international bodies, International law - History, International law - International legal theory, International law - Natural law, International law - Eclectic school, International law - Legal positivism, International law - Branches of international law, International law - Notes and references

Read more here: » International law: Encyclopedia II - International law - History

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Burundi - History

Burundi existed as an independent kingdom from the 16th century. In 1903, it became a German colony and passed to Belgium in World War I. It was part of the Belgian League of Nations mandate of Ruanda-Urundi in 1923, later a United Nations Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority following World War II. The origins of Burundi monarchy are veiled in myth. According to some legends, Ntare Rushatsi, founder of the original dynasty, came to Burundi from Rwanda in 17th century; other, more reliable sources, suggest that Ntare came from Buha, in the south-east, and laid the foundation f ...

See also:

Burundi, Burundi - History, Burundi - Politics, Burundi - Geography, Burundi - Economy, Burundi - Demographics, Burundi - Culture, Burundi - Miscellaneous topics

Read more here: » Burundi: Encyclopedia II - Burundi - History

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Tourism - History

Wealthy people have always travelled to distant parts of the world to see great buildings or other works of art; to learn new languages; or to taste new cuisine. As long ago as the time of the Roman Republic places such as Baiae were popular coastal resorts for the rich. The terms tourist and tourism were first used as official terms in 1937 by the League of Nations. Tourism was defined as people travelling abroad for periods of over 24 hours. Tourism - Health t ...

See also:

Tourism, Tourism - Tourism Classification, Tourism - Required factors, Tourism - History, Tourism - Health tourism & leisure travel, Tourism - Winter tourism, Tourism - Mass travel, Tourism - International mass tourism, Tourism - Recent developments, Tourism - Special forms of tourism, Tourism - Trends

Read more here: » Tourism: Encyclopedia II - Tourism - History

League of Nations: Encyclopedia - White Paper of 1939

The White Paper of 1939, also known as the MacDonald White Paper after Malcolm MacDonald, the British Colonial Secretary who presided over it, was a policy paper issued by the British government under Neville Chamberlain in which the idea of partitioning the British Mandate of Palestine was abandoned in favour of an independent Palestine governed jointly by Arabs and Jews. White Paper of 1939 - pre White Paper of 1939. Previous White Papers had stated that the 1917 Balfour Declaration was not a Briti ...

Including:

Read more here: » White Paper of 1939: Encyclopedia - White Paper of 1939

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - 1933 - Events

1933 - January. January 3 - Japanese troops occupy Shanghai January 5 - Construction of the Golden Gate Bridge begins in San Francisco Bay. January 15 - Political violence has caused almost 100 deaths in Spain January 17 - US Congress votes favorable for Philippines independence, against the view of president Hoover January 30 - Edouard Daladier forms a government in France January 30 - Adolf Hitler appointed Chancellor of Germany by Reich President Paul von Hindenburg. January 30 - The first airing of episode 1 of 2,956 episodes of the radio program ...

See also:

1933, 1933 - Events, 1933 - January, 1933 - February, 1933 - March, 1933 - April, 1933 - May, 1933 - June, 1933 - July, 1933 - August, 1933 - September, 1933 - October, 1933 - November, 1933 - December, 1933 - Undated, 1933 - Births, 1933 - January, 1933 - February, 1933 - March, 1933 - April, 1933 - May, 1933 - June, 1933 - July, 1933 - August, 1933 - September-October, 1933 - November, 1933 - December, 1933 - Deaths, 1933 - January-March, 1933 - April-June, 1933 - July-December, 1933 - Nobel Prizes

Read more here: » 1933: Encyclopedia II - 1933 - Events

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - William Randolph Hearst - Personal

In 1903, William married Millicent Veronica Willson (1882–1974), a beautiful 22-year-old chorus girl, in New York City. Nearly 20 years her senior, Hearst had been seeing her since she was 16. The couple had five sons: George Randolph Hearst (1904–1972), William Randolph Hearst Jr. (1908–1993), John Randolph Hearst (1910–1958), and twins Randolph Apperson Hearst (1915–2000) and David Whitmire Hearst (1915–1986). Though the couple stayed married until Hearst's death — they separated in 1926 — he was devoted to the popular movie actress and comedienne Marion Davies, (née Marion Cecilia Douras, 18 ...

See also:

William Randolph Hearst, William Randolph Hearst - Business, William Randolph Hearst - Personal, William Randolph Hearst - The Hearst myth, William Randolph Hearst - Notes on Sources

Read more here: » William Randolph Hearst: Encyclopedia II - William Randolph Hearst - Personal

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - 1946 - Events

1946 - January. January 2 - Unable to resume his rule over Albania after World War II, King Zog abdicated but retained his claim to the throne. January 4 - Theodore Schurch becomes the last person to be executed for offences committed under the Treachery Act of 1940 January 7 - Allied recognize Austrian republic with 1937 borders - the country is divided into four occupation zones January 10 - First meeting of the United Nations January 10 - Project Diana bounces Radar wa ...

See also:

1946, 1946 - Events, 1946 - January, 1946 - February, 1946 - March, 1946 - April, 1946 - May, 1946 - June-July, 1946 - August-November, 1946 - December, 1946 - Unknown dates, 1946 - Births, 1946 - January, 1946 - February, 1946 - March, 1946 - April, 1946 - May, 1946 - June, 1946 - July, 1946 - August, 1946 - September, 1946 - October, 1946 - November, 1946 - December, 1946 - Unknown date, 1946 - Fictional, 1946 - Deaths, 1946 - Nobel Prizes

Read more here: » 1946: Encyclopedia II - 1946 - Events

League of Nations: Encyclopedia - David Ben-Gurion

David Ben-Gurion ▶ (help·info) (October 16, 1886 – December 1, 1973; Hebrew: דָּוִד בֶּן גּוּרִיּוֹן) was the first Prime Minister of Israel. David Ben-Gurion - Early life. He was born as David Grün in Płońsk, Poland which was then part of the Russian Empire. His father, Avigdor Grün was a lawyer and a leader in the Hovevei Zion organization. His mother, Scheindel died when Ben-Gurion was 11 ...

Including:

Read more here: » David Ben-Gurion: Encyclopedia - David Ben-Gurion

League of Nations: : American History Sitemap I - L

This is a sitemap for American History - L . Click on a link and you will find multiple definitions and articles related to the word. The sitemap(s) covers over 1,574 different American History terms.

 

Ladies' Home Journal, Ladies' Memorial Associations, laissez-faire, Land Grant College Act, Land Ordinance of 1785, landsmanshaften, large policy, Las Gorras Blancas, League of Armed Neutrality, League of Freedom, League of Nations, League of United Latin American Citizens, League of Women Voters, Leaves of Grass, Lecompton Constitution, Lee Harvey Oswald, legal tender, Leisler's Rebellion, Lend-Lease Act, Leon Czolgosz, Leonard Wood, Lester Frank Ward, Letter from Birmingham Jail, Lewis and Clark Expedition, Lewis Cass, Levittown, Leyte Gulf, Liberal Republicans, Liberty Association, Liberty bonds, Liberty party, Lillian Wald, lily-white policy, Limited Test Ban Treaty, Lincoln Steffens, Lincoln-Douglas debates, Little Bighorn, localism, London Company, Lone Star Republic, long- and short-haul inequity, loose construction, Lord Baltimore, Lords of Trade, lost cause, lost generation, Louis Brandeis, Louis Sullivan, Louisiana Purchase, Loyalists, Loyalty Review Board, Lucretia Mott, Lusitania, lyceum, lynching, Lyndon B. Johnson,

 

More sitemaps here:

American History Dictionary, American History Dictionary - A-Z,
American History Dictionary - A, American History Dictionary - B, American History Dictionary - C, American History Dictionary - D, American History Dictionary - E, American History Dictionary - F, American History Dictionary - G, American History Dictionary - H, American History Dictionary - I, American History Dictionary - J, American History Dictionary - K, American History Dictionary - L, American History Dictionary - M, American History Dictionary - N, American History Dictionary - O, American History Dictionary - P, American History Dictionary - Q, American History Dictionary - R, American History Dictionary - S, American History Dictionary - T, American History Dictionary - U, American History Dictionary - V, American History Dictionary - W, American History Dictionary - X, American History Dictionary - Y, American History Dictionary - Z,

American History, History, Politics, Philosophy, Environment

 

Read more here: » American History Sitemap I - L

League of Nations: Encyclopedia - 1923

1923 (MCMXXIII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will take you to calendar). 1923 - Events. January 1 - Grouping of all UK railway companies into four larger companies January 10 - Lithuania seizes and annexes Memel January 11 - Troops from France and Belgium occupy the Ruhr area to force Germany to pay its reparation payments 1923 - February. February 16 - Howard Carter unseals the ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1923: Encyclopedia - 1923

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany

More than 7 million Germans, including at least 3 million civilians, died during World War II. After the war, the German people were often viewed with contempt because they were blamed for Nazi crimes by other Europeans. Germans visiting abroad, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, attracted insults from locals, and from foreigners who may have had their families or friends live through or perish in the attrocities. Today in Europe and worldwide (particularly in countries that fought against the Axis), Germans still might get scorned ...

See also:

Consequences of German Nazism, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Jewry, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Austria, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Poland, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Central Europe, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on the Soviet Union, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Western Europe, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Greece, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on world politics, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on international law, Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on racism

Read more here: » Consequences of German Nazism: Encyclopedia II - Consequences of German Nazism - Impact on Germany

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Demilitarized zone - Current Demilitarized/Neutral Zones

Demilitarized zone - Africa. Ceuta and Melilla, Spanish goverment controlled cities at North Morocco. Between Melilla & Ceuta and Morocco where is an demilitarized zone. Morocco hasn't recognized Ceuta and Melilla as part of Spain. See: Ceuta border fence and Melilla border fence. Demilitarized zone - Europe. The Cypriot demilitarized zone separates the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus from the Republic of Cyprus. It was ...

See also:

Demilitarized zone, Demilitarized zone - Current Demilitarized/Neutral Zones, Demilitarized zone - Africa, Demilitarized zone - Europe, Demilitarized zone - Asia, Demilitarized zone - Antarctica, Demilitarized zone - Famous former demilitarized zones, Demilitarized zone - Fictional demilitarized zones

Read more here: » Demilitarized zone: Encyclopedia II - Demilitarized zone - Current Demilitarized/Neutral Zones

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Country - Comparison with other concepts

The term country is often, erroneously, used synonymously with other terms like state, nation and land. Country - State and government. Main article: State State is a territory with a government, usually based on a constitution. In many circumstances, countries are indeed states with governments, and the two are frequently used as synonyms. However, many countries are federations of smaller entities which are in turn also states. In some countri ...

See also:

Country, Country - Countries of the world, Country - Comparison with other concepts, Country - State and government, Country - Nation, Country - Land and countryside, Country - Exclaves

Read more here: » Country: Encyclopedia II - Country - Comparison with other concepts

League of Nations: The New Kids Have Arrived!

An newspaper interview about Indigo Children with Jan Tober, one of the authors to The Indigo Children. She says this generation of kids are "Masters."

Read more here: » Indigo Children: The New Kids Have Arrived!

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Geneva - Culture

Geneva - Landmarks and Sights. Notable sights in Geneva include the Flower Clock, the Art and History Museum, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum and the Palais des Nations, the European headquarters of the United Nations. The city's most noted landmark is a fountain: the Jet d'Eau (water-jet), situated in Lake Geneva. Its 140-metre-high water column is visible from many parts of the city.

See also:

Geneva, Geneva - History, Geneva - Geography, Geneva - Demographics, Geneva - International organizations, Geneva - Economy, Geneva - Infrastructure, Geneva - Transportation, Geneva - Utilities, Geneva - Education, Geneva - Culture, Geneva - Landmarks and Sights, Geneva - Media, Geneva - Sport, Geneva - Trivia

Read more here: » Geneva: Encyclopedia II - Geneva - Culture

League of Nations: Encyclopedia - Counterfeit

A counterfeit is an imitation that is made with the intent to deceptively represent its content or origins. The word counterfeit most frequently describes forged money or documents, but can also describe clothing, software, pharmaceuticals, or any other manufactured item, especially when these products are protected by trademarks or patents. Counterfeit - History. Counterfeiting money is probably as old as money itself. However, the introduction of paper money has made it an easier thing to do. < ...

Including:

Read more here: » Counterfeit: Encyclopedia - Counterfeit

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Benito Mussolini - Fascist dictatorship

At first Mussolini was supported by the Liberals in parliament. With their help, he introduced strict censorship and altered the methods of election so that in 1925–1926 he was able to assume dictatorial powers and dissolve all other political parties. Skillfully using his absolute control over the press, he gradually built up the legend of Il Duce, the title he bestowed upon himself: a man who never slept, was always right, and could solve all the problems of politics and economics. He introduced the Press Laws in 1925 which stated ...

See also:

Benito Mussolini, Benito Mussolini - Early years, Benito Mussolini - Birth of Fascism, Benito Mussolini - Fascist dictatorship, Benito Mussolini - The Axis of Blood and Steel, Benito Mussolini - World War II, Benito Mussolini - Death, Benito Mussolini - Writings of Mussolini

Read more here: » Benito Mussolini: Encyclopedia II - Benito Mussolini - Fascist dictatorship

League of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Marcus Garvey - Early life

Garvey was born in Saint Ann's Bay August 17, 1887, the capital of the parish of Saint Ann, Jamaica, where he attended grammar school. He also received private instruction from his godfather Alfred Burrowes, who ran a printery. At 14, Garvey was apprenticed to Burrowes to learn the printing trade. Garvey inherited a love of books from his father, a skilled mason who had a private library. This was further encouraged during his apprenticeship with Burrowes, where he came into contact with people who stopped at the prin ...

See also:

Marcus Garvey, Marcus Garvey - Early life, Marcus Garvey - Travels abroad, Marcus Garvey - Publishing activities, Marcus Garvey - Founding of the UNIA-ACL, Marcus Garvey - Charged with mail fraud, Marcus Garvey - Other controversies, Marcus Garvey - Later years, Marcus Garvey - Influence, Marcus Garvey - Garvey and Rastafari, Marcus Garvey - Memorials to Garvey in Jamaica and Beyond, Marcus Garvey - Quotes, Marcus Garvey - See Also:, Marcus Garvey - Marcus Garvey bibliography

Read more here: » Marcus Garvey: Encyclopedia II - Marcus Garvey - Early life

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