Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. A League of Nations mandate represented a legal status under international law for specific territories following World War I, involving the transfer of control from one nation to another. These mandates served as legal documents establishing the internationally agreed terms for administering the territory on behalf of the League of Nations .

  2. Soviet Union. , Afghanistan. , and. Ecuador. . Of the 42 founding members, [1] 23 (or 24, counting the Free France) were members when the League of Nations was dissolved in 1946. A further 21 countries joined between 1920 and 1937, but seven had withdrawn, left, or been expelled before 1946. Countries are listed under the year in which they joined.

  3. Oct 12, 2017 · The League of Nations was an international diplomatic group developed after World War I as a way to solve disputes between countries before they erupted into open warfare.

    • Joshua Mapes
  4. Overview. The League of Nations was established at the end of World War I as an international peacekeeping organization. Although US President Woodrow Wilson was an enthusiastic proponent of the League, the United States did not officially join the League of Nations due to opposition from isolationists in Congress.

  5. League of Nations. Class C mandate. Class A mandate. Class B mandate. mandate, an authorization granted by the League of Nations to a member nation to govern a former German or Turkish colony. The territory was called a mandated territory, or mandate. Following the defeat of Germany and Ottoman Turkey in World War I, their Asian and African ...

  6. League of Nations - Members, Mandates, Covenant: The table provides a list of members of the League of Nations as well as the effective dates of their membership. *Original member (January 10, 1920). **Declared to be no longer a member of the League by council resolution December 14, 1939.

  1. People also search for