<span>Eleanor Roosevelt's influential family connections both to President Teddy Roosevelt and the Livingston's of New York contributed to her influence. Her drive and personality also contributed, and education in London and her relationship with her feminist headmistress helped shape her.</span>
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The Battle of Adwa (Tigrinya: ዓድዋ; Amharic: አድዋ; Italian Adua) was the climactic battle of the First Italo-Ethiopian War. Led by Emperor Menelik II, Ethiopian forces, with the aid of Russia and France, defeated an invading Italian force on 1 March 1896, near the town of Adwa in Tigray. The decisive victory thwarted the Kingdom of Italy's campaign to expand its colonial empire in the Horn of Africa and secured the Ethiopian Empire's sovereignty for another forty years. As the only African nation to successfully resist European conquest during the scramble for Africa, Ethiopia became a pre-eminent symbol of the pan-African movement and international opposition to colonialism, although Ethiopia was atypical. amongst African nations by being both Christian and possessing a written culture several centuries old by the time of the Italian invasion
By the end of the 19th century, European powers had carved up almost all of Africa after the Berlin Conference. Only Ethiopia, then still commonly known as Abyssinia and the Republic of Liberia still maintained their independence (Liberia being a settler nation supported by the United States). The newly unified Kingdom of Italy was a relative newcomer to the imperialist scramble for Africa. Two of its recently obtained African territories, Italian Eritrea and Italian Somaliland, bordered Ethiopia on the Horn of Africa. Italy sought to improve its position in Africa by conquering Ethiopia and joining it with its two territories. Menelik successfully pitted Italy against its European rivals while stockpiling advanced weapons to defend his empire against the Italians and British.
The forces that drove the revolution of the 1700s, 1800s, and early 1900s were <u>control, money, political reform, social reform, economic reform, coal, inventors and entrepreneurs, and textile machines. </u>
Enlightenment ideas about government provided a philosophical basis for the revolutions of the late 1700s and early 1800s.
They replaced them with more democratic forms of government. They also triggered a series of nationalist uprisings that let to the formation of new nation-states.