I'm going to have to say C, the requirements that a losing army must obey.
Tell me if I'm wrong, I had to look into this.
1. During his commission with the Continental Army, he became a close confidant and long-time friend of George Washington. In 1779, Lafayette was granted leave from the Continental Army to return to France. His goal was to secure additional aid from the king to help the American colonists fight the British.
2 referring to An Improbable French Leader in America.
lafayette was born as the child of French Nobles and has been lived in luxury ever since he's born.
If he join the American cause, he will discredit his family which benefits the most from the structure that currently imposed by the French government.
The Marquis de Lafayette was an improbable leader in the American Revolutionary War. ... And yet, despite his wealth and high standing in French aristocracy, Lafayette was not content. During a stay in Paris, he learned of the American colonists' revolt against the British.
Answer:
It was called "critical period" because the government at the center failed in his capacity to bring about solutions to many problems relating to the economy.
Explanation:
John Fiske in 1888 describe the critical period of American history as the period where colonies that were independent are bedeviled with lots of assemblage of domestics and array of foreign issues during the end of the revolutionary war in America in 1783.
It must be noted that it was during the period that George Washington was also to be inaugurated as the new American president