Answer:
I think it's A&E i hope it's right
Explanation:
Answer:
The Treaty of Versailles, signed in June 1919 at the Palace of Versailles in Paris at the end of World War I, codified peace terms between the victorious Allies and Germany. The Treaty of Versailles held Germany responsible for starting the war and imposed harsh penalties in terms of loss of territory, massive reparations payments and demilitarization. Far from the “peace without victory” that U.S. President Woodrow Wilson had outlined in his famous Fourteen Points in early 1918, the Treaty of Versailles humiliated Germany while failing to resolve the underlying issues that had led to war in the first place. Economic distress and resentment of the treaty within Germany helped fuel the ultra-nationalist sentiment that led to the rise of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party, as well as the coming of a World War II just two decades later.
I think it will help
Answer:
D
Explanation:
The English were there for centuries and fought numerous wars.
They did not have help from Spanish and were not familiar with the land because they didn't live there. They also were not able to get supplies easily because they lived overseas.
Answer: The mandate system authorized a member nation of the League of Nations to govern a former German or Turkish colonial area after the conclusion of World War I.
Context/detail:
When World War I erupted, the Ottoman Empire sided with Germany as part of the "Central Powers." In the end, the Central Powers lost and the Turkish empire of the Ottomans ceased to exist as an empire. Turkey remained as a country, but it lost control over other territories that it had held before. Germany was stripped of its overseas colonial holdings.
The League of Nations created a system for governing former German and Ottoman territories, called "the mandate system." There were mandate territories for former German territories in Africa and Asia, as well for former Ottoman territories in the Middle East.
The former Turkish provinces of Syria, Iraq and Palestine in the Middle East were divided into a French mandate territory and British mandate territory. The British mandate rule over Palestine has much to do with the history of the development of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
The Executive Order 9066 was enacted because many Americans, after hearing of the December 7th attack, came to distrust the Japanese Americans, and thought of them as spies, secretly sending information to mainland Japan in exchange for money, etc. The Government used Executive 9066 to "protect" the Japanese, however, the Japanese received poor housing and had the bare necessities. Later on in the war, conditions improved.
If you want a account, read "thin wood walls"