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kodGreya [7K]
3 years ago
10

Was it in the national interest of the United States to stay neutral or declare war in April 1917?

History
1 answer:
kozerog [31]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

The national interest of the United States was to remain neutral in the war in April 1917

Explanation:

In August 1914, the world was watching

beginning of the conflict of what was conventionally called the First World War. Involving the great powers

European governments, different governments around the world felt the need to

fix and externalize its position in relation to

war. There were three options: join and

fight alongside the allies, do that

alongside the central empires or remain neutral in the face of conflict. Logo no

beginning of the war, like all countries in the

American continent, Chile, through

Ramón Barros Luco's government, declared that the country adopted the principle of

neutrality. This position was supported by public opinion, since the links

political, economic and cultural

country owned with the belligerent countries

would not justify a break. The entrance

in the conflict in 1917, and the rupture

with Germany on the part of several American countries promoted a change

on the Chilean national scene and emerged

voices in the country that proposed abandoning neutrality. Started in the country

a broad debate on the Chilean position

in the face of the conflict that was becoming worldwide.

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What is a common theme in the change in leadership of the Roman Empire from 235-285 CE?
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Answer:

The Crisis of the Third Century (also known as the Imperial Crisis, 235-284 CE) was the period in the history of the Roman Empire during which it splintered into three separate political entities: the Gallic Empire, the Roman Empire, and the Palmyrene Empire.

Explanation:

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3 years ago
Which two countries signed the Limited Test San Treaty in 1983?
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Answer:

United States Soviet Union and United Kingdom singed on it on 5th August 1963 and later it was opened for other countries who wanted to become a signatory

Explanation:

On August 5, 1963, representatives of the United States, Soviet Union and Great Britain signed the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, which prohibited the testing of nuclear weapons in outer space, underwater or in the atmosphere.

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3 years ago
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In what way did the printing press most affect the Protestant Reformation?
lora16 [44]

The correct answer is letter C.

Explanation: The printing press was created around 1448 by Johann Gutenberg. It made the ideas be spread in all Europe.

In that time Martin Luther spread his ideas about the Protestant Reformation, and had a small number of people to listen to him. But the printed word could spread hid idea for so much more of people.

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How did religious issues contributed to political unrest in England in the 17th century.
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The 17th century was a time of great political and social turmoil in England, marked by civil war and regicide. Matthew White introduces the key events of this period, from the coronation of Charles I to the Glorious Revolution more than 60 years later.
The 17th century was a period of huge political and social upheaval. From an age characterised by the Crown’s tight control of the state, the century witnessed years of war, terror and bloodshed that enveloped the kingdom, as well as the execution of Charles I and the introduction of a republic. Yet all this was again to be overthrown with the restoration of Charles II: a short-lived return to autocratic royal influence finally swept away with the installation of William and Mary as ruling monarchs.

Charles I and notions of absolutism

The origins of the English Civil Wars are firmly rooted in the actions of one man: King Charles I. As a child, Charles was never destined to succeed to the throne. The weak and sickly second son of James I, Charles had lived in the shadow of his elder brother Henry, who was educated in the ways of kingship by his father. All this changed when, in 1612, Henry contracted smallpox and died, suddenly placing Charles as heir to the throne, eventually to be crowned in his own right in 1625. The old king, James I, had been schooled in notions of compromise, forced to negotiate with his nobles on matters of religion and affairs of state. Charles, by contrast, adopted a starkly different approach, believing that his authority alone was supreme and ordained by God: defined by the principle of the ‘Divine Right of Kings’. ‘It is for me to decide how our nation is to be governed’ he wrote; ‘I alone must answer to God for our exercise of the authority he has invested in me’.[1]

Charles I’s absolutism manifested itself at a time of emerging self-confidence among the English elite. Though Parliament met only sporadically during this period – and acted mainly in an advisory role to the sovereign – by the time Charles was crowned he was already highly dependent on the gentry’s ability to raise adequate tax revenues (derived from agricultural rents, which far exceeded any other sources of income). It was this body of landowning gentlemen that constituted the bulk of Members of Parliament, men who, in theory, could by withholding his sources of income, hold the king to account. Conflict between Crown and Parliament arose for a number of reasons. In matters of religion Charles appeared to disregard the Protestant settlement secured by Henry VIII, favouring instead the Catholic mass and, in 1625, marrying a Catholic member of the French nobility, Henrietta Maria. Charles also continued to act unilaterally in matters of foreign policy and, in the face of criticism levelled by his chief advisers, dissolved Parliament in 1629. Parliament would not meet again for another 11 years.

Without Parliament to sanction his financial needs, Charles found himself in increasingly difficult circumstances. Rebellion in Scotland (provoked by Charles’s insensitive imposition of a new prayer book) required that additional revenues be raised in order to finance a military response. Reluctantly, the king convened a new Parliament in 1640.

The new Parliament that met that year was at once openly hostile to the Crown. MPs complained bitterly about the imposition of taxes and the blatant disregard of religious toleration in the north. (The Scots had rejected Charles’s prayer book and drafted a National Covenant in defiance of the king, resisting his religious reforms in favour of a simpler form of Protestant worship.) Sensing weakness in Charles’s position, key concessions were demanded from the king, and personal attacks were launched against his key ministers. Among them, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of Strafford, was to suffer the death penalty for what Parliament labelled acts of treason against the Scottish nation. A botched attempt to arrest five MPs for treason set the king directly in conflict with his people. The scene was set for civil war.

A nation at war

Fearing for his own safety, in 1642 Charles fled London, first heading north to where he believed his main support lay. At Hull, the king was refused entry to the city by the Lord Mayor, and later that year, in Nottingham, Charles raised his royal standard: the first symbol of open warfare with Parliament.

On 23 October 1642 the first true battle of the Civil Wars took place, at Edgehill in Warwickshire, resulting in stalemate between Parliamentarian and Royalist forces. For four years afterwards skirmishing and warfare erupted across the nation, as Roundheads (labelled for the Parliamentarians’ short cropped hair) and Cavaliers (a derogatory term describing the courtly dress of Royalists) pitched themselves against each other.
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2 years ago
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Need help with this history question
Kobotan [32]

Answer:

i'm using the same website for school!  copy and paste the definition; separate!!

and the internet will give you the answer

Explanation:

good luck online school is difficult!

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3 years ago
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