Answer:
Britain: They had several motivations for his wishes at the Versailles Peace Conference. He had campaigned in the 1918, British election, promising to make Germany pay. They also wanted to stop German threats to the British Empire, and wanted to also protect British jobs in manufacturing.
France: France's main objective was to gain as much security as it could from the treaty, the tried to achieve this by weakening Germany as much as possible, draining its financial resources and its arms resources.
US: President Woodrow Wilson personally led the United States delegation at Versailles. ... Ultimately, the Treaty of Versailles (1919) required Germany to accept responsibility for World War I and imposed reparations. It also called for the establishment of the League of Nations, as Wilson had envisioned.
Explanation:
The struggle to trade and control food
In the triangular trade, slaves were sent from Africa to the United States.
Their methods were likely aggressive and they did anything they could to get what they wanted. I doubt their methods were very effective, but they may have had an effect over time.
I don't know what choices you might be looking for with your answer, but here are some facts about Christianity in Ethiopia.
1. Christianity has been in Ethiopia since the 4th century. King Ezana II was converted to Christianity in 324.
2. The largest and oldest Christian church group in Africa is th<span>e </span><span>Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church. (Tewahedo means "unified.") It was part of the Coptic Orthodox Church (which encompasses other parts of north Africa and the Middle East) until granted its own status in 1959 as an independent group with its own patriarch ("father" -- the church leader).
3. The "Coptic" churches do not accept the definition of Christ's dual nature that was expressed by the Council of Chalcedon (AD 451). There's a whole lot of deep theology stuff I could get into with that thought, but won't. Just note that the Coptic church (such as exists in places like Egypt and Ethiopia) has a somewhat different theological stance than what you would normally find in western Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy.</span>