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History: From One Student to Another
  • Home
  • International GCSE
    • IGCSE: Germany, 1918-45
      • The Weimar Republic
        • The German Revolution of 1918
        • The Strengths and Weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution
        • The Spartacist Uprising
        • German Reaction to The Treaty Of Versailles
        • The Kapp Putsch
        • The French Invasion of the Ruhr and Hyperinflation
        • The role of Stresemann in solving hyperinflation
        • The Weimar Republic’s foreign policy successes
        • The cultural achievements of the Weimar period
        • Continuing political and economic problems
        • The extent to which the republic recovered between 1924-1929
      • Nazi Germany
        • The Nazi Party’s Rise to Power
          • Hitler’s role in the early Nazi Party
          • The Nazi’s political idea: 25 Point Party programme
          • The Munich Putsch: its failures and successes
          • The reasons why the Nazis had little success in the 1920s
          • The Wall Street Crash and the effects of the Great Depression on Germany
          • Nazi elections promises and campaign methods between 1930-1933
          • The reasons why Hindenburg appointed Hitler as Chancellor in January 1933
          • The Reichstag Fire and Emergency Powers
          • The March Elections of 1933 and the Enabling Act
          • The Gleichschaltung Laws
          • The Night of the Long Knives and the Oath of Loyalty
          • The death of Hindenburg
        • Nazi control over Germany
          • The use of terror through the SS, Gestapo and law courts
          • The use of propaganda
          • Control over the Christian Churches
          • Aktion T4
          • Reasons for the persecution of minorities
          • Increasing persecution of Jews in the 1930s
          • Opposition to the Nazis
          • Why was there not more opposition?
        • Life in Nazi Germany
          • Nazi views of women, their aims and their policies towards them
          • Nazi views of young people, their aims and their policies towards them
          • Youth opposition groups
          • Early Nazi successes through blitzkrieg
          • Rationing, allied bombing and the war economy
          • Increased opposition
          • The Holocaust and the Final Solution
        • Nazi Economic Policy
        • Was Nazi Germany a totalitarian state?
    • IGCSE: International Relations
      • The Peace Treaties
        • The Paris Peace Conference
        • The Treaty of Versailles
      • The League of Nations
        • Organisation of the League of Nations
        • Why did the Depression make the League's job more difficult?
        • Why did the world disarmament conference fail?
        • The Manchurian Crisis
        • The Abyssinian Crisis
        • Reasons why the League failed
      • The Causes of the Second World War
        • Hitler’s foreign policy aims
        • German involvement in the Spanish Civil War
        • Anschluss with Austria
        • The Sudetenland Crisis and the Munich Agreement
        • The Nazi-Soviet Pact
        • Hitler's role in causing the war
      • The Origins of the Cold War
        • The Yalta Agreement
        • The Potsdam Agreement
        • Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech
        • The Soviet takeover of Eastern Europe
        • The US Policy of Containment
        • The causes of the Berlin Blockade, the Berlin Airlift and its consequences
        • Who was to blame?
      • How did the Soviets take-over Eastern Europe?
        • How did the United States react?
          • Where were these policies practiced?
          • How did the Soviet Union respond to the actions of the USA?
      • How did the Soviet Union keep control over countries in Eastern Europe?
        • 1948: The Berlin Blockade
        • 1956: The Hungarian Revolution
        • 1961: The Berlin Wall
        • 1968: Events in Czechoslovakia
        • 1979: The Soviet Afghan War
        • 1980: The Solidarity Movement in Poland
      • The Korean War
      • How far did Cold War tensions increase in the 1950s?
      • The Cuban Missile Crisis
      • The Vietnam War
        • (b) Why did US involvement in the Vietnam War escalate? [6 marks]
        • Types of Warfare in the Vietnam War
        • Why did the USA withdraw from Vietnam?
      • Why did events in the Gulf matter, c. 1979-2000?
        • Why was Saddam Hussein able to come to power in Iraq?
        • How influential was Stalin to Saddam's rule over Iraq?
        • Why was there an Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979?
        • What were the consequences of the Iranian Revolution?
        • Why did the Iran-Iraq war last for so long?
        • How dangerous was the Iran-Iraq war for stability in the Gulf?
        • Why did the Gulf War only last for 7 months?
        • Who suffered more from the First Gulf War: Saddam or his people?
    • IGCSE: Exam Techniques
      • Paper 1
      • Paper 2
        • What is the message of this cartoon?
        • How far do these sources agree?
        • How similar are these two cartoons?
        • Why was this source published in …?
        • Are you surprised by this source?
        • How reliable is this source?
        • What can we learn from this source about (a certain topic/event/etc)?
        • Why was this speech made in (year/location/etc)?
        • How useful is this source for a historian studying/as evidence about (a per
        • Does Source * prove Source * wrong/right?
        • Does Source * mean that [the author of other source] was lying in Source*?
        • Does Source * make Source * surprising?
        • Question 6: Source-Based Essay Question
      • Paper 4
      • How to revise for History IGCSE
  • AS-Level: International History, 1870–1945
    • Empire and the emergence of world powers, 1870–1919
      • Scramble for Africa
        • European Rivalry over Africa
        • Why did European imperialism increase tensions between the Great Powers?
        • Was European imperialism beneficial or detrimental for Africans?
        • How did Africans resist European Imperialism?
        • Why did the Boers and Britain go to war in 1899?
      • Scramble for China
        • How did Colonial Powers carve up China?
        • The Open Door Note and Open Door Policy
        • Why did the Boxer Rebellion break out in 1899? [10]
      • The emergence of Japan as a world power
        • 1853: Commodore Perry's visit to Japan
        • 1868-90: Meiji Reforms
        • 1894-95: First Sino-Japanese War
        • 1895: The Treaty of Shimonoseki
        • 1895: Triple Intervention
        • 1902: Anglo-Japanese Alliance
        • 1904-05: Russo-Japanese War
        • 1914-18: The First World War
      • The emergence of the USA as a world power
        • Why had the USA become a continental power by 1890?
        • Economic growth and the need for trade in the late nineteenth century
        • Why did the US wish to expand it's international interests?
        • 1898: The Spanish-American War
        • The USA's entry into the First World War
          • Why was the US neutral until 1917?
          • How did the USA contribute to the Allied war effort?
    • The League of Nations and international relations in the 1920s
      • Why was there dissatisfaction with the peace settlements of 1919-1920?
        • Background
        • The Peace Settlements of 1919-23
          • The Treaty of Versailles (1919)
          • The Treaty of Saint-Germain (1919)
          • The Treaty of Neuilly (1919)
          • The Treaty of Trianon (1920)
          • The Treaty of Sevres (1920)
          • The Treaty of Lausanne (1923)
        • Reparations
        • Reactions of victors and defeated powers
      • Crises and Tensions
        • French Invasion of the Ruhr in 1923
        • Corfu Crisis of 1923
        • The Washington Conferences (1921-22)
        • The Genoa Conference (1922)
        • The Rapallo Pact (1922)
        • Treaty of Lausanne
      • Improving international relations, 1924-1929
        • The Role of the USA
        • Economic Recovery and Reconstruction
        • Locarno Conference
        • The Kellogg-Briand Pact (1928)
        • The Young Plan (1929)
      • Aims, membership and structure of the League
        • Member Countries
        • Organisations of the League of Nations
        • Administering the Post-War peace settlements
      • The League's work
        • Collective Security
        • Preventing Future War
        • The League and Disputes
        • The League’s Unsuccessful Work
        • The League’s Successful Humanitarian Work
    • The League of Nations and international relations in the 1930s
      • 1929: The Great Depression
      • 1932-1934: The World Disarmament Conference
      • The Failure of Disarmament
      • 1934-1937: The Abyssinian Crisis
      • 1935: What was the Stresa Front?
      • 1936: Spanish Civil War
      • 1936: Foreign Responses to the Civil War in Spain
      • Hitler's Foreign Policy
      • Why did Britain and France pursue a policy of appeasement?
        • 1933: German Rearmament
        • 1936: Remilitarisation of the Rhineland
        • 1938: Anschluss with Austria (1938)
        • 1938: Czechoslovakia and the Munich Conference
      • 1939: The Nazi-Soviet Pact (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact)
      • 1939: The Invasion of Poland
      • Why did war break out in 1939?
      • Was Britain prepared for war in 1939?
    • China and Japan, 1912–1945
      • How did the Communists gain control of China?
      • 1919: The May the Fourth Movement
      • 1920s: Growth of the Kuomintang Party
      • 1926-1935: How did Chiang and the Kuomintang consolidate their power?
      • 1928: Attempts at Modernisation and Reforming China
      • 1936: The Xi'an Incident
      • 1936: The Sino-Japanese War
      • 1936–: Decline in support for Chiang Kai Shek and the Kuomintang
      • 1936-1948: The Yan’an Soviet
      • Japan’s international status in 1919
      • The Failure of Democracy in Japan
      • How did Military Rule affect the expansion of Japan?
      • What Caused Japanese Aggression in World War II?
      • The Implications of Pearl Harbour and Japanese Loss in World War II
  • A-Level
    • A-Level: European history, 1919–41
      • The Three Dictators (1919–41): An Introduction
        • Adolf Hitler
        • Joseph Stalin
        • Benito Mussolini
      • Mussolini’s Italy, 1919–41
        • What claims did Italy make at the Paris Peace Conference?
        • What was the state of Italy after the First World War?
        • What were the problems of the Democratic Government, 1919-22?
          • Italian Social Democratic Party
          • The Socialist Party of Italy (PSI)
          • The Italian People's Party / Italian Popular Party (PPI)
          • Democratic Liberal Party (PLDI)
          • National Fascist Party
        • What was the appeal of Fascism from 1919–22?
        • Mussolini’s appointment as prime minister
        • What challenges did Mussolini face after his appointment as Prime Minister?
        • (1924) Matteotti Crisis
        • How did Mussolini establish a dictatorship?
        • Repression in Fascist Italy
        • Mussolini's use of Propaganda
        • Corfu & Fiume: Mussolini's Foreign Policy
        • Mussolini’s Diplomacy from 1923 to 1934
        • Italian aggression after 1934
        • The Fascist Corporate State
        • Mussolini's Economic Aims
        • Mussolini’s dealings with the Church
        • Mussolini’s approach to Education
        • Mussolini's views towards Women
        • Overview of Mussolini's Italy / Mussolini's Italy Essay Plans
      • Stalin’s Russia, 1924–41
        • What was the difference between Marxism and Leninism?
        • How did Stalin consolidate his power between 1922 and 1929?
        • The Economic Policies of Stalin’s Russia
          • Industry
          • Agriculture
        • Stalin’s views towards Women
        • The Foreign Policy of Soviet Russia
        • The Treatment of Ethnic Minorities in the Soviet Union
        • How did Stalin use repression to gain absolute power?
        • How did Stalin establish a cult of personality?
        • How far was Stalin a totalitarian ruler?
        • The Legacy of Joseph Stalin
      • Hitler’s Germany, 1929–41
        • What were the problems of Weimar politicians from 1929?
        • Establishment of the Nazi Party & Nazi Policies
        • Hitler's Appointment as Chancellor
        • How did Hitler consolidate his power?
        • How did Hitler use propaganda to indoctrinate the German people?
        • Nazi Youth Groups
        • The Education System of Nazi Germany
        • Youth Opposition to the Nazis
        • Nazi policy towards minorities and opposition
        • Hitler’s Foreign Policy
        • Hitler's Economic Policies for Nazi Germany
        • How were women treated in Nazi Germany?
        • How did German life change under the Nazi Regime?
        • Strength through Joy (KDF)
        • Did the people of Germany truly support the Nazi Regime?
      • Britain, 1919–39
        • An Introduction to Post-World War Britain
        • The Irish Free State
        • The changing fortunes of the Conservative party
        • Who was Stanley Baldwin?
        • The First Labour Government
        • The General Strike of 1926
        • The Second Labour Government
        • Britain's response to the Great Depression
        • The Abdication of King Edward VIII
        • How did society and living standards change during the interwar period?
        • How did living standards change during the inter-war period?
        • How did the British people spend their leisure time in the interwar period?
        • The Policy of Appeasement
        • How did the British prepare for the Second World War?
    • A-Level: Exam Techniques
      • A-Level Paper 3
      • A-Level Paper 4
      • How to interpret and analyse sources
      • How to improve your source questions
      • How to revise for History A-Level
  • Learning Resources
  • 🏳️‍🌈 An LGBTQ+ Education (Podcast)
  • 🇺🇦 The Russo-Ukrainian War (Current Events Podcast)
History: From One Student to Another

The League of Nations

  1. Organisation of the League of Nations

  2. Why did the Depression make the League's job more difficult?

  3. Why did the world disarmament conference fail?

  4. The Manchurian Crisis

  5. The Abyssinian Crisis

  6. Reasons why the League failed

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