* Argentina (left in 1921 on rejection of an Argentine resolution that all sovereign states be admitted to the League. It resumed full membership in 1933) * Belgium * Bolivia * Brazil (withdrew 14 June 1926) * British Empire separate membership for: ** Australia ** Canada ** India (then under British rule and including the region of present-day India, Bangladesh, Burma, and Pakistan). ** New Zealand ** Union of South Africa ** United Kingdom * Chile (withdrew 14 May 1938) * China * Colombia * Cuba * Czechoslovakia (left 15 March 1939) * Denmark (withdrew July 1940) * El Salvador (withdrew 11 August 1937) * France (Vichy France withdrew 18 April 1941; withdrawal not recognised by Free French forces) * Greece * Guatemala (withdrew 26 May 1936) * Haiti (withdrew April 1942) * Honduras (withdrew 10 July 1936) * Italy (withdrew 11 December 1937) * Japan (withdrew 27 March 1933) * Liberia * Netherlands * Nicaragua (withdrew 27 June 1936) * Norway * Panama * Paraguay (withdrew 23 February 1935) * Persia (known as Iran from 1934) * Peru (withdrew 8 April 1939) * Poland * Portugal * Romania (withdrew July 1940) * Siam (known as Thailand from 1939) * Spain (withdrew May 1939) * Sweden * Switzerland * Uruguay * Venezuela (withdrew 12 July 1938) * Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (known as Kingdom of Yugoslavia from 1929; left 17 April 1941; rejoined October 1944)[citation needed] * Austria (joined 15 December 1920; left 13 March 1938) * Bulgaria (joined 16 December 1920) * Costa Rica (joined 16 December 1920; withdrew 22 January 1925) * Finland (joined 16 December 1920) * Luxembourg (joined 16 December 1920; left 30 August 1942) * Albania (joined 17 December 1920; left 9 April 1939) * Estonia (joined 22 September 1921) * Latvia (joined 22 September 1921) * Lithuania (joined 22 September 1921) * Hungary (joined 18 September 1922; withdrew 14 April 1939) * Irish Free State (joined 10 September 1923) * Abyssinia (joined 28 September 1923) * Dominican Republic (joined 29 September 1924) * Germany (joined 8 September 1926; withdrew 19 October 1933) * Mexico (joined 23 September 1931) * Turkey (joined 18 July 1932) * Iraq (joined 3 October 1932) * Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (joined 18 September 1934; expelled 14 December 1939) * Afghanistan (joined 27 September 1934) * Ecuador (joined 28 September 1934) * Egypt (joined 26 May 1937)
The U.S. never joined, the Soviet Union did not join till 1935 and Germany wasn't allowed to join till 1926. (Hitler pulled Germany out again in 1933). So, there were serious gaps.
Bob the builder....
No. The League of Nations had no real way of wielding its power and so the group fell apart somewhat naturally.
No. The League of Nations had no real way of wielding its power and so the group fell apart somewhat naturally.
The League of Nations existed before the United Nations but fell apart with the start of the second World WAr.
The league of nations lasted from 1919-1946.
The League of Nations.
The United Nations was more successful in a way because it is still standing today. The League of Nations fell apart after World War II when countries like Germany, Italy, Spain, and Japan left from it. The league of nations tried to keep their plan to prevent war, which didn't happen when World War II came. The United Nations cam apart shortly afterwards and so far, no wars.
The League of Nations never "became" the United Nations. The League of Nations was formed as a result of World War 1 and fell apart as the world moved into World War 2. During the War, those national with which the US and Britain were allied were often called "The United Nations." After the War, in 1946, a formal organization called The United Nations was created, but it was not a continuation of the old League of Nations, which had been discredited by its inability to respond to the increasing belligerency of Germany and Italy.
The League of Nations was formed after World War 1 and fell apart as a reslt of World War 2. The United Nations formed toward the end of World War 2, initially as an organization of nations opposed to the Axis Powers.
Due to the recent Wall Street Crash, those in the League of Nations were too poor to engage in war. So instead they all sat out.
The League of Nations never "became" the United Nations. The League of Nations was formed as a result of World War 1 and fell apart as the world moved into World War 2. During the War, those national with which the US and Britain were allied were often called "The United Nations." After the War, in 1946, a formal organization called The United Nations was created, but it was not a continuation of the old League of Nations, which had been discredited by its inability to respond to the increasing belligerency of Germany and Italy.
The precursor to the Current United Nations was called the League of Nations. The League of Nations was founded in 1919. When the United Nations was formed in 1945, the League of Nations basically ceased to exist.
Nothing. The League of Nations was the predecessor to the United Nations. (: