steel
In the 1800s, the major powers in Europe were Britain, France, Austria, Prussia, and Russia. Britain and France had overseas empires.
The Allied Powers emerged victorious in World War I.
they were competing about money(economics), navies, armies, amount of resources, etc
The Allies emerged victorious in World War I, defeating the Central Powers.
By the late 1800s, Britain's chief rivals as industrial powers were Germany and the United States. Germany was rapidly industrializing, focusing on heavy industries like steel and chemicals, while the U.S. was emerging as a major industrial force with its vast natural resources and innovative technologies. This competition led to significant economic and geopolitical tensions as these nations sought to expand their influence and markets globally.
It is all to do with the industrial revolution, forging the commanding straights in todays new beaming cultural Britain, also roman technology and vikings agricultural powers
U.S. and Soviet Union.
Answer this question… Other countries surpassed Great Britain in manufacturing.
The idea of power sharing has emerged in opposition to the notions of undivided political power. Hope this might help....
No comparison. Britain does not have a president.
The newly industrial North didn't like competing with the already established industrial powers in Europe (especially Great Britain), so they favored the tariff to drive up the prices of any imported manufactured goods. The agricultural South didn't have nearly as many factories, so they needed to buy their manufactured goods. They wanted more competition in order to drive down prices, so they opposed the tariff.