The League of Nations was largely maginalised during the Second World War and was officially replaced by the United Nation in 1946. There is no set answer without a thorough understanding of the League of Nations as an international body during the 1930's, for the more beligerant nations who were members either left the League or were voted out during the late 1930's. In the interest of answering the question though a few facts should be mentioned; 1. The United States was never a member of the League of Nations. 2. Germany left the League in 1933 with the rise of Adolf Hitler. 3. The Soviet Union was thrown out in December of 1939 for its role in the Invasion of Poland. 4. Italy was thrown out in the late 1930's for its Invasion of Ethiopa. The League did nothing despite the pleas of Ethiopa's Monarch, Haile Sellase (Ras Tafar) 5. Japan was expelled in the 1930's for belligerent activities on the Mainland of China. 6. England and France remained members although Vichy France was never a member and the French membership was taken on by the Free French under Charles De Gaulle.
Directly after World War I, 42 states joined together to form the League of Nations. These include:
Argentina
Belgium
Bolivia
Brazil
Australia
Canada
India
New Zealand
South Africa
Chile
China
Colombia
Cuba
Czechoslovakia
Denmark
El Salvador
France
Greece
Guatemala
Haiti
Honduras
Italy
Japan
Liberia
Netherlands
Nicaragua
Norway
Panama
Paraguay
Persia (known as Iran after 1934)
Peru
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Siam (known as Thailand after 1939)
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Uruguay
Venezuela
Yugoslavia
Six members joined in 1920, the year after the League's creation.
Austria
Bulgaria
Costa Rica
Finland
Luxembourg
Albania
Fifteen more members joined between 1921 and 1937.
Estonia
Latvia
Lithuania
Hungary
Irish Free State (known as the Republic of Ireland after 1937)
Abyssinia
Germany
Mexico
Turkey
Iraq
Soviet Union
Afghanistan
Ecuador
Egypt
Following the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the League became effectively non-operational, and was officially replaced by the United Nations in 1946.
the league of nations was like the untited nations
The League of Nations.
The United Nations predecessor organization was the League of Nations which was founded at the end of WW1 as a result of the Treaty of Versailles and managed to attract at its best the participation of 58 countries during 24 September 1934 and 23 February 1935.
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 organization Woodrow Wilson proposed in 1919 for settling world problems was The League of Nations. It was the precursor to the United Nations.
The League of Nations is the name of the organization that President Wilson set up for the preservation of peace after World War 1.
League of Nations.
The League of Nations
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.
League of Nations is correct. It is a collection of nations that have joined together, in order to promote World Peace.
The United Nations.
alsace-Lorraine