Many people played an important role in the contact and colonization of New France, but there was no one like European expedition leaders or indigenous people chiefs. Three major points I decided to focus on are the following, although the numerous indigenous chiefs and European explorers are important for New France contact and colonization: Prime members , Jack Cartier and Christopher Columbus. This page explains the three people in detail and explains the importance of new French connections and colonization.
New France (French: Nouvelle-France) is a French colony in North America, was surveyed by Jacques Cartier in 1534 and ended in New France with England and Spain. According to the Paris Convention (1763) in 1763. At the peak of 1712 (before the Utrecht Convention), the territory of New France (also known as the French North American Empire or Royal New France) consisted of five colonies each with its own government. The most developed colonies are divided into Quebec, Trois Rivières, Montreal (which extends southward from Illinois before 1717), Hudson Bay, Arkadi in the northeastern, and Newfoundland and Louisiana. (It extends north through Illinois state since 1717); therefore it includes Canadian prairie from Newfoundland, Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico, and all five Great Lakes in North America.
New France was a colony from France to North America in 1534 until New France was converted to Spain and the United Kingdom in 1734. At the peak of 1712, the territory of New France spread from Newfoundland to the Rocky Mountains, Hudson Bay, the Gulf of Mexico. The area was later divided into five colonies, each with its own governing body: Canada, Arcadia, Hudson Bay, New Zealand (Plaisance) and Louisiana. In 1534, Jack Cartier claimed to be the first province of New France. However, the first attempt to solve the French efforts in this area failed. However, the French fishing boat continued its voyage towards the Atlantic coast and the St. Lawrence River. French merchants soon realized that the St. Lawrence region was full of valuable fur animals, especially Beavers, which became rare in Europe. After all, the French royal family decided to colonize the territory to secure and expand the influence on the United States.
The Frenchman Samuel de Chaplain built a colony along the St. Lawrence River in Québec, later named New France. Later, the King of France sent a French explorer to look for gold in America, and France tried to establish a colony there, but he failed. However, the two explorers discovered that North America is rich in fur. Interest in fur trading arises from the fact that demand for fur in the European market is high and it is readily available in North America. The other settlers in North America are British settlers. These people fought with French settlers in France and the US and occupied the land they occupied in Quebec. In order to gain control of North America, the desire to expel French has promoted reconciliation between French and British British