A B C E F G H L P R S T V champlain, samuel de champlain was the French explorer who in 1608 founded Quebec,the first permanent French settlement in the new world. Page Ref 2. http://wps.ablongman.com/wps/media/objects/28/29258/ch1_glossary.html
Extractions: A B C E ... V A Agricultural Revolution The process of domesticating (planting, cultivating, and harvesting) plant life for food which occurred worldwide from 7000 to 9000 years ago. It resulted in sedentary living, the division of labor, regional trading, and greater social and political complexity. Page Ref: 5 Back to the top B Black Death The Black Death was a mid-fourteenth-century disease (primarily bubonic plague) epidemic that ravaged Europe and helped cause an economic decline. Calvin, John Calvin was a Swiss Protestant leader and reformer whose ideas informed the religious doctrines of the Pilgrims and Puritans who later migrated to America.
New World Explorers a timeline! BE CAREFUL some of the explorers are not new world explorers. 1492- 1905. samuel de champlain (1) (2) (3). The Age http://www.davison.k12.mi.us/dms/library/cybrary/new_world_explorers/new_world_e
Extractions: New World Explorers General Sites about Explorers Specific Explorers Conquistadors : This site, created by PBS, looks at the work of four Spanish explorers: Cortes, Pizarro, de Orellano, and de Vaca. This is a fascinating site to investigate! Vasco Nunez de Balboa Explorers : This site provides profiles of many New World explorers, along with suggested activities and on-line quizzes. This site was created by students! John Cabot Explorers of the Millennium : This site offers profiles on 29 different explorers, plus a timeline! BE CAREFUL - some of the explorers are not New World explorers. Jacques Cartier Treasure Trove of North American Exploration : This site gives good biographical information for explorers from 1492 - 1905. Samuel de Champlain The Age of Exploration : A fairly extensive list of explorers with longer biographical information. This site also includes maps if possible. This would be a good place to start!
Exploring Our World samuel de champlain (1567?1635) was a French champlain also discovered the lakelater named for him and administering the French colonies in the new world. http://www.pwcs.edu/i-tech/teacherWQ/Exploring/Exploring _Our_World.htm
Extractions: EXPLORING OUR WORLD Introduction The Task Resources The Process ... Conclusion Introduction Your current mission is to become an early explorer that wishes to venture out and discover new parts of the world. You will travel over miles of oceans and trek through untamed land that has never been traveled before. HAVE FUN EXPLORING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The Task Congratulations on accepting this mission! To complete your mission, you will need to construct a five-paragraph paper that describes in detail one of the following explorers: Robert de LaSalle René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle (1643-1687) was a French explorer. He was sent by King Louis XIV (14) to travel south from Canada and sail down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. He was the first European to travel the length of the Mississippi River (1682). His mission was to explore and establish fur-trade routes along the river. La Salle named the entire Mississippi basin Louisiana, in honor of the King, and claimed it for France on April 9, 1682. He also explored Lake Michigan (1679), Lake Huron, Lake Erie, and Lake Ontario. He tried to start a settlement in the southern Mississippi River Valley, but the venture ended in disaster. For more information on La Salle, click here
History 16th Century samuel de champlain, Voyages, 1607 this Renaissance Wedding Information; NativeAmerican Conquest - Native American conquest in the new world during the http://www.xs4all.nl/~xenophon/history/links16thc.html
Extractions: updated 28 June 1998 Cabrillo, Juan Rodriguez - in 1542 he sailed up the coast of what was then "New Spain" and discovered and named San Diego Bay and Santa Barbara. Cartier, Jacques (1491-1557) - he went looking for a passage through or around North America to East Asia, as some had done before him, and many would after him. Coronado, Francisco de (1510-1554) - he set out in 1540 in search of a golden city, called Cibola, joined by a large expedition of Spanish, Indian allies, and slaves. Credit of Truth: Thomas Hariot and the Defense of Ralegh - essay examining how Thomas Hariot's 1588 A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia was written to protect Sir Walter Ralegh's interests in the colonies. Elizabethan England Ivan the Terrible (1533-1584) - bio of the Russian leader. England and Loughborough Plague (1539-1640) - by Ian Jessiman. Ponce de Leon - short bio of the European who discovered Florida in his search for the "fountain of youth."
Explorers Of The New World Quiz His second expedition to the new world was comprised of 17 ships and approximately1,500 men; he discovered Jacques Cartier samuel de champlain Robert de La http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz.cfm?qid=103154&origin=
Backflip Publisher: Zimmy | Folder: New World Explorers CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA samuel de champlain (added 2002/09/10) new Worldexplorers http//www.newadvent.org/cathen/03567a.htm. Christoper http://www.backflip.com/members/zimmy/11557125
Samuel De Champlain Discovered And Rediscovered Many samuel went to war in Brittany when he was a young man. He first saw the new Worldunder the Spanish flag champlain was the first to suggest digging a canal to http://www.studyworld.com/newsite/ReportEssay/Biography/FamousPeople\Samuel_de_C
European Exploration And Settlement In The New World 1602. Bartholomew Gosnold. England. Explored new England coast. 160315. Samuelde champlain. France. Quebec , Great Lakes and Lake champlain. 1607. http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1031.html
Extractions: European Exploration and Settlement in the New World Date Explorer Representing Event c. 1000 Leif Eriksson Norse Likely first European to Newfoundland Prince Henry the Navigator Portugal Gonzalo Cabral Portugal Discovered Azores various Portugal Exploration along west African coast; slave trade Fall of Constantinople Muslim closure of eastward routes may have spurred westward push. Bartholomeu Dias Portugal Reached Cape of Good Hope Christopher Columbus Spain First voyage Treaty of Tordesillas Division of New World between Spain and Portugal John Cabot England To Newfoundland ; English claim to North America Vasco da Gama Portugal Rounds Africa to India Amerigo Vespucci Spain Portugal West Indies and South America Pedro Álvarez Cabral Portugal Brazil Ponce de Léon Spain Florida Vasco Núñez de Balboa Spain Crossed Panama to Pacific Ocean Ferdinand Magellan Spain Circumnavigation of world completed by crew Hernán Cortés Spain Conquered Aztecs in Mexico Giovanni da Verrazzano France Searched for Northwest Passage Lucas Vazquez Ayllon Spain Temporary settlement in in the Carolinas Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca Spain From Gulf of Mexico into Texas Francisco Pizarro Spain Conquered Incas in Peru Jacques Cartier France Gulf of St. Lawrence
ReferenceResources:FamousExplorers Sebastian Cabot, Pedro Alvarez Cabrera, Jacques Cartier, samuel de champlain, WilliamClark civilizations and their desire to explore the world around them. http://www.kidinfo.com/American_History/Explorers.html
Extractions: Explorer Sites A Treasure Trove of North American Exploration Accounts of European voyages and explorations to North America, from Columbus's Atlantic crossing in 1492 to the famous trip through the Northwest Passage by Roald Amundsen in 1905. Alphabetical Navigation permits browsing by explorers' names Discovery and Exploration Maps from the Library of Congress Documents the discovery and exploration of the Americas with both manuscripts and published maps. Many of these maps reflect the European Age of Discoveries, dating from the late 15th century to the 17th century when Europeans were concerned primarily with determining the outline of the continents as they explored and mapped the coastal areas and the major waterways. Also included are 18th and 19th century maps documenting the exploration and mapping of the interior parts of the continents, reflecting the work of Lewis and Clark and subsequent government explorers and surveyors. SEARCHABLE by Keyword or Creator Index
Explorers Located at the University of Kansas Biography of samuel de champlain samuel dechamplain 1607 Map of new England Library of Congress exhibit. http://www.windwardny.org/Disciplines/explorer.htm
Samuel De Champlain's First Voyage - 1603 - The Path To Settlement company to oversee the colonization and fur trade of new France rather Chaste wasappointed ViceAdmiral of France who sent samuel de champlain, probably on http://www3.sympatico.ca/goweezer/canada/z16champ1.htm
Extractions: The Path to Settlement At the turn of the century, exploration had taken second place to fur trading with the Native People of the New World. France was financially strapped and even the new king, Henri IV, lived little better than a pauper. Protestant by birth, Henri had converted to Catholicism to help him rule the Catholic-dominated country. France was poor, but the Catholic Church was very rich. King Henri then filled his government with Huguenots (French Protestants) and rewrote the tax laws and set up agricultural programs that helped France get back on track. However, he was convinced that trade income from New France was the answer to the country's financial problems. Following the lead of the Dutch and Spanish, King Henri decided to create a company to oversee the colonization and fur trade of New France rather than to depend on private funding. To that end, he founded The Canada and Acadia Company in 1603 and granted to it a fur trade monopoly over all the land from present-day Philidelphia to Cape Breton Island. Aymar de Clermont de Chaste was appointed Vice-Admiral of France who sent Samuel de Champlain, probably on commission from King Henri IV, on his first voyage to Canada. Champlain's instructions were to retrace Cartier's route from over a half-century earlier and to begin setting up trade relations with the Iroquoians and with any other Indian Nations he encountered.
Samuel Champlain, Citadel Of Brouage And The News World champlain, samuel de Groilers Encyclopedia, 1992. Explorers of theNew world Future Vision Multimedia, 1995. Map of the News world . http://www.huitres-de-marennes.com/champlain_english1.html
Extractions: Samuel CHAMPLAIN and the "News World" By Joe Y. Samuel de Champlain was a French explorer who discovered New France (which is now Canada). Our class is studying explorers. I did not know much about him or his life that is why I chose him. Samuel de Champlain was born in Brouage, France about 1570. His father was a sea captain. When he was a boy, Samuel sailed with his father and uncle. He learned how to make maps when he was a boy. In 1610, he married Helene Boulle. Samuel died on December 25, 1635 in Quebec. Champlain traveled to North America 12 times between 1603 and 1633. On his trips to North America, his objectives were to promote fur trade, find a route through the continent to Asia and promote Christianity. During these explorations, Champlain discovered the Ottawa River and Lakes Champlain, Ontario and Huron. He mapped the Atlantic Coast from the Bay of Fundy to Cape Cod. In 1608, Champlain founded Quebec. In 1629, when England and France were at war, Champlain was taken prisoner and sent to England. Luckily, the war ended quickly. France bought back Canada from the British. In 1633, Champlain became the governor of Quebec. He spent the rest of his life promoting peace in Canada with the Indians. Champlain was important in settling New France because he explored the area, made maps and helped make friends with the Indians.
Samuel De Champlain champlain, samuel de, French navigator, born in Brouage, Saintonge, on champlainthe same year ascended the Ottawa for included in the state of new York, he http://www.virtualology.com/virtualmuseumofhistory/hallofexplorers/SAMUELDECHAMP
Extractions: You are in: Museum of History Hall of Explorers Samuel de Champlain CHAMPLAIN, Samuel de, The commander, De Chaste, having died in the mean time, his privileges were transferred to Du Guay, Sieur de Monts, who made an engagement with Champlain, with the intention of founding a settlement in Acadia, and they sailed together, arriving at Sable island 1 May, 1604. Coasting along Nova Scotia, they finally determined to form a settlement on the island of St. Croix, so named by De Monts, in the river of the same name, which divides New Brunswick from the United States. Not finding the place suitable, after passing a winter there they removed to Port Royal, adjacent to the present Annapolis. During 1604-'6 Champlain explored the coast as far as Cape Cod, making careful surveys and maps as he progressed. Champlain and his Indians meeting a large force of the Iroquois on the lake, both parties landed and threw up barricades of trees. On the following day they engaged in battle, which resulted in the defeat of the hostile Indians. This result was largely due to Champlain, who killed two Iroquois chiefs with his arquebus, and mortally wounded another. The war, thus begun by the French and their allies against the Iroquois, continued with occasional intermissions until the French supremacy in Canada was ended. In addition to the volume "Des sauvages" (1603) and his "Voyages" (1613 and 1619), he published a volume containing an indifferently executed abridgment of his previous voyages, which included a continuation from 1619 to 1632. Interesting features of this volume were prayers and a catechism in two of the languages of the aborigines. Some copies bear the date of 1640. In 1830 it was reprinted in Paris. The Abbes Laverdier and Casgrain, of Quebec, have published the whole series of his works, including his Mexican voyage, with notes and fat-similes of all the maps and illustrations (4 vols., 4to, 1870). The "Mercure Francais," vol. xix., contains also what is apparently an account of the voyage of 1633.
Samuel De Champlain - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia samuel de champlain (c. 1567 or 1570 1635) was a French back in new France andproclaimed his new commission. champlain set out on May 27th to continue his http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_de_Champlain
Explorers Of North America Ocean from the shores of the new world was Vasco A fifth grader s project on the explorerJohn Cabot. samuel champlain http//www.blupete.com/Hist/BiosNS/1600 http://www.socsd.k12.ny.us/explorers.html
Extractions: Explorers of North America General Resources Virtual Museum of New France http://www.vmnf.civilization.ca/somm-en.htm This venture allows cybernauts free entry into the first virtual universe devoted to New France: a new world. Include profiles of: Champlain, Cartier, Marquette, Jolliet, La Salle, Brule, and other exlorers. Great Explorers of the World and their Expeditions http://www.itsnet.com/home/getlost/explore.html Mariners Museum http://www.mariner.org/age/menu.html ... http://www.acs.ucalgary.ca/HIST/tutor/eurvoya/intro.html This is a must see site for everyone! Click on "Knowledge & Power" for great ship info. Lots of other great links! Explorers Page http://www.cgps.org/cgslab/explorers.htm Very good for Balboa, Cabral, Columbus, Cortez, deGama, Ponce, Dias, Magellan, Vespucci, Navigation Tools, Maps. Life Aboard a Ship http://www.mariner.org/age/health.html one-page info on health and sickness aboard ships Explorers in General http://www.snowcrest.net/jmike/explor.html
MSN Encarta - Search Results - Champlain Samuel De article. 12. Explorers French explorers champlain, samuel deSaint John (city, new Brunswick)*. ArticleEncarta Encyclopedia. http://encarta.msn.com/Champlain_Samuel_de.html
Discoverers Web: Primary Sources (about Coronado s expedition); samuel de champlain Voyages (extract); samuel dechamplain The Foundation of Quebec; William Dampier A new Voyage Round http://www.win.tue.nl/cs/fm/engels/discovery/primary.html
Extractions: On this page are primary sources on voyages of discovery that can be found on the web. Primary sources are the texts the travellers themselves wrote on their voyages. Of course these sources are of utmost importance when studying the history of exploration. There is also a part on secondary sources , that is, sources that were written by others than the voyagers themselves, either based on information directly from the voyagers themselves, or on primary sources, which in some cases might be lost afterwards. Sir Samuel White Baker: The Nile tributaries of Abyssinia, and the sword hunters of the Hamran arabs Sir Joseph Banks: Collected papers Captain Wm. Becknell: Letters Gertrude Lothian Bell: The Gertrude Bell Project - all her diaries and letters Vitus Bering: Report to the Admiralty Board Luys Hernandez de Biedma: Relacion de la Isla de la Florida (about the expedition of De Soto) Daniel Boone: The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boon, Formerly A Hunter; Containing a Narrative of the Wars of Kentucky Henry Mary Brackenridge: Journal of a Voyage up the Missouri River in 1811 John Bradbury: Travels in the Interior of America William Bradford: Collection of letters Patrick Breen: Diary (member of the Donner Party) Edwin Bryant: What I saw in California Richard Byrd: Alone - with some other resources on the voyages of Narvaez and De Vaca Adventures in the Unknown Interior of America (idem) Julius Caesar: De bello gallico Robert Campbell: Various letters Robert Campbell: Narrative (written down by William Fayel)
Explorers European Explorers in the new world Cabot Student developed web page with linksto many Cabral European Voyages of exploration Cabral (Brazil champlain http://www.oelwein.k12.ia.us/ps/ss00/Explorers.html
Champlain, Samuel De sämüel du shäNplaN Pronunciation Key. champlain, samuel de ,15671635, French explorer, the chief founder of new France. http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0811298.hmtl
Extractions: Champlain, Samuel de [shampl A u Pronunciation Key Champlain, Samuel de , French explorer, the chief founder of New France. After serving in France under Henry of Navarre (King Henry IV) in the religious wars, Champlain was given command of a Spanish fleet sailing to the West Indies, Mexico, and the Isthmus of Panama. He described this three-year tour to the French king in Bref Discours (1859). In 1603 he made his first voyage to New France as a member of a fur-trading expedition. He explored the St. Lawrence River as far as the rapids at Lachine and described his voyage in Des Sauvages With the sieur de Monts , who had a monopoly of the trade of the region, Champlain returned in 1604 to found a colony, which was landed at the mouth of the St. Croix River. In 1605 the colony moved across the Bay of Fundy to Port Royal (now Annapolis Royal, N.S.), and in the next three years Champlain explored the New England coast south to Martha's Vineyard, discovering Mt. Desert Island and most of the larger rivers of Maine and making the first detailed charts of the coast. After the sieur de Monts's privileges had been revoked, the colony had to be abandoned, and through the efforts of Champlain a new one was established on the St. Lawrence River.
Division 5 Samuel De Champlain Stephanie s Project. Link to. samuel de champlain. Museum of new France. Biographyof champlain. Gander Academy Links. Back to Division Five s Explorer s Page http://wps.sd54.bc.ca/projects/explorer/champlain.html
Extractions: Added to by: Jennifer T. and Tyler B. Samuels' first voyage was in 1599. He went to the West Indies and Spanish America. He suggested that a canal be dug through Panama. A man ahead of his times. His second voyage, his first to North America, was in 1603. His job was to tell about the things he saw, write a report about it for King Henry IV of France, and to make a map of the mighty St. Lawrence River. He stayed at a summer trading post called Tadoussac where the Montagnais Indians took him up to the site of today's "Quebec City". He did lots of mapping of the St. Lawrence. The King was happy and decided to send settlers to the new world. In 1604 Champlain returned to Acadia and a small settlement was established at Port Royal . Things did not go well here as many men starved to death and suffered from scurvey. The settlement only existed for a few years with the help of the Indian people. Champlain returned to France in 1607. His third voyage to Canada was in 1608. He was the Lieutenant Governor of New France, the name the French gave to Canada. He founded Quebec City. His colony was called " Habitation" and some of these buildings can still be seen in lower Quebec City. Many people came to try and live here. Some succeeded but many died or returned to France.