In 1763, after the Seven Years' War, France gave Canada and some other North American colonies to Great Britain.
No, England did not lose control of Canada at the end of the Seven Years' War. Instead, as part of the Treaty of Paris in 1763, France ceded control of Canada to England. England then established the Province of Quebec, which remained under English control until the British Empire lost its North American colonies in the American Revolution.
because it was In Canada
The French and Indian War (1754-1763), that was the American theater of the worldwide fought Seven Years war.
Canada.
England had control over the channel of water between England and France prior to the start of the Hundred Years War.
it waz called the hundred years war
Canada
England winning the Seven Years' War gave the country control of France's possessions on the North American continent which included the Ohio River Valley and Canada.
seven years' war
The French and Indian war is called the Seven Years War in Canada.
If you mean what treaty ended the Seven Years War, that would be the Treaty of Paris in 1763. France ceded Canada and most of it's North American Territories to England, and Spain ceded Florida to England as well. This effectively ended the war.
Seven Years' War lead to Britain taking Canada and all French possessions in the area. After that they set up more colonies and Canada became great. There was a little issue with some colonies, about a dozen or so, and they went on their own.
Canada didn't lose the War of Conquest, also called the Seven Years War. The war was fought between France and England, with England winning and annexing French territory in Canada. Canada, as a unified independent country, didn't exist during this war so it couldn't actually loose.
because it was In Canada
The English sailors (England) defeated the Spanish ArmadaThat country was England
France lost the Seven Years war but left many French behind who where allowed to keep some control over their affairs.
Seven years war
Seven years war