The French lost all of their territory, yet were left a few islands off the coast.
France ceded Canada, Dominica, Grenada, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Tobago, part of French Louisiana and an area from the Mississippi River to the Apalachian Mountains
They lose power and land in North America
Treaty of Utrecht, 1714
The French and Indian War was the peace treaty where France lost all its land in North America.
They lost all the land west of the Appalachian Mountain to the Louisiana Purchase Territory.
France, about to lose the French and Indian War in Canada, ceded its southern claims (Louisiana) to its Seven Years War ally Spain under the secret Treaty of Fontainebleau (1762). This meant that Britain only received the smaller part of Louisiana, east of the Mississippi, in the Treaty of Paris (1763). Spain controlled Louisiana, the Gulf of Mexico coast, and the lower Mississippi Valley during the Revolutionary War (1776-1783), after which Britain still controlled Canada, but none of Louisiana. Under another secret treaty, the Third Treaty of San Ildefonso (1800), Spain returned Louisiana to Napoleon, who sold all of the territory to the US in 1803.
All French territory on the mainland of North America was lost.
New Orleans, Lousiana, all land east of the Mississippi
They lose power and land in North America
No. The British did not touch French territory in the Caribbean. They had a choice between the islands and Canada and chose to take Canada in the Treaty of Paris.
Treaty of Utrecht, 1714
The French and Indian War was the peace treaty where France lost all its land in North America.
The French and Indian War actually pertained to the battle between the French and British for the Ohio River Valley. The Treaty of Paris closed the battle entitling France to lose all of her North American possesions... giving Britain the land they wanted and Spanish a few pieces as well. It is NOT the French, it was BRITAIN who won the French and Indian war.
They lost all the land west of the Appalachian Mountain to the Louisiana Purchase Territory.
France, about to lose the French and Indian War in Canada, ceded its southern claims (Louisiana) to its Seven Years War ally Spain under the secret Treaty of Fontainebleau (1762). This meant that Britain only received the smaller part of Louisiana, east of the Mississippi, in the Treaty of Paris (1763). Spain controlled Louisiana, the Gulf of Mexico coast, and the lower Mississippi Valley during the Revolutionary War (1776-1783), after which Britain still controlled Canada, but none of Louisiana. Under another secret treaty, the Third Treaty of San Ildefonso (1800), Spain returned Louisiana to Napoleon, who sold all of the territory to the US in 1803.
The French gave up their attempt.We started a civil war in Columbia that caused Columbia to lose the territory of Panama.
The French word for "to lose" is "perdre".
Treaty of Ghent