The land that was in dispute in the French and Indian War was claimed by both the French and English.
It was the start of the fall of monarchy
He traveled to France to get help from European nations.
Because it wasn't a War between the French and the Indians, but part of the Seven Years Wars between the UK and France with both European Nations using Native American Allies.
British/English, French, Spanish, Dutch.
The French had the largest quantity of land than any other single European nation. They controlled most of what is today Canada, and the territory known as the Louisiana territory which spread from the Mississippi river to the Rocky Mountains. Eventually the French would lose much of their Canadian territories to the British, and would sell the Louisiana territory to the Young Nation of the United States of America in the Louisiana purchase.
The French setting on American movies is Canadian and not European.
french territory
It was the start of the fall of monarchy
The British and French. It was over North American territory.
He traveled to France to get help from European nations.
The Spanish and the French were negotiating the ownership of the Louisiana territory.
Because it wasn't a War between the French and the Indians, but part of the Seven Years Wars between the UK and France with both European Nations using Native American Allies.
Through being an overseas territory of France, it has rights and privileges afforded to it by the European Union.
No, it is not. The French Polynesia is a dependent territory of France and therefore lacks sovereignty (UN members must be sovereign states). French Polynesian foreign diplomatic relations are the responsibility of France.
The French army basically defeated the British for the untrained Americas. Spain was more help in the land that bordered Spanish territory. Without European aid, America'd be all about fish and chips and cricket.
In France. European nations invented their own culture and then exported it to colonies.
The French, Spanish, and Germans... (France, Spain, Germany)