To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz>
They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
The French established colonies in the southeast mainly for economic purposes, including acquiring resources such as fur and establishing trade networks. Additionally, they wanted to expand their territory and influence in the region to compete with other European powers. Ultimately, the colonies provided strategic advantages and opportunities for France to increase its power and wealth.
The French wanted to match the expansion of the British Empire
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
To match the growth of the British Empire</zzz> They feared the growing strength of the British Empire.
Because the French founded that Africa's land was rich with gold
Motive is from the French word "motif," which was adopted about 700 years ago.
As late as 1750, only sixty thousand or so whites inhabited New France. Landowning French peasants, unlike the dispossessed English tenant farmers who embarked for the British colonies, had little economic motive to move. Protestant Huguenots, who might have had a religious motive to migrate, were denied a refuge in this raw colony. The French government, in any case, favored its Caribbean island colonies, rich in sugar and rum, over the snow-cloaked wilderness of Canada.
To weaken England