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To find the Northwest Passage.
He sponsored a voyage to the New World. He sent a contingent of men to seek out a suitable place for a military bastion. Roanoke Island, in what is now North Carolina, was selected. Ralegh did not accompany that, or either of the two subsequent Roanoke Voyages.
The word "voyage" in English translates to "voyage" in French.
Well he travel his last voyage and died after his last voyage
In 1584 Sir Walter Ralegh and his investors sent two barks under the command of Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe to discover a suitable place for establishing a military basion in the New World. The company consisted of men only and was not intended to be a permanent settlement, rather, it was a reconnaissance voyage. In 1585 Ralegh and his backers sent a colony of 108 men to establish a military settlement on Roanoke Island. In 1587 a group of approximately 120 men, women and boys traveled to the New World to establish a perment settlment. They were supposed to go to the Chesapeake Bay but were dropped off at Roanoke Island. Ralegh's interest in this voyage was not nearly so intense as his interests in the two earlier voyages. While he certainly assisted in the organization, definitely used his influence to facilitate matters there is no evidence that he expected any financial profit from the venture.
no one
queen Sara of Spain
1769 to 1947
Queen Elizabeth 1
queen sara of spain
No. Many people never knew about it.
Sir Humphrey Gilbert. He took possession of Newfoundland in 1583 but did not really establish an English colony there. He died at sea during the return voyage.
In 1606 Michael Drayton wrote this ode βTo the Virginian Voyage,β in honour of Sir Walter Raleigh's first expedition to plant a permanent settlement of English people in North America. THERE
1576
he married and had his first chid but the child fell overboard thats why they say he had 3 but he had 4 until the baby hit the ice cold water
He didn't. He put together two voyages to the New World and lent his name to a third voyage in 1587, but he never came here himself.
Because Sir Walter Ralegh (that's the way he spelled his name) sponsored and organized the first English attempts at colonization in the New World. Although he never traveled to what is now the USA himself, his colonists came to Roanoke Island (NC). The third voyage, in 1587, was a failure and the colonists disappeared. That colony is now know as "the lost colony." The capital of NC is named in honor of Sir Walter Ralegh.