Fur trading flourished in most of Canada from about 9,000 years ago to today. When Europeans began arriving in 1000 AD, exports overseas began.
Since then the trade has had it's ups and downs. Starting in the 1600's large companies such as the Hudson Bay Company were created to exploit the resource on an industrial scale.
1949 saw a peak of over 600 processing plants, employing many thousands of people. Even today the fur trade flourishes with exports worth many millions of dollars.
The French
shelter,food,riches,and people to trade with
cus of pickle
There different aspects of kind of fur -trade that colonial Delaware had. The most common was barter trade where the fur was traded with other things.
The Fur Trade made the Native people have to leave their land. This is because their was less animals for the Native People which made them have to move ; New France, for the Fur Trade
The role of the Canadian fur trade was to allow the natives to trade fur pelts for goods, with the europeans.
The English fur trade was a long time ago
fur trade
The French
Some books that cover the Canadian fur trade include "The Fur Trade in Canada" by Harold Adams Innis, "Empire of the Bay: The Company of Adventurers that Seized a Continent" by Peter C. Newman, and "The Path of the Paddle: An Illustrated Guide to the Art of Canoeing" by Bill Mason.
French
Quebec
the role was to gain money
Étienne Brûlé is important in Canadian history for being one of the first European explorers to travel and live among Indigenous peoples in the 17th century. He played a key role in establishing early trade and diplomatic relations between the French and various Indigenous nations in Canada, paving the way for future French colonization and exploration in the region. His experiences helped to shape early interactions between Europeans and Indigenous peoples in Canada.
Voyageurs were from the French Canadian area who were travelers that helped to spread the fur trade.
It was cold and the Europians were freezing
First of all, the fur trade is history, not ancient history. They traded woven fabric, tin and brass kettles, beads, and tools for pelts, mainly beaver.