(full answer) Samuel de Champlain chose a small Island at the mouth of the Saint-Croix River on the Bay of Fundy as the site for their Settlement. ( i got this from a text book so i know it's right)
Samuel de Champlain, the French explorer, settled in Quebec City, Canada, in 1608. He established the first permanent French settlement in North America at what is now known as Quebec City.
Sir Walter Raleigh settled in the Roanoke Island colony in present-day North Carolina in the late 16th century. This settlement became known as the "Lost Colony" when its inhabitants mysteriously disappeared.
This scenario is known as a colony. Colonies are established when people settle in a new area that is under the rule of a government from another country. The settlers may be subject to the laws and regulations of the ruling government while living in the colony.
Champlain settled in Quebec because he saw it as a strategic location for fur trading and for establishing French influence in North America. He also wanted to establish a permanent French presence in the region to compete with the English and Dutch traders. Additionally, the St. Lawrence River provided good access to the interior of the continent, making it a valuable location for trade and exploration.
A colony is a territory controlled and occupied by a group of people from another country. These individuals establish settlements in the new territory, often exploiting its resources for economic gain.
He colonized it.
Samuel De Champlain was the french explorer to settle in Quebec first.
Samuel de Champlain
he started out a s training o be a priest but was released by his own choice so that he could settle in New France with his brother.
The majority of New France colonists settled along the Saint Lawrence River. The establishment of New France began with the founding of the first French permanent settlement near Quebec in 1608 by Samuel de Champlain.
on 1608, Champlain took 32 colonists to settle in quebec, and established a fur-trading centre.
St. Malo?
Quebec
Samuel De Champlain is somewhat a good leader and somewhat bad if you look at this in a different perspective. Samuel De Champlain helped France gain more in wealth and helped them participate in the fur trade in Canada. He made allies with the Huron and the relationship was pretty strong too. A bad side of him is when he killed many Iroquois during a war. He shot two Iroquois chiefs and almost the third one. The Iroquois never forgave the French even now. During the war Samuel De Champlain was shot 2 times with arrows. One was on his knee and the second one was on his neck splitting his ear apart. Samuel de Champlain also married a 12 year old woman at the age of 48 just for money to go again on voyages to Canada and support the place where the French settle, Quebec. So you decide on that question base on this answer. These are the main events on what has occurred in Samuel De Champlain's life.
The father of New France.The cancellation of De Monts's fur monopoly in 1607 brought the Port Royal settlement to a temporary end. Champlain persuaded his leader to allow him to take colonists and "go and settle on the great River St. Lawrence, with which I was familiar through a voyage that I had made there." In 1608 he founded France's first permanent Canadian colony. It was at Quebec, at the foot of a great rocky cape on the north shore, which formed a natural fortress barring the way upstream to the interior.The early years of the Quebec colony were hard, and the population grew slowly. Champlain administered its affairs and took personal charge of an organized exploration of the unknown interior. Where he did not actually travel himself, he sent other men. One was Etienne Brule, the first white man to cross Pennsylvania and later the first to see Lake Superior. Champlain himself discovered Lake Champlain (1609); and in 1615 he journeyed by canoe up the Ottawa, through Lake Nipissing, and down Georgian Bay to the heart of the Huron country, near Lake Simcoe. During these journeys Champlain aided the Hurons in battles against the Iroquois Confederacy. As a result, the Iroquois became mortal enemies of the French.In 1629 Champlain suffered the humiliation of having to surrender his almost starving garrison to an English fleet that appeared before Quebec. He was taken to England as a prisoner. Peace, however, had been declared between England and France before the surrender, and New France was accordingly restored to the French. Champlain returned from Europe to spend his few remaining years. He became governor of New France in 1633.
He finally settled in Quebec.
ng