spain
Spain
Spain
Spain
The Louisiana Purchase included what is now Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, most of Kansas, the parts of Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado east of the Rocky Mountains, and Minnesota and Louisiana west of the Mississippi River (and including the city of New Orleans which is east of the Mississippi). Napoleon returned returned the area of the purchase to France, from Spain, in 1800 bot did not announce it until 1803.
The US signed the treaty to make the Louisiana Purchase, including Florida, on May 2, 1803. The price paid to Napoleon was $11.25 Million dollars.
Actually, he sort of didn't "ask" for it; the American government sent an envoy to offer him money for New Orleans. Napoleon offered far more territory than the Americans were asking for, at a price that was only slightly higher than they had been willing to pay for New Orleans alone.
New Orleans is in the state of Louisiana
The Louisiana Purchase
Spain
Spain
It was $15 million including New Orleans, which was relatively inexpensive considering the amount of land he was offering to Jefferson.
Napoleon Bonaparte sold New Orleans along with the Louisiana Territory to President Jefferson in the 1880's.
The Louisiana Purchase included what is now Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Oklahoma, most of Kansas, the parts of Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado east of the Rocky Mountains, and Minnesota and Louisiana west of the Mississippi River (and including the city of New Orleans which is east of the Mississippi). Napoleon returned returned the area of the purchase to France, from Spain, in 1800 bot did not announce it until 1803.
New Orleans.
No. Jefferson bought the Louisiana territory from France in 1803 and that included New Orleans.
True
True
New Orleans is a city, and it can be found in Louisiana. New Orleans is Louisiana's largest city.
The US signed the treaty to make the Louisiana Purchase, including Florida, on May 2, 1803. The price paid to Napoleon was $11.25 Million dollars.
Actually, he sort of didn't "ask" for it; the American government sent an envoy to offer him money for New Orleans. Napoleon offered far more territory than the Americans were asking for, at a price that was only slightly higher than they had been willing to pay for New Orleans alone.