By conquest. They started with Lanzarote in 1402, Fuerteventura in 1405, and it took them until 1495 before La Gomera, Gran Canaria, Tenerife, and La Palma were fully under Spanish rule.
Spain :)
About 70 days
It was made to draw a line west to the Canary Islands, so that land discover west of the line belonged to Spain and the one to the east was for Portugal.
They were not founded. People settled there more than two thousand years ago and they became part of Spain when they were conquered in the 15th century.
Columbus sailed west from Spain.
The Canary Islands belongs to Spain.
As a part of Spain, the Canaries are also part of the European Union. However, the islands enjoy some exceptions in the fiscal and economic area. The currency in the Canary Islands is the euro, as in Spain.
Lanzarote is in the Canary Islands which are a part of Spain since the third century :)
The Canary islands belong to Morocco.
Euros are in use on Canary Islands, because they belong to Spain.
No, Turkey is a country, the Canary Islands are part of Spain not Turkey.
Never; Canary Islands since its annexion to Spain has always remained spanish.
Las Palmas. Located in Tenerife. (Note that the canary Islands isn't a state of its own, The Canary Islands belongs to Spain)
The Canary Islands are a part of Spain, they are not 'Possessed". The capital of Spain is Madrid.
Yes. The Canary Islands is off the coast of Morocco, Africa. But is an Archipelago and autonomous community of Spain.
The Balearic and the Canary Islands
The Canary Islands are part of Spain. Spain is a member of the European Union, which used be called the European Economic Community, or EEC.