it was built 150 years ago, 1843 and was built by pioneers. the reason was to build a trading post so fort Victoria is a trading post for the Hudson bay.
the Portuguese
Trading-post empires are those empires in the earlier centuries (13-15th) which traded vast goods and set up trading posts. Trading posts were built by European traders along the coasts of Africa and Asia as a base for trade with the interior. Trading posts (or 'Factories') were islands of European law and sovereignty, but European authority seldom extended very fat beyond the fortified post.
Fort Jesus, made by the Portuguese, was built in 1593 and used as a trading post for 20 years. It still stands today and is used as a museum.
A colonial trading post was a were colonist or french explorers traded fur with native Americans or with each other.
It was a fur trading post. But first it was a timbre town.
Jean Baptiste Point du Sable.
Natchitoches was the name of the trading post built by St. Denis.
it was built 150 years ago, 1843 and was built by pioneers. the reason was to build a trading post so fort Victoria is a trading post for the Hudson bay.
St. Denis
quebec
Arkansas post
A French post on the Ohio River was a trading post built so that fur trappers would have a place to trade their pelts. They also traded blankets and other goods with the Native American Indians at a fur trading post.
Bent's Fort
A French post on the Ohio River was a trading post built so that fur trappers would have a place to trade their pelts. They also traded blankets and other goods with the Native American Indians at a fur trading post.
AnswerTen Mile Point Restaurant and CabinsWhat was it called before this and what was it when it was first built ? Before it went to Ten Mile Point Trading Post , It was called Ten Mile Point Lodge , The question is and was , what was it originally ?
A trading post is a place where people trade goods and stuff. In the 15th century trading posts were built by European traders along the coasts of Africa and Asia as a base for trade with the interior. Trading posts or 'Factories' were islands of European law and sovereignty, but European authority seldom extended very far beyond the fortified post.