in 1918 some guy named dave who really was a gold hunter
France did not settle Texas in the same way as Spain or later the United States. However, it did explore the region in the early 18th century, primarily for trade and expansion purposes. French interests in Texas were part of a broader effort to establish a foothold in North America, competing with Spanish claims. Ultimately, the French presence in Texas was limited and did not lead to significant colonization.
Colorado is not the same size as France, Texas is. The previous answer did not recognize the difference between square miles and square kilometers. France is 260K square miles, Texas is 269K square miles (Colorado is 270K square KILOMETERS) I think the closest to the size of France is Colorado,because Texas is off to me
No. There is Paris, Texas though
France is roughly the same size as Texas if you include oversea territories. It is midway between California and Texas if you consider mainland France only.
Yes. Texas is 268,581 sq mi (695,621 sq km) and France is 210,026 sq mi (543965 sq km).
To expand the claim of France on that area.
Christopher Columbus did not explore Texas
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca explored what is now Texas in 1528.
Texas is about 10 percent larger than France. The area of Texas is 268,820 square miles and of France is 247,367 square miles.
France did not settle Texas in the same way as Spain or later the United States. However, it did explore the region in the early 18th century, primarily for trade and expansion purposes. French interests in Texas were part of a broader effort to establish a foothold in North America, competing with Spanish claims. Ultimately, the French presence in Texas was limited and did not lead to significant colonization.
No the French did not
Pineda explored Texas in the year 1519.
why did panfilo narvaez explorer texas
Corpus Christi
Yes
houston
The spainerds