Yes
They divided the territory into provinces
Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon was the Spanish explorer who gave Spain the claim to South Carolina. He claimed this territory for Spain in 1525.
/f claim
France, Australia, Norway, Britain, Argentina and Chile claim territory on Antarctica.
You do not need a lawyer for file a judgment debtors claim for exemption in Missouri. You do need to have it notarized.
To find gold
The Spanish were able to claim land in the Americas primarily through a combination of military conquest, the establishment of colonies, and treaties with indigenous peoples. They also exploited existing power structures and alliances with indigenous groups to solidify their control over territory.
to claim their territory
you press 't' then type in the following /f claim claim faction territory
Different groups claim rights to settle in the land of the northwest territory because they won the war.
Phillip Nolan was suspected of plotting to claim land in Texas as part of a broader scheme to establish an independent territory or republic in the region. He was known to have made several expeditions into Spanish Texas, which raised suspicions among Spanish authorities that he aimed to promote American settlement and possibly facilitate a rebellion against Spanish rule. His actions ultimately led to his arrest and execution, as the Spanish government sought to maintain control over its territories.
What is now Iowa was a small part of the huge area which French explorers claimed in 1682 and named Louisiana in honor of French King Louis XIV. At that time French Louisiana extended all the way from the Appalachian Mountains in the east to the Rocky Mountains in the west and from the Great Lakes in the north to the Gulf of Mexico in the south. As a result of the French and Indian War, France lost its claim to Louisiana in 1763. The part west of the Mississippi River, including today's Iowa, was ceded to Spain. After France defeated Spain in the War of the Pyrenees, the entire Spanish colony of Louisiana was returned to France as part of the Third Treaty of Ildefonso of 1800. Then in 1803 the huge territory was purchased from France by the United States. In 1804 the southernmost part of the region, which controlled the mouth of the Mississippi River, was organized by the federal government as the Territory of Orleans, and in 1805 all the remaining area was organized as the Territory of Louisiana. The name Louisiana was given to the Orleans Territory when it was granted statehood in 1812, so the name of the Louisiana Territory was changed to the Missouri Territory. In 1821, a small portion of Missouri Territory was granted statehood as the State of Missouri. Aside from Arkansas Territory south of Missouri, the rest of the former Missouri Territory remained unorganized for over a decade. Then in 1834 the US gave a large part of the unorganized territory, including all of today's Iowa, to Michigan Territory, changing the western border of Michigan Territory from the Mississippi River to the Missouri River. In 1836, Michigan Territory was divided. The eastern part kept the name and became the State of Michigan in 1837, and the name of the rest of the territory was changed to Wisconsin Territory. In 1838 Wisconsin Territory was split along the Mississippi River. The eastern part kept the Wisconsin name, and the western part became Iowa Territory. Finally, in December of 1846, the southern third of Iowa Territory was admitted to the Union as the State of Iowa.