Well, on SIRS discover, it said he crossed it 23 times.
washing their clothes, putting their waste in it??
A cross-sweeper's job was to clear the streets of horse manure for people who were wealthy enough to pay a street urchin to clear a foot path or road for them. See the Related Link below for an illustration.
The rise in ocean travel allowed explorers to come into contact with peoples who were very different from known societies.
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He was a British explorer who sailed to North America in 1576. He was hoping to find the "Northwest Passage" to the Orient, which would make it easier for trade and commerce via ocean vessels. He landed in Northeastern Canada (Labrador, Baffin Bay) and although he did not find the Passage, he did find what he believed to be sources of gold and other precious metals, and he returned to the area several times.
of course not
Samuel de Champlain's first voyage took about one year. It began in 1603 and ended in 1604. He found a vast network of lakes and waterways that were navigable in Canada.
Samuel de Champlain sailed several times to the Spanish colonies in North America between 1599 and 1601. In 1603, Champlain also sailed to Canada.
Samuel de Champlain was a French navigator, cartographer, and explorer who founded New France and Quebec City in 1608. He mapped the St. Lawrence River and surrounding territories, establishing key trading relationships with Indigenous peoples. Champlain's efforts laid the foundation for French exploration and settlement in North America.
He got hit in the knee many times, and his leg with two arrows. Thats what killed him.
Samuel de Champlain was a famous explorer from France in the 1600's he sailed to Canada and back to France many times he discovered what he called new France.
he said sure I'll do it and then king henry IV kept sending him like 24 times across
asdfasdfasdfasdfasdfadfsadfasdfdsaf please don't answer questions like that people don't know the answer and they won't know what to do with their lives when they grow up then they will be poor.
Samuel De Champlain is somewhat a good leader and somewhat bad if you look at this in a different perspective. Samuel De Champlain helped France gain more in wealth and helped them participate in the fur trade in Canada. He made allies with the Huron and the relationship was pretty strong too. A bad side of him is when he killed many Iroquois during a war. He shot two Iroquois chiefs and almost the third one. The Iroquois never forgave the French even now. During the war Samuel De Champlain was shot 2 times with arrows. One was on his knee and the second one was on his neck splitting his ear apart. Samuel de Champlain also married a 12 year old woman at the age of 48 just for money to go again on voyages to Canada and support the place where the French settle, Quebec. So you decide on that question base on this answer. These are the main events on what has occurred in Samuel De Champlain's life.
Samuel De Champlain is somewhat a good leader and somewhat bad if you look at this in a different perspective. Samuel De Champlain helped France gain more in wealth and helped them participate in the fur trade in Canada. He made allies with the Huron and the relationship was pretty strong too. A bad side of him is when he killed many Iroquois during a war. He shot two Iroquois chiefs and almost the third one. The Iroquois never forgave the French even now. During the war Samuel De Champlain was shot 2 times with arrows. One was on his knee and the second one was on his neck splitting his ear apart. Samuel de Champlain also married a 12 year old woman at the age of 48 just for money to go again on voyages to Canada and support the place where the French settle, Quebec. So you decide on that question base on this answer. These are the main events on what has occurred in Samuel De Champlain's life.
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Samuel de Champlain,Like Cartier a century before him, Samuel de Champlain originally set out to find riches for France and a route to the Orient. From 1603 to his death in 1635, Champlain crossed the Atlantic Ocean many times. Through these voyages he accomplished a great deal. His skills as a cartographer (map-maker) provided detailed maps of the Atlantic coast, the waterways of the St. Lawrence and its tributaries, and a view of the interior of the continent that had, until then, not been available to Europeans. In his initial voyages, he explored the coastal regions of eastern North America. He founded a settlement at Québec City, the first permanent settlement for Europeans in what was to become Canada. He established a military alliance with the Huron people. In 1609 he joined them in an attack near a lake that would eventually bear his name. In this attack, Champlain used his arquebus (an early type of shotgun). He loaded it with two rounds of shot and fired it into the group of Iroquois attacking his party. This one shot instantly killed two Iroquois chiefs. The attacking force, not ever having experienced anything like this before, retreated, giving the victory to the Huron alliance. Over the next 20 years Champlain worked tirelessly to build a colony for France. By the time of his death, he had established the basis of a successful colony, and Champlain's legacy as the "Father of New France" was secured.