Dictionary Of Canadian Biography Online cartier, jacques, navigator of SaintMalo, first explorer of the Gulf of St. I that an expedition be sent to the new world, he asserted that cartier had http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=34229
Kids.net.au Cartier,_Jacques The Virtual Museum of newFrance jacques cartier profile - In-depth illustrated Article focuses on cartier s voyages and time in the new world. http://www.kids.net.au/kidscategories/Kids_and_Teens/People_and_Society/Biograph
Civilization.ca - VMNF - New France Is... who demanded and obtained his share of the riches of the new world Like most European explorers seeking a passage to China, jacques cartier hit an http://www.civilization.ca/vmnf/intro/intro-en.htm
Extractions: QUICK LINKS Home page VMNF Main Menu About the Museum About New France Genealogy Tourism Collections Youth Adventures Explorers First Nations People Great Names Daily Life Maps Chronology Glossary Artifact catalogue Library catalogue Boutique Jacques Cartier in Gaspé Between France and the Orient: an obstacle, a continent French exploration of North America intensified in 1534 on the orders of François I , who demanded and obtained his share of the riches of the New World- riches to which, up to that time, Portugal and Spain had had exclusive rights. Like most European explorers seeking a passage to China, Jacques Cartier hit an obstacle: North America. The territory on which he lands is peopled by Natives who call this land Canada . This word, he learns, means "encampment" or "collection of huts." Cartier plants a cross in Gaspesia and takes possession of Canada in the name of the king of France. Seaport of Dieppe At the beginning of the next century, New France begins to take shape when colonists recruited in France settle in the Saint Lawrence valley and Acadia Amongst other factors, success depends on the contribution of the first occupants, who introduced the French to the land, the climate and the Amerindians nations who peopled North America.
France In America -- La France En Amérique exploration and Knowledge. bullet new Maritime Routes in the 16th Century The second voyage of jacques cartier to Canada (153536) resulted in the http://international.loc.gov/intldl/fiahtml/fiatheme1a.html
Extractions: General Introduction Exploration and Knowledge New Maritime Routes in the 16th Century From the St. Lawrence Valley to the Great Plains (17th-18th C.) ... Descriptive Maps , Nicolas Desliens, 1566. BnF Maps and Plans Department. fleurs-de-lis in Canada (Labrador), Florida (on the May River), and Brazil (on the Rio de La Plata). , Pierre Detcheverry, 1689. BnF Navy Hydrographic Service Collection. This nautical map of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, drawn in 1689 by the Basque cartographer Pierre Detcheverry at Plaisance, the French capital of Newfoundland, contains many place-names in the Basque language and details the many anchorages between Newfoundland and Tadoussac. By the late-17th century, French fishermen and sailors had been plying these waters for more than 150 years. Journal , Jacques Cartier, 1535-1536 . BnF Western Manuscript Department. In the 16th century the French monarchy was hardly interested in the New World. Above all, it wished to maintain its position on the European continent in opposition to the Habsburg Empire. Moreover, France was weakened by the Wars of Religion (1562-98). la Dauphine The Library of Congress Global Gateway Contact Us
Mrs. Wilborne's Social Studies Class Discovering the new world Was a blessing, not a pain. * cartier jacques jacques cartier jacques cartier (14911557) was a French explorer who led three http://web.dps.k12.va.us/ParkAve/wilbosst.htm
Extractions: Economics The student will explain how producers use natural resources (water, soil, wood, and coal), human resources (people at work), and capital resources (machines, tools, and buildings) to produce goods and services for consumers 15 Days) Explain how producers use natural resources (water, soil, wood, and coal), human resources (people at work), and capital resources (machines, tools, and buildings) to produce goods and services for
The Library Of Congress French navigator jacques cartier sailed into the St. Lawrence River for the first cartier made his third and final voyage to the new world on a 1541 http://www.stmarystoday.com/library_of_congress.htm
Extractions: Portraits of the Presidents and First Ladies,1789-Present While attending a recent Lincoln celebration I asked myself if Lincoln would have been as serviceable to the people of this country had he been a college man, and I was obliged to say to myself that he would not. The process to which the college man is subjected does not render him serviceable to the country as a whole. It is for this reason that I have dedicated every power in me to a democratic regeneration. The American college must become saturated in the same sympathies as the common people. The colleges of this country must be reconstructed from the top to the bottom. The American people will tolerate nothing that savors of exclusiveness. Woodrow Wilson, president of Princeton University; "Address to Alumni," April 16, 1910 On June 9 Woodrow Wilson was unanimously elected president of Princeton University. In this position, Wilson exhibited both the idealistic integrity and the occasional lack of political acumen that marked his tenure as 28th president of the United States. After graduating from Princeton in 1879, Wilson studied law at the
Studies In Canadian Literature strain in the early reports of the first British settlement in the new world . Des écrits de jacques cartier, on remarque au début une observation http://www.lib.unb.ca/Texts/SCL/bin/get2.cgi?directory=Abstracts/&filename=vol4_
The New World The new world Amerigo Vespucci of Italy; jacques cartier of France. . . More a pirate than an explorer, Drake almost accidentally became the first http://ise.uvic.ca/Library/SLTnoframes/ideas/voyages.html
Extractions: Home Life Stage Society ... Next The extraordinary journey of Christopher Columbus, in 1492, opened the way to the exploration (or, we might now think, invasion) of new worlds and new peoples. Once Columbus brought news of landfall in the Caribbean, every nation in Europe sent its mariners to explore and exploit the new lands: John Cabot of England followed five years later; Amerigo Vespucci of Italy; Jacques Cartier of France. . . Click here to read about the chief motivation* for explorers in the period. Sir Francis Drake, from an engraving of c.1590. Reproduced in J.R.Greene, A Short History of the English People . University of Victoria Library. More a pirate than an explorer, Drake almost accidentally became the first Englishman to circumnavigate the world* . His life was one of high adventure, high profit, and considerable military success. By knighting him aboard his ship, the Golden Hind, Elizabeth trumpeted her open opposition to the policies of Spain; eight years later Drake was a vice-admiral of the fleet that defeated the Armada. Some other explorers*
Viewing NetStep @2Learn.ca This page continues with the story of jacques cartier. allows cybernauts freeentry into the first virtual universe devoted to new France a new world. http://www.2learn.ca/search/NetStepView.asp?PID=1108
Backflip Publisher: Zimmy | Folder: New World Explorers new world explorers http//www.loc.gov/exhibits/1492/columbus.html. DiscoverersWeb jacques cartier (added 2002/09/10) new world explorers http://www.backflip.com/members/zimmy/11557125
Discoverers Web: Jacques Cartier jacques cartier was born in St. Malo (France) in 1491. Used sources. Richard E.Bohlander (editor) world Explorers and Discoverers . http://www.win.tue.nl/cs/fm/engels/discovery/cartier.html
Extractions: Jacques Cartier Jacques Cartier was born in St. Malo (France) in 1491. Not much is known of his life before 1534, when he departed on his first voyage. He was looking for a passage through or around North America to East Asia, as some had done before him, and many would after him. He made the crossing of the Atlantic in only twenty days, and landed on an island near the coast of Newfoundland, by then already much frequented by Breton fishermen . He sailed north, and entered the Strait of Belle Isle. He sailed into the Bay of St. Lawrence and along the westcoast of Newfoundland, and crossed the Bay to the Magdalen Islands and Prince Edward Island Micmac indians , who seemed friendly and greeted him with the words napeu tondamen assurtah we want to make friendship ). The next day the French and the Micmac traded and celebrated. Cartier explored the bay, being disappointed that it was not the straight to China he had hoped it to be. He also met a fishing party of 200 Hurons , led by their chief, Donnaconna. His sons, Domagaia and Taignagny, went to France with Cartier to become interpreters. Cartier explored Anticosti Island and returned to France.
Other French Explorers He sailed back to Canada in 1604 and then explored the new England coast. In waters near newfoundland, he met the French navigator jacques cartier. http://www2.worldbook.com/features/explorers/html/newworld_french_ofe.html
Extractions: Other French explorers Other explorers of the Great Age Charting the explorers of the Great Age of European Exploration The continuing saga of exploration Impact on native people ... Related Web sites Click on the links below to read about other French explorers of the great age of European exploration. Etienne Brule Etienne (ay TYEHN) Brule (broo LAY) (1592?-1633), a noted French adventurer, was the first European to reach Lake Ontario. He arrived there in 1615 while on a mission for Samuel de Champlain, a French explorer who founded the Canadian city of Quebec. Brule may have been the first European to see Lakes Erie, Huron, and Superior.
Extractions: The main causes for this expansion to the Americas are above all political, religious and economic in nature. Europeans, who had become accustomed to costly products from Asia and easy commerce with India, were forced to revise their purchasing strategies on account of the increasing menace represented by Islam. France feared it would be unable to extract itself from the numerous Italian and Arab middlemen it was dependent on. And, owing to the closely related problem of their trade deficit with the Orient, Europeans were obliged to seek out other supply locations, such as Africa or the Americas, in order to obtain the precious metals required to offset this imbalance. America or Asia?
Extractions: Major Explorers of New York State In 1493, Christopher Columbus returned to Spain from America with tales of his voyage to the islands he had discovered off the coast of what he thought was India. Soon other countries in Europe began sending ships to explore these new lands seeking the riches they might provide. One of their primary goals was also to try to find a quicker trade route to Asia, the land of silks and spices. This search for the Northwest Passage lead to many new discoveries and claims. By the early 16 th century (1500âs) France, Italy, and England had begun their explorations. John Cabot John Cabot, like Columbus, believed that Asia could be reached by sailing westward. Cabot, an Italian ship captain, made two voyages to the new world. In 1497, he sailed for the King of England. He reached the northern coast of North America in what today is part of Canada. He sailed southward, exploring possibly as far as New York.
They Explored In Canada Champlains Map of the new world, 1632, Not the largest version I ve seen, Great Canadian Explorers, More links on the likes of cartier, Champlain, http://www.hpedsb.on.ca/sg/quinte/exploring_canada.htm
Extractions: Belleville, Ontario Webmaster Visit over 125 links to over 60 explorers, both famous and not-so-famous; updated Click on these underlined links to jump down this very long page. Arctic Explorers Astronauts Canoes Coureurs des Bois ... Maps of the early exploration of Canada: 1497-1650 and 1651-1760. Individual Explorers: Albanel Bylot des Groseilliers Hall ... Vancouver Albanel , Charles Missionary voyageur The Jesuit priest Charles Albanel was born in Auvergne, France,in either 1613 or 1616. In the spring of 1649 he embarked for Canada. Energetic and stubborn but obscure and undistinguished, looked down on by his superiors, Albanel nevertheless accepted the challenge of reaching Hudson Bay overland. Alling , Lillian One Determined Woman Lillian Alling walked, in 1927, from New York City to Dawson, YT. Amundsen, Roald Biography A biography of one of the most successful polar explorers ever known. He visited both poles. Arctic Explorers and the Northwest Passage see also Amundsen Bartlett Bering Davis ... Exploration of the Northwest Passage A good summary of the explorations of this region, with links about particular explorers.
EPL Pathfinders: Canadian Explorers cartier jacques cartier in search of the Northwest Passage Good maps ofthe explorer s routes. Biography for Beginners world Explorers http://www.epl.ca/EPLPathfinderPrintVersion.cfm?id=CANADIANE1
CPL Kids Pages: Reading: Book Lists: J 910.92 S, Simon, Charnan, Explorers of the Ancient world J BIO cartier,Blashfield, Jean, cartier jacques cartier in Search of the Northwest Passage http://www.cantonpl.org/kids/bklist/explorer.html
Extractions: Books about Explorers at the Canton Public Library Books with Many Explorers: CALL # AUTHOR TITLE J 910 V Explorers of the Ancient World J 910 V Green, Jen Exploring the Polar Regions J 910 V Macdonald, Fiona Exploring the World J 910.4 M Macdonald, Fiona Explorers: Expeditions and Pioneers J 910.722 M Matthews, Rupert Explorer J 910.9 F Fradin, Dennis Explorers J 910.9 G Grosseck, Joyce Great Explorers J 910.92 A The Age of Exploration: Marco Polo, Christopher Columbus, Hernan Cortes J 910.92 H Hudson, Wade Five Brave Explorers (Jean DuSable, Matthew Henson, Mae Jemison, James Beckwourth, Esteban) J 910.92 R Ross, Stewart Conquerors and Explorers J 910.92 S Simon, Charnan Explorers of the Ancient World J 910.922 C Ciovacco, Justine The Encyclopedia of Explorers and Adventurers J 910.922 F Fritz, Jean
Jacques Cartier cartier explored the coast of newfoundland, but found no passage leading westward . In conclusion jacques cartier has discovered new land for the French, http://www.freeessays.cc/db/21/emr96.shtml
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SOL 3.3a K-3 Social Studies SOL The student will study the exploration of the Americas by The backgroundinformation on jacques cartier includes maps. http//www. http://k3hss.pwnet.org/3grade/3_3a.htm
Extractions: a) describing the accomplishments of Christopher Columbus, Juan Ponce de Léon, Jacques Cartier, and Christopher Newport SUGGESTED INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES Introduce this unit by bringing in a covered box with items inside that an explorer might use. Some examples are a magnifying lens, compass, hat, map, journal, etc. Have students guess what is in the box before opening it. Then take out one item at a time and generate guesses about why the item is in the box. Also discuss what each item is used for. List ideas on the board or on chart paper. After the students have talked about all the items in the box, explain to the class that you are beginning a unit on explorers. Begin a KWL chart either on an enlarged ship model with K, W, and L on each sail or on just a chart. Elicit responses from students about what they already know about explorers and write them on the K part of the ship or chart. Then have them give responses about what they would like to learn on the W part of the ship or chart. Post this chart or ship up for the entire unit.
New World Explorers Cavelier De La Salle Cavelier de La Salle_This important explorer was driven by his desire to her colonial policy in the new world in the eighteenth century until finally http://www.archaeolink.com/new_world_explorers_cavelier_de_.htm
Extractions: Explorer Cavelier de La Salle Home Arctic Explorers General Resources Antarctica Explorers General Resources Africa Explorers Behaim, Martin Cadamosto, Alvise da Dias, Bartolomeu Eannes, Gil ... Speke, John Hanning New World Explorers Albanel, Charles Balboa, Vasco Nunez de Brûlé, Étienne Cabot, John ... Vespucci, Amerigo World Explorers Cook, James Da Gama, Vasco Drake, Sir Francis General Resources ... Zheng He (Cheng Ho) Cavelier de La Salle _This important explorer was driven by his desire to find a route to the Orient. Read his story here. - Illustrated - From the Virtual Museum of New France -