Explorer
Routes
Motivations
Conflicts
Colonies
100

In 1534, this French explorer claimed parts of modern-day Canada for France while searching for a passage to Asia.

Jacques Cartier

100

Jacques Cartier crossed this ocean to reach North America on his search for a western route to Asia.

Atlantic Ocean

100

Like other European powers, France sought a shorter water route to this continent through North America.

Asia

100

This 18th-century conflict, known in North America as the French and Indian War, stretched across Europe, the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia.

Seven Years War

100

Samuel de Champlain founded this settlement in 1608, which became the capital of New France.

Quebec

200

Known as the "Father of New France" this man founded Quebec City in 1608.

Samuel De Champlain

200

Cartier sailed this river in 1535, paving the way for French claims in the interior of Canada.

St. Lawrence River

200

Jacques Cartier was motivated by the hope of finding precious metals, especially this one.

Gold

200

This war also called Queen Anne’s War in the Americas, involved battles in Europe and overseas, ending with Britain gaining Gibraltar and parts of Canada.

War of the Spanish Succession
200

Jacques Cartier claimed this island in the Gulf of St. Lawrence for France in 1534.

Newfoundland

300

This explorer led expeditions down the Mississippi River, claiming the surrounding region for France and naming it Louisiana.

Rene-Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle

300

Samuel de Champlain explored and mapped parts of this system of lakes, including the one that now bears his name.

Great Lakes

300

Samuel de Champlain’s alliances with Indigenous peoples helped secure control of this trade.

The Fur Trade
300

Beginning in the 1600s, these conflicts between the Iroquois Confederacy and New France were fueled by competition over the fur trade.

The Beaver Wars
300

Rene-Robert Cavalier, and Sieur de La Salle claimed this vast region drained by the Mississippi River for France in 1682.

Louisiana Territory

400

On his voyages, this explorer made contact with the St. Lawrence Iroquoians and brought two of their sons back to France.

Jacques Cartier

400

In 1608, Champlain founded Quebec along this river, which became the main French access route into North America.

St. Lawrence River

400

Along with wealth, French explorers were also driven by the desire to spread this religion to the New World.

Catholicism

400

Fought from 1689–1697, this conflict marked the first major colonial struggle between France and England.

Nine Years War

400

This French colony on the St. Lawrence River grew into a major center of trade and the second largest city of New France.

Montreal

500

After claiming Louisiana for France, this explorer planned a colony near the Mississippi’s mouth but instead landed in Texas, where his failed expedition led to his murder by his own men.

Rene-Robert Cavalier, Sieur De La Salle

500

Rene-Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle, led an expedition down this river to the Gulf of Mexico, claiming all the land it drained for France.

Mississippi River

500

By claiming the Mississippi Valley and Louisiana, La Salle hoped to expand France’s territory and block the influence of these two rival European powers.

Spain & England

500

This 17th-century conflict devastated Europe, and though fought mainly on the continent, France’s victory against Spain and the Habsburgs helped secure its later colonial expansion.

Thirty Years War

500

In South America, France briefly attempted a colony here in the 17th century.

French Guiana