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French Colonization in North Africa

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  • Balch, Thomas Willing

Abstract

In the contest of the western powers of Europe to colonize the New World, France, owing to a mistaken policy, failed completely and saw her flag and sovereignty practically driven back from this hemisphere. The early attempts of Admiral de Coligny to colonize the Huguenots first in Brazil and then in Florida, were, owing to the indifference and even opposition of the French crown, abortive. And in the later effort of the French crown to colonize in Canada and Louisiana, the attempt to bring over the remains of feudalism as opposed to the strong individualism that characterized the English settlers, reinforced by the Hollanders in New Netherlands, the Swedes and the Germans in Pennsylvania, and the Huguenots in Virginia and the Carolinas, doomed the French settlers, in the valley of the Saint Lawrence and at the mouth of the Mississippi, to defeat in their effort to extend their language and supremacy over the continent of North America.

Suggested Citation

  • Balch, Thomas Willing, 1909. "French Colonization in North Africa," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 3(4), pages 539-551, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:3:y:1909:i:04:p:539-551_00
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