Albeit French anglers had gotten cod off Newfoundland as soon as 1504, fish were not what spurred the journeys supported by Ruler Francis I in the sixteenth 100 years. In 1524, Giovanni da Verrazano cruised up the east coast from present‐day North Carolina to Nova Scotia searching for a northwesterly entry to Asia. A similar goal was behind Jacques Cartier's three journeys (1534-42) that were the reason for future French cases to Canada. He investigated the Inlet of St. Lawrence and found the St. Lawrence Stream, on which individuals from his undertaking established a short‐lived settlement close to Quebec. Unsuccessful states were additionally settled by French Huguenots (Protestants) inside the modern‐day limits of South Carolina (1562-64) and Florida (1564-65). The Conflicts of Religion, which set Catholic in opposition to Protestant, deferred further French investigation until the seventeenth hundred years. Under the authority of Samuel de Champlain, who made various journeys toward the eastern Canada locale starting in 1603, the city of Quebec was established (1608) and coalitions were made with the Hurons to foster the fur exchange. For sure, furs as opposed to settlements meant a lot to France at that point. The Dutch became one of the extraordinary nautical and business countries of Europe in the seventeenth 100 years and were opponents of the Portuguese in the East Indies. The Dutch East India Organization supported English mariner Henry Hudson in 1609 for one more quest for the slippery Northwest Section. He found Delaware Cove and cruised up the stream later named for him, laying out Dutch cases for the region known as New Netherland. Like the French, the Dutch were fur brokers, and they laid out rewarding binds with the neighborhood clans of the Iroquois Alliance.