The French Empire in America (1500–1800)
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概要
What happens after discovery—when a landing becomes an empire?
In this episode, we follow the rise of a world where France, not Spain, becomes the first great Atlantic power. After Christopher Columbus opens the western route under the French banner, discovery quickly turns into domination: island bases become permanent colonies, coastal outposts become cities, and trade routes become the arteries of a new French America.
From the Caribbean to Mexico and deep into North America’s river systems, France builds a vast imperial space shaped by governors, merchants, missionaries, soldiers, and settlers. Plantation wealth, precious metals, fur routes, and Atlantic trade bind the New World to Paris, Bordeaux, and Saint-Malo—while French language, law, religion, and urban culture spread across continents.
But empire never grows without cost. Alongside splendor come slavery, disease, violence, and the destruction of Indigenous worlds. The same colonial system that brings France power and prestige also creates deep tensions—between Crown and colonists, between wealth and injustice, between empire and the people living under it.
By 1800, French America stands rich, vast, and powerful—but already unstable. Enlightenment ideas, colonial elites, enslaved populations, and regional identities begin to pull against the empire that created them.
This episode explores three centuries in which France does not merely build colonies, but creates an entire Atlantic civilization—one that could have changed the language, power, and destiny of the modern world.