Answer:
Advocates such as Richard Hakluyt the Younger and John Dee, for instance, drew upon The History of the Kings of Britain, written by the twelfth-century monk Geoffrey of Monmouth, and its mythical account of King Arthur’s conquest and Christianization of pagan lands to justify American conquest.
Step-by-step explanation:
Richard Hakluyt the Younger represented one of the most important propagandists of British colonization in North America. Among his many works, he wrote Divers Voyages Touching the Discoverie of America and the Islands Adjacent, supporting the plan of Sir Humphrey Gilbert to colonize North America. After Walter Raleigh (Gilbert's half brother) took control of the colonization process, Hakluyt elaborated a Discourse on Western Planting for Queen Elizabeth in 1584, in which he claimed that colonization was a way to predicate Protestanism and this would foster the expansion of the Spanish economy.