Title: NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
1NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
- Born in Corsica in 1769
- Father was minor and impoverished Italian noble
- Sent Napoleon to military school on the mainland
- Graduated as young commissioned officer in middle
of Revolution - Decided that the best way to advance was to
abandon all principles and side with whoever
looked as though they were going to win
2RAPID RISE TO THE TOP
- Rose through ranks rapidly
- First came to notice for retaking the port of
Toulon in 1793 and crushing royalist uprising in
Paris in 1795 - Became Directorys official enforcer
- Conducted Italian campaign brilliantly
- At age of 30 he had achieved success, glory,
popularity and fame - And with coup détat of November 1799, he also
achieved political power
3FIRST CONSUL
- Produced new constitution within a month of
taking power - Created three-house legislature which actually
was a three-stage rubber stamp for legislation
prepared by Council of State - Executive committee whose members were all
appointed by Napoleon - First Consul had exclusive power to appoint all
officials and judges, conduct diplomacy, declare
and wage war, and to maintain internal law and
order - Napoleon created a new monarchy under a
republican facade
4PLEBISCITE
- Put constitution into effect on his own authority
and then, after the fact, held a plebiscite - Popular referendum
- Results were
- 3,011,007 FOR
- 1562 AGAINST
- Plebiscites became permanent part of Napoleons
arsenal
5POPULAR SUPPORT
- Power did not rest solely on tricks
- Had broad support of French people
- Only diehard royalists and republicans never
accepted him - And neither group had much influence
- Napoleon gave the rich what they wanted, the poor
what they expected, and gave everyone a measure
of glory they seemed to crave. - At the same time he built an institutional
foundation that brought every aspect of
political, economic, and social life under the
direct control of the state
6CENTRALIZATION
- All departmental officials were responsible to
the central government through a clear
chain-of-command - Judiciary put under control of central state
- All judges and justices of the peace were
appointed by Napoleon - Control of the economy was centralized
- Napoleon applied price and export controls as he
saw fit - He promoted industries through government
subsidies - Created extensive network of roads
- Created Bank of France in 1800
- Streamlined and centralized tax collection system
7NAPOLEONIC CODE
- Also called Civil Code of 1804
- Attempt to unify and rationalize the various laws
and administrative practices into single national
code of law - Included civil and legal equality, religious
toleration, and the abolition of feudalism,
social orders, and hereditary aristocracy - But it also resurrected spirit of paternalism
that had existed in the Old Regime - Emphasis was on the downflow of authority
- From state to individual, from employer to
employee, from husband to wife, and from parent
to child
8CONCORDAT OF 1801
- War between Revolution and Church had been costly
for both sides - Church driven underground
- Millions of devout French people alienated from
state - Napoleon realized that religion would held him
govern - Concordat of 1801
- Vatican recognized confiscation of its property
in France and allowed clergy to be salaried state
employees - Pope was recognized as head of the Church and
Catholicism declared the religion of the
majority of Frenchmen - State reconciled with the Church without giving
up its power to control it within France
Pope Pius VII
9EMPEROR
Declared himself Consul for Life in 1802
Took title of Emperor in 1804 and created new
aristocracy to reward relatives and supporters
Summoned Pope Pius VII to preside over coronation
but took crown out of his hands and put it on his
own head
10MILITARY SITUATION
- French fought to extend their revolution, keep
its momentum going at home, and to acquire buffer
zones for defense - Anti-French forces had no positive goals at the
beginning and they tended to desert one another
in moments of crisis - More concerned with each other than they were
with France - Did not take French seriously in the beginning
11ARMY OF THE FUTURE
- French military successes took rest of Europe by
surprise - French army broke every rule of military practice
yet kept winning - New recruits trained in battle
- Discipline was slight
- Supplies always short
- Sanitation non-existent
- Officers were men from any class who showed flare
for maneuvers and courage in battle - Promotions based on merit
- Napoleons marshals included a former cooper,
miller, mason, and stable boy - Average age was 30
- Army of the future defeating the armies of the
past
Joachim Murat, Marshal Former stable boy
12RENEWAL OF WAR
- In 1799, Frances enemies revived and,
spearheaded by Russian troops, drove French out
of Italy and moved towards French border - Napoleon launched brilliant counter-attack
- Between 1800-1801
- Forced Austria and Russia to surrender
- England still undefeated but still forced to sue
for peace and accept French terms - Treaty of Amiens (March 2, 1802)
13WAR AGAIN
- Anti-French coalition revived again in 1805
- Financed by England
- Included England, Austria, and Russia
- Napoleon defeats Austria at Battles of Ulm and
Austerlitz - Austria forced to accept dictated peace
- British destroy French fleet at Battle of
Trafalgar - Commanded by Admiral Horatio Nelson
- October 21, 1805
- Ends Napoleons plan for sea-born invasion of
England
Battle of Trafalgar
14FRANCE TRIUMPHS AGAIN
- Prussia blunders into war in 1806 and is quickly
defeated - Russians defeated at Battle of Friedland
- June 1807
- Tsar Alexander I sues for peace
- Peace of Tilsit
- Napoleon receives Poland and Alexanders promise
to help against England
Napoleon and tsar Alexander I
15NAPOLEONIC EUROPE
Brother Joseph made king of Spain brother Louis
made king of the Netherlands brother Jerome made
king of Westphalia and brother-in-law Joachim
Murat made king of Naples
Dominated Europe from Atlantic Ocean to the
steppes of Poland and from Baltic Sea to the
Mediterranean
Spain, Switzerland, central Germany, and most of
Italy organized as satellites and parceled out to
relatives
Prussia, Austria, Denmark and Sweden forced to be
allies
16FOUNDING A DYNASTY
- French Empire was inherently unstable
- Built too quickly
- Included too many countries that didnt want to
be a part of it - Violated balance of power principle
- Many harbored secret doubts about its ability to
survive - Napoleons only hope lay in founding a dynasty
- Divorced first wife, Josephine
- Married Princess Maria-Louisa of Austria
- Had son in 1811the King of Rome
Josephine
King of Rome
Maria Louisa
17PROBLEMS
- Continental System backfired
- British slipped through embargo at will
- British navy at same time blockaded French ports
- Internal trade declined throughout Europe
- Awakening of national pride
- German nationalism limited to intellectuals
- Spaniards rose up in spontaneous guerilla war
against French - Napoleon ended up sending 200,000 men to Spain
without results - Situation made worse in 1812 when British force
linked up with Spanish rebels - Led by Duke of Wellington
18INVASION OF RUSSIA 1812
- Alexander I dropped out of Continental System in
1812, resumed trade with England, and set up
tariffs against French products - Napoleon decides to teach tsar a lesson and
invade Russia in June 1812 - With Grand Armée
- 600,000 men
- Figured on short, decisive campaign
- Troops had rations for only four days
- Supply convoys only equipped for an additional
three weeks
Napoleon in 1812
Alexander I
19DEEPENING CRISIS IN RUSSIA
- Russian army refuses to fight and retreats deeper
into interior - Napoleon catches them outside of Moscow
- Battle of Borodino
- September 1812
- Fails to win decisive victory
20DEFEAT BY GENERAL WINTER
- Napoleon enters Moscow
- Alexander orders evacuation and destruction of
city - Deprived French of supplies and shelter
- Napoleon withdraws in October 1812
- Mired by mud and snow
- Harassed by Russian partisans
- Devastated by severe cold
- 500,000 soldiers perished during retreat
- Only 100,000 made it back
- Shattering defeat
21THE APPARENT END
- Napoleon raises new army of 250,000 men
- Against new coalition of England, Prussia,
Austria, Sweden, and Russia - Defeated at Battle of Nations (October 1813)
- Napoleon is forced back into France
- Refuses initial peace offer and allies invade
- Napoleon is finally surrounded and cut off in
Paris and abdicates
Battle of Nations
22LOUIS XVIII
- Allies make Count of Provence new king as Louis
XVIII - Signs moderate peace treaty
- France returns to 1789 boundaries
- Napoleon exiled to island of Elba
- Off west coast of Italy
- Retained title of emperor
- Granted a pension of 2 million francs per year
- Louis XVIII issues Constitutional Charter
- Paid lip service to principles of legal and
social equality - Confirmed the Napoleonic Code
- Created two-house legislature
- Dominated by large landowners
- Ultras dissatisfied with kings moderation
- Wanted to settle old scores and restore Old
Regime - Their activities cost new regime much credibility
23BACK AGAIN
- Napoleon escapes Elba on March 1, 1815 and lands
on southern coast of France - With 1000 men
- Troops sent to stop him join him
- As did thousands of demobilized veterans
- Reaches Paris with huge army
- Louis XVIII flees
- Napoleon ruler of France again
24WATERLOO
- Former allies declare Napoleon a public outlaw
and vow to destroy him - Napoleon goes on offensive and invades Belgium
- Defeated at Battle of Waterloo by joint
British/Prussian army - Commanded by Duke of Wellington
- Napoleon flees to Paris
- But arrested by British before he could leave for
America - Louis XVIII brought back
- Napoleons return only last 100 Days
25SAD END TO A GREAT STORY
- Napoleon exiled this time to Sainte Helena
- Bleak and barren island off west coast of Africa
- 4000 miles from Europe
- Died there in 1821
- From stomach cancer and complications of syphilis
- 52 years old
26CONGRESS OF VIENNA
Met in September 1814
Viscount Castlereagh
First general congress of European powers since
Peace of Westphalia in 1648
Klemens von Metternich
Talleyrand
Prince Hardenburg
Alexander I
27CONGRESS AT WORK
- Wanted to restore old order as much as possible
- Also prevent any single state from dominating
Europe again - Also contain the virus of revolution
- Developed two-part strategy
- Create structure of collective security
- Agree to suppress radical activity whenever it
occurred - Embodied in concept of Concert of Europe
- Informal great power consensus that kept peace in
Europe until 1914 - Included Austria, Prussia, Great Britain, Russia,
and France (after 1818)
28DIFFERENT VIEWS
- Basic innovation was the recognition that war had
become too dangerous a luxury for Europe to
afford - Because it unleashed revolutions
- Alexander I saw collective security not only as a
political instrument but also as a spiritual
compact - Pressured fellow rulers to sign a Holy Alliance
against war and for Christian concord - Metternich saw collective security as a sanction
to intervene in the affairs of any state
threatened by revolution - British refused to commit themselves to any sort
of joint command and never supported Metternichs
interventionist schemes - Prussia was skeptical about anything Russia and
Austria agreed on
29POLAND
- Alexander insisted on taking Poland over as king
- To get Prussian support for this plan, he offered
it Saxony - Metternich would not stand for this and sought
support of Castlereagh and Talleyrand to block
plan - Issue finally settled by compromise
- Alexander received smaller Poland (other part
going to Austria - Prussia got 2/3s of Saxony
- Illustrated inherent contradiction of the
congress system - It presupposed cooperation between individually
sovereign states whose interests were often
different and antagonistic
30England also got West Indies, Cape of Good Hope,
Ceylon, Mauritius, and Singapore
Upper-most was creation of buffer zones against
France and also Russia
31GERMANY AND FRANCE
- Germany remained 39 states linked in a loose
confederation - Including Prussia and Austria
- Main function was to prevent smaller states from
gravitating towards France - France lost a few small pieces of territory, had
to pay 700 million francs indemnity, and had to
endure presence of an occupation army for three
years
32SUMMARY
- Diplomats of Congress of Vienna were men formed
under the Old Regime - Their conception of society was patriarchal
- In redrawing map of Europe, they acted in a
high-handed manner - Parceled out peoples and territories solely
according to abstract needs of power politics - Not concerned whether any of the peoples involved
wanted to be handed out to others - And they didnt and they eventually rebelled
- Saw job as merely rewarding victors and punishing
losers in a great war (with moderation) and
restoring an order in which the established
powers could play the old game of politics - Never realized just how much the French
Revolution had changed Europe - Never realized that the rules of the game had
dramatically changed