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Napoleon

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Title: Napoleon


1
Napoleons Report Card
  • By Sam and Daniel

2
Marking Guide
  • A Excellent
  • B Good
  • C Passable
  • D Failure

3
Military Abilities
4
1769-1800
  • B
  • Napoleon did a formidable job in defending
    France and conquering Northern Italy and Egypt.
    He does not however deserve to receive an A
    because the Turkish, with the help of a small
    naval squadron from Britain, used the unarmed
    fort of Acre to repel the French, and drive them
    from Egypt. After losing a large amount of his
    navy to a British attack commanded by Admiral
    Nelson, Napoleon fled Egypt, for home with a
    small number of scientists and Officers from his
    Army, leaving most of his men for dead in Egypt.
    All the same, the destruction of the French
    fleet wrecked Napoleons military plans. After
    repulsing a Turkish force backed by the British
    in Syria, he decided to cut his losses and return
    home, leaving most of his army behind. (
    Blackwood, 1986)
  • Napoleon had many successful conquests in the
    late 1700s , driving the Austrians from the
    Papal Territories of northern Italy, pursuing
    them into Austria all the way to Vienna .
    Napoleon led his troops in an attack on the
    Austrian Empires north Italian provinces. Using
    tactics of swift movement and surprise, he
    captured Turin and Milan, and in January 1797
    defeated the bulk of the Austrian army at
    Rivoli. (Blackwood, 1986)

5
1801-1812
  • A
  • Napoleon successfully led the French to military
    domination of continental Europe. On December 2,
    1805, the first anniversary of his coronation,
    Napoleon met a combined Austrian and Russian army
    at Austerlitz (in what is now Czechoslovakia).
    Between dawn and suck of that brief winters day
    he fought an army far larger than his own,
    killing or capturing nearly 30, 000 of the enemy
    soldiers and hundreds of guns. The Battle of
    Austerlitz was his most stunning
    victory.(Blackwood, 1986 )Napoleon and his men
    conquered most of Europe, from Holland ,to
    Austria and Italy, all with minimal losses.
  • He and his marshals defeated the Jena and
    Auerstadt in 1806, and the Russians at Eylau and
    Friedland, now both in Poland, in 1807 On land,
    at least, Napoleon seemed unbeatable. He was a
    master of nearly the whole of continental Europe,
    from Northern Germany to southern Italy, and from
    Poland to Pyrenees. (Blackwood, 1986)

6
1813-1821
  • C
  • Napoleon was beaten brutally many times during
    the last years of his life, eventually being
    exiled to St. Helena in the south Atlantic. In
    the winter of 1813-14, the armies of the
    coalition invaded France. Napoleon fought some
    brilliant defensive actions, but he could not
    prevent the capture of Paris by the Russians and
    Prussians. His own position suddenly collapsed.
    (Blackwood, 1986) The Battle of Waterloo in June
    1815 was Napoleons worst defeat. In one
    afternoon is brilliant political career and life
    as a military genius was ended.
  • The actual fighting began shortly before
    noon on June 18, 1815, with the French guns
    firing across the grain fields. From then until
    evening a furious battle was fought, with the
    French trying to dislodge Wellingtons men and
    drive them back to Brussels a few kilometers
    away A final charge was made by the Old Guard
    led by Marshal Ney. It was turned back by the
    fire of the British infantry and tumbled back
    down the sloping ground A great cheer welcomed
    Wellington as he rode along the line and gave the
    order to advance. The Battle of Waterloo was won
    and Napoleons career ended.(Trueman, Schaffter,
    Stewart and Hunter 1979)

7
Final Grade
1793 Victory at Toulon
1796-97 Victory at Turin, Milan and Rivoli
1805 Victory at Austerlitz
1805 Defeat at Trafalgar
1807 Victory at Eylau
1807 Victory at Jena
1809 Victory at Wagram
1815 Defeat at Waterloo
  • B
  • Napoleon was one of the greatest
    generals in history . Although he ultimately
    suffered defeat his many magnificent conquests
    show him to be a tactical genius who at one point
    ruled most of Europe. On Dec 2nd 1805, the first
    anniversary of his coordination, Napoleon met a
    combined Austrian and Russian army at Austerlitz
    (in what is now the Czech Republic and Slovakia).
    Between dawn and dusk of that brief winters day
    he fought an army far larger than his own killing
    or capturing nearly 30,000 of the enemy soldiers
    and hundreds of guns. (Adapted fromBlackwood,
    1986)

8
Political Abilities
9
1769-1800
  • A
  • Napoleon was a smart politician in the early
    years. He did a good job in endearing himself to
    the peasants. On his return from Italy he made
    a point of wearing civilian dress, seeking the
    company of scientists and other learned men, and
    avoiding military pomp and public appearances.
    That helped him secure the role as First consul
    without much opposition. He out smarted Abbé
    Sieyes and the rest of the directory into having
    him named First Consul.( Ruler of France)

10
1801-1812
  • A
  • Napoleon established himself as an astute
    politician by reinstating the church to France
    and creating the Napoleonic code. The code was
    moderate in tone, and combined much that was good
    in the old laws of France with the basic ideas of
    the revolution-equality of all men before the
    law, freedom of conscience , freedom of work, and
    the separation of Church and State. It tried
    to strengthen the family by giving the father
    real authority. A fathers consent was necessary
    for the marriage of sons up to the age of twenty
    five and daughters up to the age of twenty
    one.(Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart and Hunter
    1979) He bettered the educational system of
    France by making everyone eligible to attend
    school and making the educational system uniform
    throughout his empire. He also installed the
    University of France

11
1813-1821
  • D
  • Napoleons last days as emperor were difficult on
    him. He lost most of the territories he had
    gained and was forced to abdicate the throne of
    France. On April 1st , 1814, a provisional
    government was formed and persuaded the Senate to
    depose of the Emperor Napoleon wrote out his
    abdication. (Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart and
    Hunter 1979) Napoleon even went as far as to
    proclaim his political life was over. My
    political life is over. (Napoleon),(Blackwood,
    1986)

12
Final Grade
1800 Named First Consul
1801 Returned Christianity to France
1802 Created Napoleonic Code
1802 Signs Peace treaty with Britain
1804 Named Emperor of France
1806 Established the continental system
1808. Established University of France
  • B
  • Napoleon was a great politician early in his
    reign. While he was somewhat of a disappointment
    later in his tenure, he must be remembered as a
    great politician because his Napoleonic Code is
    still used to some extent even today. He also
    laid down a new civil and legal code, the code
    Napoleon, By these methods Napoleon created
    blueprint for most modern systems of government
    and law.(Blackwood, 1986)

13
International Relations
14
1769-1800
  • B
  •   In 1769 to about 1793, Napoleon had a decent
    relationship with international countries,
    because everyone was keeping France down after it
    had been weakened by the French Revolution. When
    at the age of 24, in 1793 Napoleon was promoted
    to captain of artillery, and began winning
    battles against his usually victorious opponents,
    that is when his relationships with other
    countries begun to sour. England, who had
    previously just started to get one up on France,
    was starting to lose battles thanks to the genius
    of Napoleon Bonaparte.

15
1801-1812
  • C
  • During 1801 to 1812, Napoleon had ruined any
    chance of a relationship with England. England
    was still standing their ground, and Napoleon was
    basically bartering with other countries like
    Austria. When there was an up rise against France
    from Austria, Napoleon beat them back down again,
    for example, at Wagram, near Vienna in 1809.
    On land, at least Napoleon seemed unbeatable. He
    was master of nearly the whole continental
    Europe, from northern Germany to southern Italy,
    and from Poland to the Pyrenees.
    (Blackwood,1986)

16
1813-1821
  • D
  • As seen below, Napoleon was slowly coming to a
    halt. At age 46, in 1815, Napoleons career was
    on a downward slope. He fought many battles
    against countries he had previously conquered,
    because France was now at stake. In 1815,
    Napoleon was temporarily exiled, because the
    French people were starting to find him as an
    embarrassment to France. When the countries who
    were fighting France became too much for the
    people of France to handle, Napoleon was brought
    back to France near June 1815, to defend France
    in his last attempt at a his career and to help
    France defend Frances ground in The Battle of
    Waterloo. Napoleon did not think this through,
    seriously underestimating the leader of the
    opponents army, Duke of Wellington. Wellington
    cleverly outwitted Napoleon, who fled from the
    battle, ashamed of himself. The same day he lost
    that battle, he was exiled, this time permanently
    to the island of St. Helena, where he spent the
    rest of his days until he died in 1821.

17
Final Grade
1797 Traded the Republic of Venice for Belgium and Lombardy.
1798 Invaded Switzerland to finance Egyptian invasion.
1802 Treaty of Amiens giving temporary peace between France and Britain.
1806 Established the Continental System.
Napoleons International Relations were awful. His
relations deteriorated the longer his tenure
lasted. Although he did make some treaties that
aided him with taking control of Europe, he
failed to make himself any friends, but succeeded
in making many enemies.
18
Geographical Knowledge
19
1769-1800
  • B
  • Napoleon recognized early on that it would be
    senseless to extend the French borders, unless he
    was able to extend those borders to impassable
    natural boundaries of Europe. The aim of
    revolutionary France was to extend its borders
    from the Rhine to the Alps to correspond with
    those of ancient Gaul (Trueman, Schaffter,
    Stewart and Hunter 1979)

Ancient Gaul
20
1801-1812
  • A
  • Napoleon showed good recognition of certain
    geographical advantages he could use to defeat an
    Austrian uprising. Bonaparte gathered an army
    quickly and entered Italy by crossing the alps
    over the Great St. Bernard pass. Some twenty-five
    kilometers of this route were impassable for
    wheeled vehicles so that the cannon had to be put
    in hollowed logs and dragged by ropes The
    Austrians remained quite unaware of his advance
    and were thrown into confusion when his army came
    down out of the mountains and stood between them
    and their base. (Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart
    and Hunter 1979 )

21
1813-1821
  • C
  • Napoleon planed to use old strategies to dispose
    of the armies around Waterloo, he failed to
    realize that his opponents would have studied his
    tendencies t, and adapted to them. While his
    strategy worked on one front, he failed to
    realize the advantages the British had by staying
    near Waterloo. His strategy was the one that
    had served him so well in the past. He would
    knock out the two enemy armies in the north
    before they could combine, and then turn to the
    east with the expectation of repeating the
    process. He himself attacked the Prussians under
    the General Blücher while Ney attacked an
    English and German army commanded by Wellington
    Wellingtons army withdrew to a position near the
    Belgian village of Waterloo. It was his favorite
    position for a battle, a low ridge behind the
    crest of which he could position his men out of
    danger until the time came for them to come over
    the top, and in three long lines deliver
    shattering volleys into the advancing French
    Columns. (Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart and Hunter
    1979)

22
Final Grade
  • B
  • During his younger years, Napoleon tried and did
    what was thought the impossible thanks to his
    open mind and daring and new ideas to conquer his
    s enemy on their own turf. Later on in his life
    Napoleon began to be overconfident and
    predictable, failing miserably. If thought
    about, Napoleon, at the height of his career,
    conquered and ruled most of Europe.

French Empire at its greatest extent,
c.1810showing major battles of the Napoleonic
Wars.
23
Ethics
24
1769-1800
  • In the year of 1793, Napoleon became a
    captain of artillery. For Napoleon, the events of
    the time could not have been better in ten year
    he would rise to become the most powerful man in
    the world. During the years of 1793 and 1800,
    Napoleon leads the French to many battles
    forcing the Austrians out of Italy, lying siege
    to Mantua and at Rivoli where he beat the
    Austrian Army badly once again. In 1797,
    Bonaparte made one of the deals which gave his
    the reputation for heartless cynicism. Instead
    of halting the war, he offered Austria the
    Republic of Venice in return for Belgium (the
    Austrian Netherlands) and Lombardy. Venice had
    been neutral in the war but it was weakand to be
    weak was to invite the contempt of General
    Bonaparte. (Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart and
    Hunter 1979) The only place where Napoleon
    really wrecked the opportunity to be perfect was
    in Egypt. When the English had depleted most of
    his fleet, leaving the French army and Napoleon
    stranded in Egypt, On the night of August 22,
    1799, with his chief of staff, some of his best
    officers, and a few of the scientists who had
    accompanied him to Egypt, he slipped quietly away
    on a fast frigate bound for France. The army and
    its new commander, Kléber did not know he was
    gone until the next day, when that astonished and
    furious officer got the letter Bonaparte had left
    him appointing him to the command of the
    imprisoned army. ( Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart
    and Hunter 1979) With Bonapartes selfish
    thinking, he left his men for dead, and saved his
    own hide.

25
1801-1812
  • D
  • In the years of 1801-1812, Napoleons
    paranoia was beginning to show more and more.
    In the spring of 1802 Bonaparte had reached the
    highest point of his career. He controlled
    France with the full support, as he was soon to
    prove, of the middle class and cast majority of
    the people. He controlled the newspapers and
    suppressed those likely to oppose him. He
    commanded the army. He had made peace with the
    Church and with Britain. He had regained
    colonies France had lost without making any
    concessions or giving up any French territory.
    (Trueman, Schaffter, Stewart and Hunter 1979)

26
1813-1821
  • D
  • Napoleon spent his first two years in this time
    period as a gradually losing emperor. From
    January to March 1814, Bonaparte fought many
    great battles to no use. He was forced to
    retreat from Russia, he waited until he had no
    choice, and in doing so inadvertently killed most
    of his Grand Army. By November the icy storms of
    the Russian winter fell on the stumbling army and
    completed the destruction begun by the Russian
    forces, which harried it every step of the way.
    While still in Russia, Napoleon turned the
    command over to his brother-in-law, Marshal
    Murat, and hurried back to Paris to crush a
    revolt that had broken out. By the middle of
    December, 1812, only twenty thousand starving,
    frost-bitten survivors of the Grand Army
    struggled out of Russia to safety. (Trueman,
    Schaffter, Stewart and Hunter 1979)

27
Final Grade
1798 Shot 3000 prisoners of war at Jaffa.
1799 Fled Egypt with his chief of staff and a few officers and scientists, leaving his army for dead.
1812 Left his army in Russia
  • D
  • Napoleons personal ethics were
    horrible. He put himself before his country and
    abandoned his men to death to further his
    ambitions.

28
Bibliography
  • Quotes- Modern Perspectives-Trueman, Schaffter,
    Stewart and Hunter 1979- Mcgraw-Hill Ryerson
  • Quotes-Napoleon-Blackwood 1986- Wayland
    (Publishers) Limited.
  • Title Picture- http//library.gmu.edu/resources/fr
    ench/Francais20Databases.html
  • Millitary Abilities title picture-
  • http//shuzak.com/Personal/Blog/uploaded_ima
    ges/NapoleonStart20copy-704617.jpg
  • First Consul Picture- Blackwood 1986- Wayland
    (Publishers) Limited.
  • Napoleonic Code picture- Blackwood 1986- Wayland
    (Publishers) Limited.
  • Geographical Knowledge Title picture-Euratlas.com
  • Map of Ancient Gaul- http//images.encarta.ms
    n.com/xrefmedia/aencmed/targets/maps/mhi/T041499A.
    gif
  • Political Cartoons- http//www.cartoonstock.com/di
    rectory/n/napoleon_bonaparte.asp
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