Title: The Napoleonic Era
1The Napoleonic Era
2Biography
- 1769-1821
- Born of Italian descent to prominent Corsican
family on the French island of Corsica - Military genius specialized in artillery
- child of the Enlightenment and Revolution
- Associated with Jacobins
- Advanced rapidly in army
- Eventually unified the nation at the price of
individual liberty
3Early Military Victories
- Britain and Austria
- 1795 The invasion of Italy October Treaty of
Campo Formio - War of the Second Coalition 1798-1801
- 1798 Napoleon invades Egypt Horatio Nelson
destroys Frances navy in the Battle of the
Nile Napoleon is isolated in North Africa - 1801 Ended the Second Coalition Austria loses
Italian possessions Gain German territory on
west bank of the Rhine Russia retreated from
western Europe
4Consulate Period 1799-1804
- Enlightened reform
- First Consul
- May be thought of as last and most eminent of the
enlightened despots - Constitution of Year VIII
- Suppressing enemies
- Made peace with Frances enemies abroad
- Russia withdraws
- Austria defeated Treaty of Luneville 1801
- Treaty of Amiens with Britain, 1802
- Enemies at home
- Granted amnesty to 100,000 émigrés in return for
loyalty oath - Ruthlessly put down opposition
- Creation of Police State
- Spy system
- State prisons
5Consulate Period 1799-1804
Religious reforms Concordat of 1801
- Motives
- Making peace with the Church to weaken link with
monarchists - Would help people accept economic inequalities in
French society
- Provisions
- Papacy renounced claims to Church property
- French govt allowed to nominate or depose
bishops - Reinstated clergy who had resisted Civil
Constitutions of the Clergy - Allowed worship in public
- Church seminaries reopened
- Extended legal toleration to Catholics,
Protestants, Jews, and atheists - Replaced the Revolutionary Calendar with
Christian Calendar
6Consulate Period 1799-1804
- Financial Unity
- Bank of France 1800
- Balanced national budget
- Established sound currency and public credit
- Economic reform to stimulate economy
- Food at low prices
- Increased employment
- Retained Le Chapelier Law of 1791
- Lowered taxes on farmers
- Guaranteed church lands would be redistributed
- Tax collection became more efficient
7Consulate Period 1799-1804
- Careers open to talent
- Opportunity to rise in government jobs according
to ability - Educational Reforms
- Based on system of public education under state
control - Rigorous standards
- Available to the masses
- Secondary and higher education reorganized to
prepare for government service and professional
occupations - Education became important in determining social
standing
8Consulate Period 1799-1804
Included civil code, criminal procedure,
commercial code, and penal code Emphasized
protection of private property Equality before
the law Freedom of religion Property
rights Abolition of serfdom Inheritance rights
for women (but denied equal status)
- Napoleonic Code
- Legal unity
- Dynasty
- New Constitution declared Napoleon Emperor of
the French - Crowning ceremony
9Napoleonic Wars
- Consulate Era
- Series of wars were usually short and distinct
- The Third Coalition
- Britain, Austria, Russia
- 1805 War of the Third Coalition Austria signed
alliance with Britain Joined by Alexander I of
Russia and Sweden October, Battle of
Trafalgar December, Battle of Austerlitz - 1806 Confederation of the Rhine Berlin Decrees
- 1807 Defeat of the Russians and rule of all
Germany
10Napoleonic Wars
- Empire Period, 1804-1814
- 1807 June, Treaty of Tilsit Prussia lost land
to France and accepted reorganization of
western and central Europe agreed to
Continental System Continental System - British response to Berlin Decrees Order in
council neutrals might enter continental
ports only if they first stopped in Great
Britain - Milan Decree Any neutral ship entering a
British port or submitting to a British warship
at sea, would be confiscated if it attempted
to enter a Continental port
11Napoleon and Great Britain
- Plumb Pudding in Danger
- William Pitt the Younger and Napoleon carving up
the world.
12The Continental System
13European Response to Empire
- Napoleons influence
- Imposition of Napoleonic Code and revolutionary
equality - Church subordinate to state
- Continental System
- Policies always intended for glory of Napoleon
first and France second - German Nationalism
- No German unity
- Romanticism and Nationalism
- Emphasis on unique German culture and people
- German intellectuals urge resistance
- French Nationalism
14European Response to Empire
- Prussian Reform
- Continued to resist French domination
- King Frederick William III and Junker nobility
resented reform - Had to change to survive
- Administrative and social reforms
- Baron vom Stein and Prince von Hardenberg
- Broke Junker monopoly of landholding
- Serfdom abolished
- Rise in number of landless laborers caused new
problems - Military reforms
- Abolished inhuman military punishments
- Increased patriotism
- Opened the officer corps to commoners
- Gave promotions on the basis of merit
- Organized war colleges to develop new theories of
strategy and tactics - Limited military size
15European Response to Empire
- Wars of Liberation
- Spain
- First great revolt against Napoleon
- National resistance had deep social roots
- 1807, France entered Spain to stop Portugal
alliance with Britain - 1808, Revolt in Madrid
- Guerilla warfare
- British support
16Goyas Notebook
17Goyas Notebook
Picture Titles
18Goyas Notebook
Picture Titles
19Goyas Notebook
Picture Titles
20Goyas Notebook
Picture Titles
21European Response to Empire
- Austria
- Defeated swiftly by Napoleons troops
- Napoleon married Marie Louise of Austria now
nephew of Louis XVI - Invasion of Russia
- Shaky alliance
- The Grand Army
- Scorched earth policy
- Retreat
22Napoleons Europe
23The Russian Campaign
24European Coalition
- Combined forces of Russia, Prussia, Austria, and
Great Britain form allied army - Napoleon defeats allies at Dresden
- Defeated at Leipzig in Battle of Nations
- Allied armies take over Paris
- Napoleon abdicates throne in March, 1814 and is
exiled to island of Elba
25European Coalition
- Treaty of Chaumont/Charter of 1814
Constitutional Monarchy - Bourbons restored to the Throne Louis XVIII
- France surrendered all territory gained since the
Wars of Revolution 1792 - Allied powers imposed no reparations
- Napoleon is exiled to the island of Elba
- Quadruple Alliance agreed to meet in Vienna
26The Congress of Vienna
27Congress of Vienna
- Representatives of major powers of Europe,
including France, met to redraw territorial lines
and try to restore the social and political order
of the ancien regime - The Big Four
- Austria, England, Prussia, and Russia
- Leaders
- Klemens Von Metternich, Austria Prussia
- Lord Castlereagh, England
- Alexander I, Russia
- Talleyrand, France
28Congress of Vienna
- The Dancing Congress
- Pageantry, parties, balls, and banquest
- Intended to generate favorable public opinon
- Little to do of a serious nature
29Congress of Vienna
- Principles of Settlement
- Legitimacy, Compensation, Balance of Power
- Legitimacy returning power to ruling families
deposed by revolutionary warfare - Bourbons in France, Spain, and Naples
- Dynasties in Holland, Sardinia, Tuscany, and
Modena - Papal States returned to the Pope
- Compensation limiting France and territorially
rewarding those states which made considerable
sacrifices to defeat Napoleon - Encirclement of France
- End of Hapsburg Holy Roman Empire (creation of
German Confederation aka Bund) - England received naval bases in Malta, Ceylon,
Cape of Good Hope - Austria recovered Italian province of Lombardy,
and Venetia, Galicia, and the Illyrian Provinces - Russia received Poland, Finland, and Bessarabia
- Prussia awarded the Rhineland, 3/5 of Saxony and
part of Poland - Sweden received Norway
30The German Confederation
31Congress of Vienna
32Congress of Vienna
33Congress of Vienna
- Principles of Settlement
- Balance of Power creation of a permanent
Congress to meet and solve problems before the
outbreak of another war - Renewal of the Quadruple Alliance
- Concert of Europe
34The Hundred Days
- March 20-June 22, 1815
- Stalled talks at Vienna
- Napoleon leaves Elba for France
- Lands in the south and marches with popular
support into Paris - Raises an army and defeats the Prussians in
Belgium - Battle of Waterloo, June 1815
- Last battle of the Napoleonic Wars Napoleon is
defeated - Exiled to the South Atlantic island of St.
Helena died in 1821 - The second Treaty of Paris (1815)
- Allied dealt harshly with France
35The Hundred Days
- March 20-June 22, 1815
- Stalled talks at Vienna
- Napoleon leaves Elba for France
- Lands in the south and marches with popular
support into Paris - Raises an army and defeats the Prussians in
Belgium - Battle of Waterloo, June 1815
- Last battle of the Napoleonic Wars Napoleon is
defeated - Exiled to the South Atlantic island of St.
Helena died in 1821 - The second Treaty of Paris (1815)
- Allied dealt harshly with France
36Napoleons Legacy
- First egalitarian dictatorship of modern times
- Positive achievements
- Revolutionary institutions consolidated
- Thoroughly centralized French government
- Lasting settlement with the church
- Spread positive achievements of French Revolution
to the rest of Europe
37Napoleons Legacy
- Liabilities
- Repressed individual liberty
- Subverted republicanism
- Oppressed conquered peoples throughout Europe
- Caused terrific suffering as a result of war
38Art of the 18th Century
- Neo-classical and Romanticism
39Romantic Art
40Romantic Art
41Romantic Art
42Romanticism
- Intellectual movement that was a reaction against
the Enlightenment - Urged a revival of Christianity
- Revival of art, music, and literature of medieval
times
43Questioning of Reason
- Rousseau and education
- Emile (1762)
- Children should be raised with maximum freedom
- Adults should allow children to reason
- Emile Kant
- The Critique of Pure Reason (1781) and The
Critique of Practical Reason (1788) - Sought rationalism of Enlightenment
- Categorical imperativean innate sense of moral
duty or awareness
44English Romantic Writers
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Gothic poems of the supernatural
- William Wordsworth
- How humans lose their child-like imagination as
they get older - Lord Byron
- Rebel romanticist
- Wrote about personal liberty and mocked his own
beliefs - Don Juan (1819)
45German Romantic Writers
- Friedrich Schlegel
- Progressive who attacked prejudices against women
in novels such as Lucinde (1799) - Johan Wolfgang von Goethe
- Part of Romantic mode/part criticism of romantic
excess - FaustPart I (1808)
- FaustPart II (1832)
46Romantic Art
47Romantic Art
48Romantic Art
49Romantic Art