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The Age of Napoleon The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon was born into a family of minor nobility on the island of Corsica (1769). He spoke French with an Italian accent. • When trying to spread the Revolution in Corsica, he was banished from the island (1793). • He played a major role in expelling the British from the French port city of Toulon (occupied during the Revolution). The Age of Napoleon • In 1795 as a junior officer of the French Army, he saved the Directory from an attack from an angry Parisian mob through the timely use of “a whiff of grapeshot” (artillery fire). • For this, and his earlier action at Toulon, Napoleon was made France’s youngest general (at the age of 26). The Age of Napoleon • Desperate for military victories that would take people’s minds off their dismal conditions at home, Napoleon was sent to Italy. • Between 1795-97, in a series of stunningly quick victories, Napoleon defeated the combined Austrian-Piedmontese-Sardinian armies and drove them from northern Italy. The Age of Napoleon • France (actually Napoleon-since he negotiated agreements himself) now controlled northern and central Italy. • He had wagonloads of Italian art treasures sent back to the Louve (opened 1793) including the Mona Lisa (which actually hung in his bedroom for several years). • Napoleon returned to Paris a national hero. The Age of Napoleon • “Napoleon Crossing the Alps” by Jacques-Louis David (1801) • Here Napoleon is heroic, the model of calm and composure in the face of war. The Age of Napoleon • Now Great Britain remained as France’s only real threat. • Napoleon knew he could not defeat Admiral Horatio Nelson or the British on the seas, or by crossing the English Channel into Britain. The Age of Napoleon • In early 1798, Napoleon chose to fight the British in Egypt in order to cut British ties to the Middle East, its colony in India, and to damage British trade. The Age of Napoleon • The great, and once wealthy, Ottoman Empire was rocked in 1798 by Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt. The Age of Napoleon • The French were met by tens of thousands of cavalry bent on defending the Mamluk regime under their leader Murad. The Age of Napoleon • Murad, when told of Napoleon’s invasion, dismissed the invader as a “donkey boy” whom he would soon drive from his lands. The Age of Napoleon • Murad’s contempt for Napoleon and the French was symptomatic of the profound ignorance of events in Europe that was typical of the Islamic world at the time. • The Mamluks were clad in medieval armor and used spears against French artillery, rifles, and disciplined French legions. The Age of Napoleon • This ignorance led to a series of crushing defeats to the French, the most famous was fought in the shadows of the great pyramids (Battle of the Pyramids July, 1798). The Age of Napoleon • The defeat of the Mamluks was traumatic for the Ottoman world because they were considered fighters of great prowess. • It also showed how vulnerable the Muslim world was to European aggression, and how far they had fallen behind Europe in their capacity to wage war. The Age of Napoleon • Like Alexander the Great, Napoleon took leading French scientists on the expedition. • Excavating near the town of Rosetta, his troops found sticking out of the ground, the Rosetta Stone. • Dating to 196 BCE, it is a slab of black basalt. The Age of Napoleon • The Rosetta Stone eventually helped French linguists decipher Egyptian hieroglyphics. • It was inscribed in Aramaic, Greek, and in hieroglyphs. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon immediately took all necessary measures to protect, inventory, study, and publicize the archeological treasures of the ancient Egyptian civilization. • On August 22, 1798, he founded the Egyptian Institute, the starting point of Egyptology. The Age of Napoleon • But Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt also alarmed Russia (which had its own interests in the region) so the Russians joined with the Austrians, the Ottomans, and the British against the French. The Age of Napoleon • Then the British fleet under Admiral Nelson caught the French fleet anchored in Egypt and destroyed it, killing over 3,000 French soldiers/sailors (3,000 more were left on the shore). The Age of Napoleon • Even though Egypt ended up being a disaster for the French, few in France knew this because Napoleon was able to have the press censored (in his favor). • Napoleon was still hugely popular with the Directory and among the French people. The Age of Napoleon • By the fall of 1799, the French war in Europe was falling apart. • Thousands of French troops were deserting the various fronts. • The Russians/Austrians defeated the French in Italy and Switzerland and threatened to invade France. • The former Austrian Netherlands (Belgium) revolted as well. The Age of Napoleon • The Egyptian campaign further fueled Napoleon’s military and political ambitions. • Realizing the time was right and that the Directory was weak, Napoleon staged a coup d’ etat, overthrowing the government of the Directory. • He was 30 years old. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon staging the coup d’etat that overthrew the Directory (painted 1840). The Age of Napoleon • He set up a new constitution, proclaimed France a consulate (led by three consuls), and made himself the First Consul of the Republic. The Age of Napoleon • The Consulate in effect ended the French Revolution. • A military victory over the Austrians cemented his political power (1800). • Even though Napoleon mandated universal male suffrage and a system of checks and balances, his new constitution (called the Constitution of Year VIII) established the rule of one man…him. The Age of Napoleon • As First Consul, Napoleon could pick the members of the Council of State, which proposed the laws. • The French government was no longer representative…the new constitution eliminated direct elections. • Napoleon and his advisors chose the members of the legislature. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon staged a plebiscite (a vote by the people) for his new constitution to show popular support, and it passed overwhelmingly. • People wanted a strong leader. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon now compared himself to Caesar and Augustus. • Napoleon was the first modern political figure to use the voice of revolution and nationalism, and back it with military force, to create imperial expansion and increase his own power. • The dictators of the 20th century modeled themselves after Napoleon. The Age of Napoleon • During the Revolution, the pressures of constant warfare and conscription caused the French government internal instability. • Napoleon placated the people by making peace with France’s enemies (Russia-Austria in 1801 and Britain in 1802). The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon was able to restore order at home by using generosity, bribery, and flattery over his enemies. • He issued a general amnesty to deserters and hired men from all political factions. • He only required their unconditional loyalty. The Age of Napoleon • No single set of revolutionary policies created so much domestic opposition as those regarding the Catholic Church. • Though he was not religious, Napoleon realized the Catholic Church was a useful tool for maintaining political stability. The Age of Napoleon • In 1801, much to the shock and dismay of his anticlerical supporters, Napoleon settled the decade of hostility between the Revolution and the Church (known as the Concordat). The Age of Napoleon • The Concordat established the authority of the state (i.e. Napoleon’s) over the church. • Freedom of faith was extended to Protestants and Jews. • The French government retained church lands seized during the revolution but agreed to continue paying clerical salaries. The Age of Napoleon • In return, Napoleon agreed to give up the Revolution’s calendar (which eliminated Sundays and religious holidays). • Catholicism was officially recognized as the religion of “the great majority of French citizens.” The Age of Napoleon • The pope was able to bring the large French Catholic population back to the fold. • And Napoleon received the pope’s support for his regime. The Age of Napoleon • As First Consul, Napoleon promised order and an end to the chaos and turmoil of ten years of revolutionary upheaval. • But it came at a high price. The Age of Napoleon • In order to increase and then maintain his power, Napoleon instituted the following measures: • 1. He created a secret police to root out and destroy his political opponents and enemies. • The police had political adversaries under constant surveillance, they were subjected to house arrest, and they were imprisoned without “just The Age of Napoleon • 2. Paris went from having 73 newspapers to four (and those four were puppets of the government). • Government censors had to approve all operas and plays. • All “offensive” artistic works were banned. • Political debate ceased. The Age of Napoleon • In 1802 Napoleon held another plebiscite naming himself “First Consul for Life.” • A new constitution essentially granted him total power. • As part of his restoration of order, Napoleon then set about reforming the French legal system. The Age of Napoleon • The Civil Code of 1804 (commonly called the Napoleonic Code) provided the framework for the French legal system. • Parts of it are still in place, 200 years later. The Age of Napoleon • The code created a single legal system for all of France. Before this, there were over 300 different localized legal codes from the monarchy (that the Revolution hadn’t fixed). • The code stated the equality of all men before the law and the rights of property holders. The Age of Napoleon • The advances women had received from the Revolution were reversed, stating women and children were legally dependent on their husbands and fathers. • A woman could not buy or sell property without the approval of her husband or father. The Age of Napoleon • Divorce was legal but very hard to get (a woman could only get one if her husband had a mistress and he brought her to live in the family home). • If a woman was convicted of adultery, she could be imprisoned for up to two years. The Age of Napoleon • In 1804, a bomb attack on his life caused him to argue he needed a dynasty to make his regime secure and make further attempts on his life useless. • Another new constitution was created making Napoleon Emperor of the French, not First Consul of the Republic. The Age of Napoleon • “Consecration of the Emperor Napoleon I” (by David 1806) The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon wanted it to be clear that not the will of God, nor accident of birth, but rather his merits led to him being made Emperor. • Another plebiscite overwhelmingly approved this. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon destroyed one ideal of the Revolution, that of Liberty. • But he maintained and preserved another ideal, that of Equality (for all citizens (at least male ones) were equal before the law). • He also promoted the idea of a meritocracy (the idea that merit/talent, not birth, determined your career path). The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon developed a cult of personality. • His name or face appeared everywhere: on coins, stamps, engravings, paintings, buildings. • He had France embark on a massive building campaign. The Age of Napoleon • The Arc de Triomphe and the Paris Stock Exchange. The Age of Napoleon • To restore economic prosperity, Napoleon controlled prices. • He encouraged industry. • He had roads and canals built. • He set up a system of public schools (under strict government control) to ensure well-trained officials and military officers The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon supported work in science, especially if it was practical or it benefited the military. • Experiments with balloons led to laws about the expansion of gases. The Age of Napoleon • New techniques of battlefield amputation and medical care were developed (from all the wars he fought). The Age of Napoleon • French research on fossils helped prepare the way for new theories on evolutionary change later in the century. The Age of Napoleon • But constant warfare was the hallmark of Napoleon’s reign. He is considered one of the geniuses in the history of warfare. He became the most feared person in Europe and France became the most powerful state on the continent. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon’s “Grand Army” created a “Grand Empire.” • Over 1 million men served in the army, most willingly, because the Revolution had taught them to identify the army with the nation (the idea of nationalism). • Military service was seen as both patriotic and a way towards upward social mobility. The Age of Napoleon • This led to an officer corps that was young and ambitious and rose through the ranks. • The French military had better morale than the armies of other countries. The Age of Napoleon • In any given battle, between 70,000 and 180,000 men fought for France. • France had so many soldiers, heavy losses could be endured in battle and they could still overwhelm an enemy. The Age of Napoleon • Despite the hardships of the common soldier, Napoleon inspired fanatical loyalty among his troops because he fought alongside them. • He was a brilliant strategist who outmaneuvered nearly every opponent because he developed new plans for every battle (so opposing generals could never anticipate his moves). The Age of Napoleon • He fought alongside his troops in over 60 battles and had 19 horses shot out from underneath him. • It was said that his presence on the battlefield equaled the worth of 50,000 men. The Age of Napoleon • His strategy was simple: he went after the main body of the opposing army and tried to crush it in a lightning campaign (later used by the Nazi’s). • He then pursued the remnants of the enemy to completely break their morale. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon was known for taking great risks on the battlefield, and his unpredictability often led to enormous casualties. • He once said “I grew up on the field of battle and a man such as I cares little for the life of a million men.” The Age of Napoleon • In 1801, Napoleon hoped to recapture the island of SaintDomingue (today called Haiti) from the rebellious slaves who had taken it away from the French planters ten years earlier. • It was part of Napoleon’s grander strategy of having a North American empire. The Age of Napoleon • Haiti was the only completely successful slave revolt in history. • Haiti had declared its independence (becoming the 2nd independent republic in the Americas). The Age of Napoleon • Haiti had been France’s most valuable colony and was considered the most valuable colony in the world. The Age of Napoleon • The leader of the revolt, Toussaint L’Ouverture proclaimed himself the Governor – General (shown here in the dress of a French General). The Age of Napoleon • It had 8,000 plantations which produced 40% of the world’s sugar and 50% of the world’s coffee. • The population was about 500,000 slaves, 40,000 whites (divided between rich and poor, and 30,000 free people of color (black or mixed-race). The Age of Napoleon • Initially, Napoleon sent 20,000 troops and they quickly got the upper hand. • But as they waited for reinforcements, the rainy season came, bringing with it mosquitoes carrying Yellow Fever. The Age of Napoleon • Over the next two years, 40,000 French soldiers were sent to Haiti (and most died from Yellow Fever-sometimes 50+/day). • Because of the huge losses (including his own brother-in-law) Napoleon gave up on Haiti, and on having an American empire. The Age of Napoleon • In 1803, realizing his dream of an American empire was over, he sold the United States the Louisiana Purchase for $15 million. • He wanted the territory kept out of the hands of the British, and he needed the money to help offset his enormous war debts. The Age of Napoleon • We got over 800,000 square miles of territory (at about 5c a square mile). The Age of Napoleon • For perspective, in 2004, 625 Madison Avenue in New York City sold for $231.5 million (equivalent to $15 million in 1803). Area: 542,368 sq ft (17 floors). The Age of Napoleon • Before selling the Louisiana Territory, the British knew Napoleon was trying to create a North American empire. • At this point, he had already taken over Switzerland, Holland, most of Italy, and most of Germany. The Age of Napoleon • In October 1805, fearing a French invasion of Britain, the British navy, under Admiral Lord Nelson, met the combined French/Spanish fleets off the coast of southwestern Spain (near Cadiz). This became the Battle of Trafalgar. The Age of Napoleon • The Battle of Trafalgar is considered by military historians to be the most important sea battle ever waged. The Age of Napoleon • At the Battle of Trafalgar, Lord Nelson destroyed the French/Spanish fleets and didn’t lose a single British ship. • This ended all French hope of invading Britain and guaranteed British control of the seas (which lasted until WWI). The Age of Napoleon • In December 1805 (a year to the day after his coronation) Napoleon had his most famous victory…over the Austrians and their new ally Russia, at Austerlitz. The Age of Napoleon • Not only did Napoleon win here on the field of battle but in public opinion. • He announced in a public speech that he would adopt the children of all the French soldiers killed in the battle—a number that was in the thousands. The Age of Napoleon • To fulfill his promise, he ordered the state to pay for the children’s support and education, to arrange marriages for the girls and to find jobs for the boys. • One final provision was probably the most cherished– he permitted “his children” to add the name Napoleon to theirs. The Age of Napoleon • From 1801-1812, Napoleon had defeated the British (on land but not on the sea), the Austrians, the Russians, the Swedes, and the Prussians. • From 1807-1812, Napoleon controlled most of continental Europe (except Britain and Russia). The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon united all German states except Austria and Prussia (creating the Confederation of the Rhine). The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon consolidated Italy by annexing the territories next to France and establishing the kingdoms of Italy and Naples. The Age of Napoleon • By annexing some territories and setting up others as satellite kingdoms (controlled by his friends and relatives), Napoleon hoped to unite Europe. • French controlled areas were subject to French laws and French-style reforms. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon’s many successes boosted the spirit of nationalism in France. • Great victory parades filled the streets of Paris with cheering crowds. • The masses celebrated the glory and grandeur that Napoleon had achieved for France. The Age of Napoleon • What ever Napoleon controlled, he imposed the Napoleonic Code and abolished hereditary social distinctions. • Peasants were freed from serfdom. • Churches were made subordinate to the state. The Age of Napoleon • Religious toleration replaced monopoly of religion by an established (usually Roman Catholic) church. • Civil rights were extended to Jews and other religious minorities. The Age of Napoleon • The one power always between Napoleon and total European dominance was Great Britain. The Age of Napoleon • Realizing he could not defeat the British navy, he decided to wage economic war on Britain by establishing the Continental System (1806). • The idea was to ban all British goods from arriving on the continent. The Age of Napoleon • Virtually no French controlled territory was to economically support Britain. • The Continental System initially hurt Britain’s trade, but smuggling was rampant and British industrial growth continued. • It backfired on the French (and on Napoleon). The Age of Napoleon • The resentment the Continental System created galvanized support against the French. • Initially French troops brought with them the ideals of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. • But the French were occupiers and increasingly harsh ones. The Age of Napoleon • Goya’s Third of May (1808): Spanish rebels were fighting for Spain’s independence against the French. The Age of Napoleon • Nationalism eventually defeated Napoleon, as those under French rule began to want their own sovereignty. • Pockets of resistance and rebellion flared up all over the continent. • People love liberators…they hate occupiers. The Age of Napoleon • Josephine (Napoleon called her Rose), was a widower with two small children when they met. • Her previous husband died on the guillotine (she was also marked for death but outlasted Robespierre). The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon and Josephine married in March 1796, just before he took command of the army in Italy. • She was hesitant at first to marry him, because he was "silent and awkward with women…though altogether strange in all his person." • His wedding present to her was a gold medallion inscribed “To Destiny.” The Age of Napoleon • During the First Italian Campaign Napoleon began to hear rumors that Josephine was being unfaithful. • The affair was found out (to another army officer)—Josephine called this the “day of the catastrophe.” • From this point on, Napoleon knew he couldn’t trust her and his love turned to resentment. The Age of Napoleon • He took a mistress in retaliation (known among his troops as “Napoleon’s Cleopatra”). • Napoleon wrote a letter to his brother Joseph about his relationship with Josephine. It was intercepted by the British and published by the British press. Now all of France knew about their marriage in “crisis.” The Age of Napoleon • When Napoleon returned from Italy and didn’t find Josephine at home (she had gone to meet him but they missed each other), he ordered the servants to remove all her possessions. • When she returned, he had locked himself in his room. The accusations and her crying outside his door lasted for hours. By dawn, they were in each others arms again. The Age of Napoleon • From that point on, Josephine never took another lover, but Napoleon felt free to do as he pleased with other women. • In February 1800 Napoleon became First Consul, and the couple moved into the Tuileries Palace. Napoleon began to flaunt his mistresses. The Age of Napoleon • "I am not a man like others and moral laws or the laws that govern conventional behavior do not apply to me. My mistresses do not in the least engage my feelings. Power is my mistress." The Age of Napoleon • After they had been crowned Emperor and Empress, Josephine accompanied Napoleon on his Prussian Campaign. • But Napoleon’s latest mistress was pregnant. The Age of Napoleon • Until this time Napoleon had thought Josephine’s barrenness during their marriage might be his fault, but the birth of his son to his mistress changed everything. • He began to think very seriously again about the possibility of divorcing Josephine. The Age of Napoleon • Josephine’s fate was sealed when her grandson Napoleon, son of her son Eugene, who had been declared Napoleon’s heir, died of croup in 1807. • Napoleon began to create lists of eligible princesses. The Age of Napoleon • At dinner on November 30, 1809, he let Josephine know that — in the interest of France — he must find a wife who could produce an heir. From the next room, Napoleon’s secretary heard her screams. • “No, I can never survive it!” she cried and then collapsed. The Age of Napoleon • The premiere candidate in Napoleon’s mind was the 15 year-old sister of the Russian Tsar. But a deal fell through. • Next on the list was the 19 yearold Marie-Louise, daughter of his enemy, the emperor of Austria (Marie-Antoinette was her greataunt). The Age of Napoleon • Marie-Louise was horrified at the thought of marrying the 41 year-old Napoleon but bowed to the will of her father. • In March 1811, a year after their wedding, Marie-Louise gave Napoleon his long awaited heir. • Napoleon proclaimed his son to be “the King of Rome.” The Age of Napoleon • The Emperor in His Study at the Tuileries (by David 1812). • Note the symbolism within the painting. The Age of Napoleon • By 1812, only Britain and Russia were independent of Napoleon. • In June 1812 Napoleon took his “Grand Army” of 600,000 men to Russia where he fully expected to defeat the Russians in open battle. The Age of Napoleon • In early September, thinking he could defeat the Russian army in one day, Napoleon engaged the main Russian force at Borodino (85 miles from Moscow), and there were heavy casualties on both sides. • The battle ended in a tactical draw (Russia lost 44,000/France 35,000 men). The Age of Napoleon • As he headed towards Moscow, to his great annoyance, the Russians merely retreated before him. • When he got to Moscow, the retreating Russians set the city on fire and he found it a smoking ruin (scorched earth strategy) and the Tsar refused to negotiate a surrender. The Age of Napoleon • Almost out of supplies and winter quickly approaching caused the Napoleon to begin his retreat in October. • In France, rumors began circulating that Napoleon had been killed in battle. • Winter hit in November and the French were unprepared. The Age of Napoleon • The winter was brutal, with temperatures reaching -40 below. • In their desperation to find shelter from the blinding snow, French troops resorted to building huts using the frozen corpses of their fallen comrades, stacking them like logs to create walls. The Age of Napoleon The Age of Napoleon • In one of the most famous retreats in military history, the brutal winter made this a disaster; by December, less than 100,000 troops returned to France alive. • The Russian defeat was the beginning of the end for Napoleon. The Age of Napoleon • By the spring of 1813 Napoleon had replenished his army but a coalition of Russian, Prussian, Austrian, and Swedish armies, backed by British financial support, decided to fight together until Europe was freed from French control. • At the Battle of the Nations (Leipzig, Germany) Napoleon was defeated. The Age of Napoleon • The French Senate forced Napoleon to give up his emperorship as key generals abandoned him. The Age of Napoleon • He was exiled to the tiny island of Elba (in the Mediterranean off the west coast of Italy). • His young wife and son did not go with him and he never saw them again. The Age of Napoleon • While Napoleon was exiled to Elba, Josephine caught a bad cold and died of pneumonia two weeks later. • When told of the news, Napoleon was so despondent he stayed locked in his room for two days, refusing to see anyone or eat. • Josephine’s favorite flowers were roses and violets, so Napoleon wore some in a locket until the day he died. The Age of Napoleon • Through her son, she was the great-grandmother of the royal houses of Sweden and Denmark, and the royalty of Belgium, Luxembourg and Norway also descend from her. • Through her daughter, she was the maternal grandmother of the future Napoleon III, who ruled France (1848-1870). The Age of Napoleon • In 1814-1815, the victorious allies met in Vienna for a general peace conference (Congress of Vienna) and tried to undo the ideals of the French Revolution (nationalism, equality, and liberalism). • The kings in Europe were restored, peace re-established, and one of Louis XVI’s brothers became Louis XVIII. The Age of Napoleon • Louis XVIII (r 18141824) was caught between émigré nobles who demanded their lands and power back, and those who benefited from the Revolution or Napoleon’s reign. The Age of Napoleon • This chaos gave Napoleon the opportunity to escape from Elba (with some help) and return to France. • Word quickly spread of the escape and in March 1815, with 1500 loyal men, he marched on Paris as crowds cheered and as Louis XVIII fled. The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon retook the French government and immediately rebuilt his army with former soldiers still loyal to him. • A new Napoleonic era, known as the “Hundred Days,” had begun. The Age of Napoleon • The allies immediately reassembled their forces to take Napoleon on again. • In June 1815, the opposing armies met south of Brussels (Waterloo), with the allies throwing over 150,000 troops at Napoleon’s forces of 75,000. The Age of Napoleon • After a day-long battle, Napoleon was defeated for the last time and he surrendered to the British (the Duke of Wellington). The Age of Napoleon • He was forced to give up power and asked the English to give political asylum. • They instead sent him as a British prisoner of war into permanent exile to the South Atlantic island of St. Helena, where he died of stomach cancer in 1821. The Age of Napoleon • His last words were: “France, the Army, head of the Army, Josephine…” The Age of Napoleon The Age of Napoleon • Napoleon’s wars killed over 750,000 French soldiers and an additional 400,000 from territories France controlled. • But his unification of Europe, the spread of French reforms, and the nationalism created by his occupations set the agenda for modern European history.