Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleon Bonaparte Napoleon I (1769-1821),
emperor of the France, who made
reforms after the French Revolution. One of
the greatest military commanders of
all time, he conquered the larger part of
Europe and did much to modernize the
nations he conquered. Napoleon was born
on August 15, 1769, in Ajaccio, Corsica,
and was given the name Napoleon. He
was the second of eight children of Carlo
Bonaparte and Letizia Ramolino
Buonaparte, both of the Corsican-Italian
ancestry. Napoleans father was a
lawyer who had fought for Corsican
independence, but after the French
occupied the island in 1768, he served as a
prosecutor and a judge and
entered the French nobility as a count. Through his
father’s influence,
Napoleon was educated at the expense of King Louis XVI, in
Paris.
Napoleon graduated in 1785, at the age of 16, and joined the artillery as
a
second lieutenant. After the Revolution began, he became a lieutenant
colonel.
In 1793, however, Corsica declared independence, and Bonaparte,
a French patriot
and a Republican, fled to France with his family. He was
assigned, as a captain,
to an army besieging Toulon, a naval base that, aided
by a British fleet, was in
revolt against the republic. Replacing wounded
artillery general, he seized
ground where his guns could drive the British
fleet from the harbor, and the
port fell. As a result Napoleon was promoted
to brigadier general at the age of
24. In 1795 he saved the revolutionary
government by dispersing an insurgent mob
in Paris. In 1796 he married
Josephine de Beauharnais, the widow of an
aristocrat murdered in the
Revolution. Also in 1796, Napoleon was made commander
of the French army in
Italy. He defeated four Austrian generals, each with
superior numbers, and
forced Austria and its allies to make peace. In northern
Italy he founded
the Cisalpine Republic (later known as Italy) and strengthened
his position
in France by sending millions of francs worth of treasure to the
government.
In 1798, to strike at British trade with the East, he led an
expedition to
Turkish-ruled Egypt, which he conquered. The British admiral
Horatio
Nelson, leaving him stranded, however, destroyed his fleet. Undaunted,
he
reformed the Egyptian government and law, abolishing serfdom and
feudalism
and guaranteeing basic rights. The French scholars he had brought
with him began
the scientific study of ancient Egyptian history. In 1799 he
failed to capture
Syria, but he won a smashing victory over the Turks.
France, meanwhile, faced a
new army; Austria, Russia, and lesser powers had
allied with Britain. Napoleon,
was no meek soul, he decided to leave his army
and return to save France. In
Paris, he joined a conspiracy against the
government. November 9-10, 1799, he
and his friends seized power and
established a new regime. Under its
constitution, Napolean, as first consul,
had almost completely dictatorial
powers. The constitution was revised in
1802 to make Bonaparte consul for life
and in 1804 to create him emperor.
Each change received the overwhelming assent
of the French electorate. In
1800, he assured his power by crossing the Alps and
defeating the Austrians.
He then negotiated a general European peace that
established the Rhine River
as the eastern border of France. He also concluded
an agreement with the
pope, which contributed to French domestic tranquillity by
ending the quarrel
with the Roman Catholic Church that had arisen during the
Revolution. In
France the administration was reorganized, the court system was
simplified,
and all schools were put under centralized control. French law
was
standardized in the Code of Napoleon. They guaranteed the rights and
liberties
won in the Revolution, including equality before the law and
freedom of
religion. In April 1803 Britain, provoked by Napoleon’s aggressive
behavior,
resumed war with France on the seas; two years later Russia and
Austria joined
the British in a new coalition. Napoleon then abandoned plans
to invade England
and turned his armies against the Russian forces. In 1806
he seized the kingdom
of Naples and made his elder brother Joseph king,
converted the Dutch Republic
into the kingdom of Holland for his brother
Louis, and established the
Confederation of the Rhine of which he was the
protector. Napoleon had meanwhile
established the Continental System; a
French-imposed blockade of Europe against
British goods, designed to
bankrupt what he called the "nation of
shopkeepers." In 1807 Napoleon seized
Portugal. In 1808, he made his
brother Joseph king of Spain, awarding Naples
to his brother-in-law, Joachim
Murat. Joseph’s arrival in Spain touched
off a rebellion there, which became
known as the Peninsular War. Napoleon
appeared briefly and scored victories, but
after his departure the fighting
continued for five years, with the British
backing Spanish armies and
guerrillas. The Peninsular War cost France 300,000
casualties and lots of
money and contributed to the eventual destruction of the
Napoleons
Empire. In all the new kingdoms created by Napolean, the Code Napoleon
was
established as law. Feudalism and serfdom were abolished, and freedom
of
religion. Each state was given a constitution, providing for the right for
a
male vote and a parliament and a bill of rights. French-style
administrative and
judicial systems were required. Schools were put under
centralized government,
and free public schools were thought of. Higher
education was opened to all that
qualified, regardless of class or religion.
Every state had an academy or
institute for the promotion of the arts and
sciences. Incomes were provided for
scholars, especially scientists.
Constitutional government remained only a
promise, but progress and increased
efficiency were widely realized. Not until
after Napoleon’s fall did the
common people of Europe, alienated from his
governments by war taxes fully
appreciate the benefits he had given them. In
1812 Napoleon, whose
alliance with Alexander I had disintegrated, launched an
invasion into Russia
that ended in a disastrous retreat from Moscow. After that
all Europe united
against him, and although he fought on, and brilliantly, the
odds were
impossible to beat. After the allies had rejected his stepping down in
favor
of his son, Napoleon unconditionally surrendered and was exiled to
a
Mediterranean island. Marie Louise and his son were put in the custody
of her
father, the emperor of Austria. Napoleon never saw either of them
again.
Napoleon himself, however, soon made a dramatic comeback. In March
1815, he
escaped from Elba, reached France, and marched on Paris, winning
over the troops
sent to capture him. In Paris, he promulgated a new and more
democratic
constitution, and veterans of his old campaigns flocked to his
support. Napoleon
asked peace of the allies, but they outlawed him, and he
decided to strike
first. The result was a campaign into Belgium, which ended
in defeat at the
Battle of Waterloo on June 18, 1815. In Paris, crowds
begged him to fight on,
but the politicians withdrew their support. Napoleon
fled to Rochefort, where he
surrendered to the captain of the British
battleship. He was then exiled to a
remote island in the South Atlantic
Ocean, where he remained until his death
from stomach cancer on May 5,
1821.