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The bare facts of the life of Napoleon Bonaparte stagger the imagination and rival the
plots of the most fantastic novels.
Born in 1769 in Ajaccio, Corsica, just as that island
was passing from the hands of the Republic of Genoa to those of France, Bonaparte attended a
French military school for impoverished sons of the nobility.
Unlike many French nobles, he
supported the Revolution, and thanks to a combination of skill, luck, and patronage, he was
given command of the Italian campaign in 1796 (at the ripe old age of 27!).
He invaded Egypt
in 1798, took charge of a new government in 1799, had himself named First Consul for Life in
1802, and crowned himself Emperor in 1804.
His fall from the pinnacle of power was almost as startling as his rise. In 1812 he
invaded Russia, where he won most of the battles but lost an army in the process.
Within two
years the powers allied against him had captured Paris. Forced into exile on the island of
Elba, Napoleon escaped to fight one last time. When he lost his final battle at Waterloo in
Belgium in 1815, the victors sent him to the faraway island of Saint Helena, where he died
in 1821. The eagle (his preferred symbol) had taken its last flight.
Napoleon created a new form of government in France, reshaped the boundaries of Europe,
and influenced revolutionaries and nationalists the world over.
Since his first days in
power he aroused controversies that continue today.
Was he a true son of the Enlightenment
who modernized French government and brought the message of equality under the law wherever
he went?
Or was he an authoritarian military dictator who fought incessant wars and
conquered territory in order to maintain his egomaniacal grip on power?
There is abundant
evidence for both views. The evidence is presented here under three main headings: domestic
policies; foreign policies and wars; and his legacy.
Domestic Policies
How did a young Corsican from a minor noble family, whose native language was not even
French, become supreme ruler of one of the most important countries in Europe? The answer
has to be sought in the impact of an expanding war on revolutionary politics.
From 1792 to
1794, the French armies struggled to save the Republic from its foreign and internal
enemies. In 1794 the tide turned, enabling France to go on the offensive and to carry the
war to its neighbors rather than desperately fight to save itself.
But war was expensive,
and the Directory government (1795–99) encouraged its generals to exact tribute from the
local populations they "liberated" in order to pay for the maintenance of the
armies. While fighting far from France, the generals acted more and more on their own,
paying their armies out of local treasure and overseeing the administration of conquered
territories.
Like the other generals, Napoleon Bonaparte benefited from this system, but he stood out
from them because of his remarkable talent for seizing every military opportunity.
In 1796
he took a ragtag army of 40,000 soldiers and swept the Austrian armies out of their
possessions in Italy. When he returned to Paris in November 1797 bearing the treaty that he
himself had negotiated with the Austrians, giving France control over much of Italy,
Belgium, and the Rhineland, the French welcomed him as a hero. His taste of power and glory
in Italy inspired him with great ambitions for the future. "I saw the world spin
beneath me," he exulted, "as if I were flying through the air."
He invaded Egypt next and though trapped when the English destroyed his fleet, he escaped
to France in October 1799 at a critical moment in the political affairs of the Republic.
Leading members of the government secretly sought a constitutional overhaul and they needed
a general to make their plot work.
Napoleon appeared at just the right moment, but his
arrogance and bluster nearly lost the day. He forced his way into a meeting of the deputies,
who threatened to outlaw him as a would-be dictator.
He and his brother Lucien, rallying
some troops waiting outside, broke up the session by armed force. Napoleon was then named
First Consul. The plotters in the legislature expected to control the young general (he was
not old enough to hold office under the Constitution of 1795), but they soon found
themselves outmaneuvered.
Napoleon steadily gained support for the new regime by promising a regime of law and
order and by making peace with the Catholic Church and its head, the pope.
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