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NAPOLEON

NAPOLEON. A myth about his height…. Our book says 5’6” and that is about right Reports of 5’2” were published at his death when he was measured for his coffin. But a French “foot” was 1.067877 of an English foot, or a bit longer…

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NAPOLEON

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  1. NAPOLEON

  2. A myth about his height… • Our book says 5’6” and that is about right • Reports of 5’2” were published at his death when he was measured for his coffin. • But a French “foot” was 1.067877 of an English foot, or a bit longer… • Converted Napoleon was actually 5’ 6.5”, slightly taller than average in France • But he was often shorter than the tall men hired for his Imperial Guard, which reinforced the myth.

  3. At a salon in Paris, 1787, Jacques-Louis David showed his Death of Socrates

  4. By Jacques-Louis David Sketch: Marie Antoinette on her way to the Guillotine The Death of Marat

  5. Unfinished Portrait of Napoleon in 1798

  6. What does Jacques-Louis David think of Napoleon? Why? 5 versions done; Original on right.

  7. 1795-1799OBSCURITY TO MASTERY • October 5, 1795…(or 13 Vendmaire…) • Defends government from troops sympathetic to monarch • 1796: Bonaparte appointed to lead the French army • against Austria and Sardinia • swift victories in Italy; • control of Italy and Switzerland • 1797: Treaty ends the fighting on land - temporarily • But British Navy still fights on • Bonaparte went after Britain by attacking Egypt • failure, but he returned a hero

  8. 1795-1799 continuedOBSCURITY TO MASTERY • November 10, 1799…(19 Brumaire)..coup d’etat • Year 7 • The Directory is declared corrupt • With military force, he takes over chamber of legislature • Napoleon named one of 3 consuls • Called the Consulate • Assumes dictatorial power as 1st consul • 1800- plebescite held

  9. JOSEPHINE • Born in Martinique • First married Vicomte Alexandre de Beauharnais • 2 children, Eugene and Hortense • Imprisoned and widowed during the Terror • A “socialite without equal” • Met and married the young Napoleon in 1796 • She had requested the sword of her husband

  10. THE CONSULATE of Napoleon1799-1804 • Peace with the Church • Condordat of of 1801 • Dominant church recognized • Freedom of worship for Hugeonots and Jews • Govt would keep most lands taken during Terror • Govt would appoint French bishops • Church could appoint all priests without interference • Napoleon brings victory and peace • 2nd Coalition: Britain , Austria, Russia forms in 1799 • What’s a coalition? • Napoleon wins great victories in Austrian Italy • Peace of Amiens 1802

  11. Domestic policies • Invited nobles and others who’d fled back • Centralization of government • Reorganization of complex law codes • Reorganization of education • extensive system of public schools • good propaganda for Napoleon • New central bank: Banque de France • balanced budget • Curbs inflation • Strengthened agriculture • Stimulated commerce

  12. NAPOLEONIC CODE • Gave France a single set of laws • Abolished the 3 estates of the old regime • Equality under the law • Catholic Church recognized • Religious liberty • But Limited some previously gained liberty • Censorship of newspapers • Women lost right to own property • Slavery restored in French colonies • Church never gets it lands back from govt

  13. A Plebescite makes Napoleon Consul for Life • By 1802, Napoleon could see people were happy for the stability he promised • hungry for more order • Plebescite or vote on a yes or no vote

  14. 1804 Another Plebescite Makes Napoleon EMPEROR

  15. December 2, 1804

  16. THE EMPIRE:1804-1814 • Napoleon dominated Europe • Takes over much of Italy • Puts puppet government in Switzerland • British declare war again in 1803 • 3rd Coalition forms: Britain, Russia, Austria, Sweden and Prussia…1805 • Battles: Austerlitz December 1805…Austria made peace • …Jena October 1806…French troops in Berlin, Prussia • …Friedland June 180…Treaty of Tilsit gives France domination of Poland • Mastery over most of Europe • Ended the Holy Roman Empire

  17. NAPOLEON Places SIBLINGS into positions of power… • Joseph…King of Naples and Spain • Louis , King of Holland • Lucien, Prince of Canino

  18. More of Napoleon’s Siblings Pauline Borghese Jerome, King of Westphalia Caroline, Queen of Naples Elise

  19. THE NEED FOR AN HIER • Divorced Josephine in 1809 • Married Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria 1810 • Only child born in 1811

  20. War on Britain: The CONTINENTAL SYSTEM • Sea: Battle of Trafalgar: loss in 1805 meant that Napoleon could not defeat British navy • British admiral Horatio Nelson…Trafalgar Square in London • Economic blockade • Supposed to make Europe self sufficient • Smuggling • Weakened economies across Europe • British used impressment and stopped neutral merchant ships • War of 1812 declared by United States

  21. Trafalgar Square: The Heart of London today… New Years celebrations in London center here, like our Times Square…what is Times Square named for? The Nelson Column National Gallery

  22. SPAIN 1808-1813

  23. The PENINSULAR WAR • Napoleon tried to make brother Joseph King of Spain • Guerilla warfare • Lost 300,000 soldiers • NATIONALISM becoming a powerful weapon against Napoleon • French Revolutionary ideas backfire

  24. RUSSIA 1812 • Napoleon’s disastrous mistake • 420,000 troops enter Russia…

  25. Czar Alexander ordersScorched Earth! Moscow burns….

  26. December 1812…Only 10,000 get out still fit to fight; another 90,000 are hurt; 300,000 dead

  27. THE GRAND ALLIANCE • Britain, Russia, Prussia, Austria, Sweden • Napoleon defeated • October 1813: Battle of Leipzig • Napoleon’s empire crumbled • April 1814: exile to Elba

  28. HUNDRED DAYSMARCH-JUNE 1815 • Napoleon’s escape from Elba • Enthusiastic welcome from French people • Louis XVIII, brother of guillotined king, fled

  29. WATERLOO: His last battle June 15, 1815

  30. Island of St Helena1815-1821

  31. THE INVALIDESNAPOLEON’S TOMB

  32. Napoleon’s legacy continued to influence the course of European history • 1. consolidated some of the gains of the French Revolution • 2. carried the ideas of the revolution across Europe • 3. remade the map of Europe • 4. stimulated the growth of NATIONALISM • 5. the “Napoleonic legend”: French history marked by struggles among 3 groups • Bonapartists…one strong man should govern • Monarchists…favor a king… • Democrats: People seeking to establish a democratic republic

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