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Napoleon

Napoleon. Danielle Brooke Ryan Mod: 3 Ms. Phillips. Napoleon Comes to Power. The Napoleonic Empire was the most institutionally uniform and largest European empire in modern times. Napoleon Bonaparte was the “emperor of the French,” in 1804. Napoleon fell from power around 1814-1815.

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Napoleon

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  1. Napoleon Danielle Brooke Ryan Mod: 3 Ms. Phillips

  2. Napoleon Comes to Power • The Napoleonic Empire was the most institutionally uniform and largest European empire in modern times. • Napoleon Bonaparte was the “emperor of the French,” in 1804. • Napoleon fell from power around 1814-1815. • Napoleon Bonaparte was a French general who became a hero in a military campaign in Italy in 1796 and 1797. • He seized control over the government, November 9, 1799. • They needed Napoleon Bonaparte for military support. • A number of political leaders planed to overthrow the directory. • The constitution of the year provided for the consulate.

  3. Napoleon Comes to Power Continued • Napoleon’s ambitions lay elsewhere. • The results of his policy of expansion by diplomacy, rather than military aggression, proved among his most seminal schemes, also if rare for their reciprocity. • Napoleon engineered a fundamental territorial reorganization of Germany. • He achieved this in partnership with the rulers of the middle-sized states of western and southern Germany, giving French backing to their own territorial ambitions., • They forced Francis II, the Holy Roman emperor and ruler of Austria, to let them absorb a myriad of both aggrandized and bound to him the rulers of the southwestern German states of Bavaria, Baden, Wurtemberg, Hesse-Darmstadt, and Nassau.

  4. Napoleonic Wars • The Wars (1803-1815) were fought between the French emperor, Napoleon Bonaparte (Napoleon I, 1769-1821) and the European powers of Britain, Austria, Russia, and Prussia. • Ultimately, the wars extended to all corners of the European continent, profoundly affecting European politics, society, and culture. • According to the International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2008, the wars encompassed eight separate military campaigns divided into three broader periods: 1803 to 1807, the ascendancy of Napoleonic power in Europe; 1897 to 1812, the height of Napoleon’s Grand Empire and 1812 to 1815, the decline and fall of Napoleon’s empire.

  5. Napoleonic Wars Continued • In January 1805 Spain joined France in an anti-British alliance. • Napoleon prepared an invasion force. • Britain sought allies to tie the French to the continent. • By summer 1805 England, Russia, and Austria formed a Third Coalition against France. • Napoleon invaded Austria, taking Vienna by the end of November. • Victory over the Third Coalition enabled napoleon to make sweeping changes to the map of Europe. • Germany was abolished in the summer of 1806 and replaced by the Confederation of the Rhine, with France as its protector. • Austria and Prussia were excluded from this new German entity. • The number of German territories was substantially reduced through secularization from 120 to 37. • The Italian Republic, a kingdom after 1804, annexed Venetia, nearly doubting its size.

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