Napoleon

Seeking to extend his trade embargo against Britain, Napoleon invaded the Iberian Peninsula and installed his brother Joseph as King of Spain in 1808, provoking the Peninsular War.

After the Corsican defeat at the Battle of Ponte Novu in 1769 and Paoli's exile in Britain, Carlo became friends with the French governor Charles Louis de Marbeuf, who became his patron and godfather to Napoleon.

[81][82] The preliminary peace of Leoben, signed on 18 April, gave France control of most of northern Italy and the Low Countries, and promised to partition the Republic of Venice with Austria.

[109] On 24 August 1799, fearing that the Republic's future was in doubt, he took advantage of the temporary departure of British ships from French coastal ports and set sail for France, despite the fact that he had received no explicit orders from Paris.

On 9 November 1799 (18 Brumaire according to the revolutionary calendar), the conspirators launched a coup, and the following day, backed by grenadiers with fixed bayonets, forced the Council of Five Hundred to dissolve the Directory and appoint Bonaparte, Sieyès and Ducos provisional consuls.

[122][123][124] Bonaparte also improved state finances by securing loans under a promise to defend private property, raising taxes on tobacco, alcohol and salt, and extracting levies from France's satellite republics.

Although Toussaint was captured and sent to France in July, the expedition ultimately failed due to high rates of disease and a string of defeats against rebel commander Jean-Jacques Dessalines.

[152] In February 1804, Bonaparte's police made a series of arrests in relation to a royalist plot to kidnap or assassinate him that involved the British government, Moreau and an unnamed Bourbon prince.

Following the royalist plot, Bonaparte's supporters convinced him that creating a hereditary regime would help secure it in case of his death, make it more acceptable to constitutional monarchists, and put it on the same footing as other European monarchies.

He then swore an oath to defend the territory of the Republic; to respect the Concordat, freedom of worship, political and civil liberty and the sale of nationalized lands; to raise no taxes except by law; to maintain the Legion of Honour; and to govern in the interests, wellbeing and the glory of the French people.

By the subsequent Treaty of Pressburg, signed on 26 December, Austria left the coalition, lost substantial territory to the Kingdom of Italy and Bavaria, and was forced to pay an indemnity of 40 million francs.

[185] Napoleon continued to entertain a grand scheme to establish a French presence in the Middle East in order to put pressure on Britain and Russia, possibly by forming an alliance with the Ottoman Empire.

The two emperors began peace negotiations on 25 June at the town of Tilsit during a meeting on a raft floating in the middle of the River Niemen which separated the French and Russian troops and their respective spheres of influence.

[199] Napoleon offered Alexander relatively lenient terms—demanding that Russia join the Continental System, withdraw its forces from Wallachia and Moldavia, and hand over the Ionian Islands to France.

[237] France received Carinthia, Carniola, and the Adriatic ports of Trieste and Fiume(Rijeka); the part of Poland annexed by Austria in the third partition in 1795, known at the time as West Galicia, was given to the Polish-ruled Duchy of Warsaw; and the territory of the former Archbishopric of Salzburg went to Bavaria.

[244] Tsar Alexander saw the creation of the Grand Duchy of Warsaw, Napoleon's marriage alliance with Austria and the election of the French Marshal Bernadotte as Crown Prince of Sweden as attempts to contain Russia.

[252] The Russians retreated 320 kilometres east to the Dvina river and implemented a scorched earth policy, making it increasingly difficult for the French to forage food for themselves and their horses.

In the first few months on Elba, he drew up plans for administrative reforms, road and building works, and improvements to the island's mines and agriculture, but results were limited by lack of funds.

Realizing that his wife and son would not be joining him in exile, cut off from the allowance guaranteed to him by the Treaty of Fontainebleau, and aware of rumours he was about to be banished to a remote island in the Atlantic Ocean, Napoleon escaped from Elba in the brig Inconstant on 26 February 1815 with about 1,000 men and a flotilla of seven vessels.

[318] Under instructions from the British government, Lowe cut Napoleon's expenditure, refused to recognize him as a former emperor, and made his supporters sign a guarantee they would stay with the prisoner indefinitely.

[322][323] A number of his entourage also left Saint Helena including Las Cases in December 1816, General Gaspard Gourgaud in March 1818 and Albine de Montholon, who was possibly Napoleon's lover, in July 1819.

"[330] Antommarchi and the British wrote separate autopsy reports, each concluding that Napoleon had died of internal bleeding caused by stomach cancer, the disease that had killed his father.

An imperial decree of March 1808 organized Jewish worship into consistories, limited usury and encouraged Jews to adopt a family name, intermarriage, and civil marriage and divorce.

Those arguing for a ruthless personality point to episodes such as his violent suppression of revolts in France and conquered territories,[377] his execution of the Duc d'Enghien and plotters against his rule,[10][378] and his massacre of Turkish prisoners of war in Syria in 1799.

"[398] English painter Joseph Farington, who met him in 1802, said Bonaparte's eyes were "lighter, and more of a grey, than I should have expected from his complexion", that "his person is below middle size", and that "his general aspect was milder than I had before thought it.

[411] Real power in the regions was now in the hands of the prefects who were judged by how they met the main priorities of Napoleon's government: efficient administration, law and order, stimulating the local economy, gathering votes for plebiscites, conscripting soldiers and provisioning the army.

"[423] In the field of military organization, Napoleon borrowed from previous theorists such as Jacques Antoine Hippolyte, Comte de Guibert, and from the reforms of preceding French governments, and then developed what was already in place.

[424][425] Corps replaced divisions as the largest army units, mobile artillery was integrated into reserve batteries, the staff system became more fluid, and cavalry returned as an important formation in French military doctrine.

[104][105] A number of historians have argued that his expansionist foreign policy was a major factor in the Napoleonic wars,[450][451] which cost six million lives and caused economic disruption for a generation.

Napoleon indirectly began the process of Latin American independence when the power vacuum was filled by local political leaders such as Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín.

Half-length portrait of a wigged middle-aged man with a well-to-do jacket. His left hand is tucked inside his waistcoat.
Napoleon's father, Carlo Buonaparte , fought for Corsican independence under Pasquale Paoli . After their defeat, he eventually became the island's representative to Louis XVI 's court.
Bonaparte, aged 23, as lieutenant-colonel of a battalion of Corsican Republican volunteers . Portrait made in 1835 by Henri Félix Emmanuel Philippoteaux
Bonaparte at the Siege of Toulon , 1793 , by Edouard Detaille
Etching of a street, there are many pockets of smoke due to a group of republican artillery firing on royalists across the street at the entrance to a building
Journée du 13 Vendémiaire , artillery fire in front of the Church of Saint-Roch, Paris , Rue Saint-Honoré
Bonaparte in a simple general uniform in the middle of a scrum of red-robbed members of the Council of Five Hundred
General Bonaparte surrounded by members of the Council of Five Hundred during the Coup of 18 Brumaire , by François Bouchot
Bonaparte, First Consul , by Ingres . Posing the hand inside the waistcoat was often used in portraits of rulers to indicate calm and stable leadership.
The 1803 Louisiana Purchase totalled 2,144,480 square kilometres (827,987 square miles), doubling the size of the United States.
Silver 5 francs coin depicting Napoleon as First Consul from AN XI, 1802
Napoleon's throne room at Fontainebleau
Napoleon in his coronation robes by François Gérard , c. 1805
Colored painting depicting Napoleon receiving the surrender of the Austrian generals, with the opposing armies and the city of Ulm in the background
Napoleon and the Grande Armée receive the surrender of Austrian General Mack after the Battle of Ulm in October 1805.
Napoleon at the Battle of Austerlitz , by François Gérard , 1805.
The Iranian envoy Mirza Mohammad-Reza Qazvini meeting with Napoleon at the Finckenstein Palace in West Prussia , 27 April 1807, to sign the Treaty of Finckenstein
Napoleon reviewing the Imperial Guard before the Battle of Jena , 14 October 1806
The Treaties of Tilsit : Napoleon meeting with Alexander I of Russia on a raft in the middle of the Neman River , 7 July 1807
Portrait of Joseph Bonaparte by François Gérard , 1808. Napoleon's elder brother, as King of Spain
Map of Europe. French Empire shown as bigger than present day France as it included parts of present-day Netherlands and Italy.
The French Empire at its greatest extent in 1812:
French Empire
Napoleon watching the fire of Moscow in September 1812 , by Adam Albrecht (1841)
Napoleon's withdrawal from Russia , painting by Adolph Northen
Napoleon and Prince Poniatowski at Leipzig , painting by January Suchodolski
Napoleon's farewell to his Imperial Guard, 20 April 1814 , by Antoine-Alphonse Montfort
Napoleon leaving Elba on 26 February 1815 , by Joseph Beaume (1836)
Napoleon on Saint Helena , watercolour by Franz Josef Sandmann, c. 1820
Longwood House , Saint Helena, site of Napoleon's captivity
Reorganisation of the religious geography: France is divided into 59 dioceses and 10 ecclesiastical provinces .
Leaders of the Catholic Church taking the civil oath required by the Concordat of 1801
Napoleon visiting the Tribunat
Napoleon is often represented in his green colonel uniform of the Chasseur à Cheval of the Imperial Guard , the regiment that often served as his personal escort, with a large bicorne and a hand-in-waistcoat gesture.
First remittance of the Legion of Honour, 15 July 1804, at Saint-Louis des Invalides , by Jean-Baptiste Debret (1812)
Page of French writing
First page of the 1804 original edition of the Code Civil
Photo of a grey and phosphorous-coloured equestrian statue. Napoleon is seated on the horse, which is rearing up, he looks forward with his right hand raised and pointing forward; his left hand holds the reins.
Statue in Cherbourg-Octeville unveiled by Napoleon III in 1858. Napoleon I strengthened the town's defences to prevent British naval incursions.
The Third of May 1808 by Francisco Goya , showing Spanish resisters being executed by French troops
A mass grave of soldiers killed at the Battle of Waterloo
1814 English caricature of Napoleon being exiled to Elba : the ex-emperor is riding a donkey backwards while holding a broken sword.
Coat of arms of the House of Capet
Coat of arms of the House of Capet
Imperial Eagle of the House of Bonaparte
Imperial Eagle of the House of Bonaparte