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NAPOLEON
BONAPARTE (French)
NAPOLEONE BUONAPARTE (Italian)
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1769-1821 |
Napoleon
Bonaparte was born on the island
of Corsica
at Ajaccio, on
August 15, 1769
to Carlo Bonaparte, a lawyer, and his wife, Marie-Letizia
Bonaparte. Small
for his age, Napoleon would only grow to be 5 feet
and three inches.
In 1779 he began his military career at the
military academy at Brienne,
France.
Civil
war on
Corsica
forced Napoleon’s family to flee to France
where, after some civil uprisings, Napoleon was
finally placed in an important military position. France
attacked Austria in 1796, and Napoleon was given what he had wanted
for some time -- control of the army campaign in Italy. This
campaign was a major triumph for Napoleon and France.
In
1796 he married Joséphine, widow of the Vicomte de
Beauharnais.
Intending
to break British trade by conquering Egypt, he
captured Malta (1798), and entered Cairo, defeating
the Turks; but after the French fleet was destroyed
by Nelson at The Battle of Aboukir Bay (also known
as the Battle of the Nil) in 1798, he
returned to France (1799), having learned of French
reverses in Europe. The coup d'état of 18th
Brumaire followed (November 9, 1799) in which Napoleon assumed power as First Consul,
instituting a military dictatorship.
He
then routed the Austrians at Marengo (1800), made
further gains at the Treaty of Luneville (1801), and
consolidated French domination by the Concordat with
Rome
and the Peace of Amiens with England
(1802).
Elected consul for
life, he assumed the hereditary title of emperor in
1804. His administrative, military, educational, and
legal reforms (notably the Code Napoléon)
made a lasting impact on French society. War with England
was renewed, and extended to
Russia
and Austria. Forced by
England's naval supremacy at Trafalgar (1805) to abandon
the notion of invasion, he attacked the Austrians
and Russians, gaining victories at Ulm
and Austerlitz
(1805).
Prussia
was defeated at
Jena
and Auerstadt (1806), and Russia
at Friedland (1807). After the Peace of Tilsit, he
became the arbiter (a person with power to decide a
dispute) of Europe.
Napoleon then tried
to cripple England
with the Continental System, ordering the European
states under his control to boycott British goods.
He sent armies into Portugal
and Spain, which resulted in the bitter and ultimately
unsuccessful Peninsular War (1808–14).
In
1809, wanting an heir, he divorced Joséphine, who
was childless by him, and married the Archduchess
Marie Louise of Austria, a son being born in 1811.
Believing
that Russia
was planning an alliance with England, he invaded (1812), defeating the Russians at
Borodino, before entering Moscow, but he was forced to retreat, his army broken by
hunger and the Russian winter.
In
1813 his victories over the allied armies continued
at Lützen, Bautzen, and Dresden, but he was routed at
Leipzig, and France
was invaded. Forced to abdicate, he was given the
sovereignty of
Elba
(1814).
The
unpopularity which followed the return of the
Bourbons monarchy motivated him to return to
France
in 1815. He regained power for a period known as the
Hundred Days, but was defeated by the combination of
Wellington's and Blücher's forces at Waterloo.
Napoleon
fled to Paris, abdicated, surrendered to the British, and was
banished to St Helena, where he died on May 5, 1821. Today
he rests at Les Invalides church at Paris
with some of his marshals, his ashes having been
returned in 1840.
Emperor
Napoleon proved to be an excellent civil
administrator. One of his greatest achievements was
his supervision of the revision and collection of
French law into codes. The new law codes—seven in
number—incorporated some of the freedoms gained by
the people of France
during the French
revolution, including religious toleration and the
abolition of serfdom. The most famous of the codes,
the Code Napoleon or Code Civil, still forms the
basis of French civil law. Napoleon also centralized
France's government by
appointing prefects to administer regions called
departments, into which France was divided.
He established educational systems,
established fire departments, water and sewer
systems, and sidewalks in
Paris.
Napoleon
argued that he was building a federation of free
peoples in a
Europe
united under a liberal
government. In
all the areas of
Europe
under Napoleonic rule, the Code Napoléon became
law. A great number of political and social reforms
resulted, including the abolition of feudalism and
serfdom, freedom of religion in most occupied
states, the granting of constitutions, universal
male suffrage, and parliaments, the creation of efficient
governments and judiciary systems, and the fostering
of education based on the French model, science, literature
and the arts. Higher
education was made available to all qualified
applicants regardless of religion or social class.
Adapted
from Biography: http://www.biography.com/search/article.do?id=9420291
And Lucid Café Library:
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95aug/napoleon.html
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