nobility. His father Carlo Buonaparte arranged
for Napoleon's education in France and he moved
there at the age of nine.
Napoleon initially considered himself a foreigner
and an outsider; accusations of foreignness would
dog him throughout his life. He had become an
officer in the French army when the
French Revolution began in
1789. Napoleon returned to Corsica, where a
nationalist struggle sought separation from France.
Civil war broke out, and Napoleon's family had to
flee to France. Napoleon supported the Revolution
and quickly rose through the ranks. In
1793, he freed
Toulon from the royalists and from the British
troops supporting them. In
1795, when royalists marched against the
National Convention in
Paris, he had them shot.
Nicknamed the Little Corporal,
Napoleon was a brilliant military strategist, able
to absorb the substantial body of military knowledge
of his time and to apply it to the real-world
circumstances of his era. An
artillery officer by training, he used artillery
innovatively as a mobile force to support
infantry attacks. When appointed
commander-in-chief of the ill-equipped French army
in
Italy, he managed to defeat Austrian forces
repeatedly. In these battles, contemporary paintings
of his headquarters show that he used the world's
first
telecommunications system, the
Chappe
semaphore line, first implemented in
1792. Austrian forces, led by
Archduke Charles, had to negotiate an
unfavorable treaty; at the same time, Napoleon
organized a
coup in
1797 which removed several royalists from power
in Paris.
Invasion of Egypt, rise to dictatorship
In
1798, the French government, afraid of
Bonaparte's popularity, charged him to invade
Egypt in order to undermine Britain's access to
India. An indication of Napoleon's devotion to
the principles of
the Enlightenment was his decision to take
scholars along on his expedition: among the other
discoveries that resulted, the
Rosetta Stone was translated. He was defeated by
Cezzar Ahmet in
Syria near the Castle of Saida. Napoleon's fleet
in Egypt was completely destroyed by
Nelson at
The Battle of the Nile, so that Napoleon became
land-bound.
A coalition against France formed in Europe, the
royalists rose again, and Napoleon abandoned his
troops and returned to Paris in
1799; in November of that year, a coup
d'etat
made him the ruler and military dictator ("First
Consul") of France. According to the
French Revolutionary Calendar, the date was
18 Brumaire.
Napoleon instituted several lasting reforms in
the educational, judicial, financial and
administrational system. His set of civil laws, the
Napoleonic Code or Civil Code, has importance to
this day in many countries. The Code was largely the
work of
Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès, who held the
office Second Consul under Bonaparte from
1799 to
1804. Napoleon was also a dictator and military
adventurer who cost France and her allies millions
of lives. In the end, all the
Napoleonic Empire Wars did not gain any
territory for France.
Struggle in Europe, rise to emperor
In
1800, Napoleon attacked and defeated Austria
again; afterwards, the British also signed a peace
treaty.
In
1802, Napoleon sold a large part of northern
America to the
United States as part of the
Louisiana Purchase; he had just faced a major
military setback when his army sent to conquer
Santo Domingo and establish a base in the
western world was destroyed by a combination of
yellow fever and fierce resistance led by
Toussaint L'Ouverture. With his western forces
diminished, Napoleon knew he would be unable to
defend Louisiana and decided to sell (see
Louisiana Purchase).
After Napoleon had enlarged his influence to
Switzerland and Germany, a dispute over
Malta provided the pretext for Britain to
declare war on France in
1803 and support French royalists who opposed
Napoleon. Napoleon, however, crowned himself
Emperor on
December 2,
1804. Claims that he seized the crown out of the
hands of
Pope Pius VII during the ceremony in order to
avoid subjecting himself to the authority of the
Pontiff are
apocryphal; after the Imperial regalia had been
blessed by the Pope, Napoleon crowned himself before
crowning his wife
Josephine as Empress. Then at
Milan's cathedral on
May 26,
1805, Napoleon was crowned King of Italy.
A plan by the French, along with the Spanish, to
defeat the
British Royal Navy failed dramatically at the
Battle of Trafalgar (21
October
1805), and
Britain gained lasting control of the seas.
By 1805 the
Third Coalition against Napoleon had formed in
Europe; Napoleon attacked and secured a major
victory against
Austria and
Russia at
Austerlitz (2
December
1805) and, in the following year, humbled
Prussia at the
Battle of Jena-Auerstedt (14
October
1806). As a result, Napoleon became the de
facto ruler over most of
Germany. Napoleon marched on through
Poland and then signed a treaty with the Russian
tsar
Alexander I, dividing Europe between the two
powerss. In the French part of Poland, he
established the restored Polish state of
Grand Duchy de Varsovie with the Saxonian King
as a ruler.
Then on
May 17,
1809 Napoleon ordered the annexation of the
Papal States to the French empire.
Battles in Spain, Austria, and Russia
Napoleon attempted to enforce a Europe-wide
commercial boycott of Britain called the "Continental
System". He invaded
Spain and installed his brother
Joseph Bonaparte as king there. The Spanish rose
in revolt, which Napoleon was unable to suppress.
The British invaded Spain through
Portugal in
1808 and, with the aid of the Spanish
nationalistss, slowly drove out the French. While
France was engaged in Spain, Austria attacked in
Germany, but after initial success suffered defeat
at the
Battle of Wagram (6
July
1809).
Alexander I of Russia had become distrustful of
Napoleon and refused to co-operate with him against
the British. Napoleon invaded Russia in
1812. Napoleon didn't take into account the
advice of Poles, who predicted long-term war instead
of quick victorious campaign. They proposed to
gradually retrieve former Polish areas from the
Russian hands and build there the base for the
further war. As Poles predicted, the Russians under
Kutuzov retreated instead of giving battle.
Outside of Moscow on
12 September, the
Battle of Borodino took place. The Russians
retreated and Napoleon was able to enter
Moscow, assuming that Alexander I would
negotiate peace. Moscow began to burn and within the
month, fearing loss of control in France, Napoleon
left Moscow. The French
Grand Army suffered greatly in the course of a
ruinous retreat; the Army had begun as over 500,000
men, almost half of it was Polish, but in the end
fewer than 10,000 crossed the
Berezina River (November 1812) to escape.
Encouraged by this dramatic reversal, several
nations again took up arms against France. The
decisive defeat of the French came at the
Battle of Leipzig, also called "The Battle of
the Nations" (October
16-19
1813).
Defeat, Exile in Elba, Return and Waterloo
In
1814 Great Britain, Russia, Prussia and Austria
formed an alliance against Napoleon. Although the
defense of France included many battles which the
French won, the pressure became overwhelming. Paris
was occupied on
31 March 1814. The marshals asked Napoleon to
abdicate, and he did so on
April 6 in favor of his son. The
Allies, however demanded
unconditional surrender and Napoleon abdicated
again, unconditionally, on
April 11. In the Treaty of Fontainebleau the
victors exiled the Corsican to
Elba, a small island in the
Mediterranean 20 km off the coast of
Italy. They let him keep the title of "Emperor"
but restricted his
empire to that tiny island.
Napoleon tried to poison himself and failed; on
the voyage to Elba he was almost assassinated. In
France, the royalists had taken over and restored
King Louis XVIII to power. On Elba, Napoleon
became concerned about his wife and, more
especially, his son, in the hands of the Austrians;
the French government refused to pay his allowance
and he heard rumors that he was about to be banished
to a remote island in the Atlantic. Napoleon escaped
from Elba on
February 26,
1815 and returned to the mainland on
March 1,
1815. The French armies sent to stop him
received him as leader. He arrived in
Paris on
March 20 with a regular army of 140,000 and a
volunteer force of around 200,000 and governed for
the
Hundred Days.
Napoleon's final defeat came at the hands of
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington and of
Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher at the
Battle of Waterloo in present-day
Belgium on
18 June
1815.
Off the port of
Rochefort, Napoleon made his formal surrender
while on the
HMS Bellerophon,
July 15,
1815.
Napoleon's exile to
Elba is the inspiration for the famous
palindrome: "Able was I ere I saw Elba."
Exile in Saint Helena and Death
Napoleon was imprisoned and then exiled by the
British to the island of
Saint Helena (2,800 km off the Bight of Guinea)
starting on
October 15,
1815. There, with a small cadre of followers, he
dictated his memoirs and criticized his captors. In
the last half of April 1821, he wrote out his own
will and several codicils (a total of 40-odd pages)
himself. His last words were: "France, the Army,
Joséphine."
In 1955 the diaries of Louis Marchand, Napoleon's
valet, appeared in print. He describes Napoleon in
the months leading up to his death, and led many to
conclude that he had been killed by
arsenic poisoning. Arsenic was at the time
sometimes used as an undetectable poison,
administered over a long period of time. In 2001
Pascal Kintz, of the Strasbourg Forensic Institute
in France, added credence to this claim with a study
of arsenic levels found in a lock of Napoleon's hair
preserved after his death, with seven to
thirty-eight times normal levels.
More recent analysis on behalf of the magazine
Science et Vie showed that similar
concentrations of arsenic can be found in Napoleon's
hair in samples taken from 1805, 1814 and 1821. The
lead investigator (Ivan Ricordel, head of toxicology
for the Paris Police) stated that if arsenic was the
cause, he should have died years earlier. Arsenic
was also used in some wallpaper, as a green pigment,
and even in some patent medicines, and the group
suggested that the most likely source in this case
was a hair tonic. Prior to the discovery of
antibiotics, arsenic was also a widely used, but
ineffective, treatment for
syphilis. This has led to speculation that
Napoleon might have suffered from syphilis.
Napoleon married twice, first to
Josephine de Beauharnais (whom he crowned as
''Empress Josephine'\', and by whom he had no heirs,
leading to a divorce) and second to
Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria, who became
his second empress. He had one child by
Marie-Louise: Napoleon Francis Joseph Charles
Bonaparte (1812-1833), King of Rome (known as
Napoleon II of France although he never ruled).
Napoleon also had at least two illegitimate
children:
Charles, Count Léon, (1806
-
1881) (son of Louise Catherine ELéonore Denuelle
de la Plaigne
1787 -
1868) and
Alexandre Joseph Colonna, Count Walewski, (1810
-
1868) (son of Maria, Countess Walewski
1789 -
1817), which both had descendants.
There is other information saying he had more
illegitimate children, Emilie Louise Marie Francoise
Josephine Pellapra, (daughter of Francoise-Marie
LeRoy), Karl Eugin von Mühlfeld (son of Victoria
Kraus), and Barthélemy St. Hilaire (unknown). Also
Helene Napoleone Bonaparte (daughter of Countess
Montholon).
He had asked in his will to be buried on the
banks of the
Seine, but when he died in 1821 he was buried on
Saint Helena. In 1840 his remains were taken to
France and entombed in
Les Invalides, Paris.
Napoleon's
marshals included
Jean Baptiste Bessieres,
Jean Baptiste Bernadotte,
Joachim Murat,
Louis Nicolas Davout,
Louis Alexandre Berthier,
Michel Ney, Josef Antoni Poniatowski, Pierre
Francois Charle Augereau, Emmanuel Grouchy,
Jean Lannes,
Auguste Marmont,
Laurent, Marquis de Gouvion Saint-Cyr,
Nicolas Oudinot,
Nicolas Jean de Dieu Soult,
Guillaume Brune, Francois Christophe Kellerman,
Francois Lefebvre,
Jean Baptiste Jourdan, Bon Adrien Moncey,
Jacques Macdonald,
Andre Massena, Eduoard Mortier, Claude Perrin
Victor, Dominique Perignon, Jean Mathieu Serrurier,
Louis Gabriel Suchet
See also:
Napoleonic Era