1 / 51

The Age of Napoleon

The Age of Napoleon. Ch 11 Sec 3. Napoleon Bonaparte. Born 1769 Island of Corsica Sent to military school at age 9 Graduated at 16 Became lieutenant. Military Success. Hero of the Hour Oct. 1795 Defended Nat’l Convention from royalist rebels Savior of French Republic.

duman
Télécharger la présentation

The Age of Napoleon

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Age of Napoleon Ch 11 Sec 3

  2. Napoleon Bonaparte • Born 1769 • Island of Corsica • Sent to military school at age 9 • Graduated at 16 • Became lieutenant

  3. Military Success • Hero of the Hour • Oct. 1795 • Defended Nat’l Convention from royalist rebels • Savior of French Republic

  4. 1796 - Directory appoints to lead French Army against Austria • Crushed Austrian threat to France • Went to Egypt but was defeated by British navy • Kept reports out of press

  5. Consul and Emperor • Coup d’Etat – sudden seize of power • 1799 – Directory lost control of political situation in France • Lost confidence of French people

  6. Nov. 9, 1799 – Napoleon put in charge of army • Troops drove out members of Nat’l Assembly • Legislature dissolves Directory • Creates three consuls– Napoleon is one • Assumes dictatorial power as first consul

  7. Napoleon’s Domestic Policies • 1800 – plebiscite approves new constitution • Vote of the people • Constitution gives all power to Napoleon

  8. Peace with the Church • Concordat w/Pope Pius VII (agreement) - 1801 • Gov’t recognized influence of church on society • Rejected church control in nat’l affairs • People that had bought Church lands got to keep them

  9. Codification of the Laws • Napoleonic Code (Civil Code) • Uniform set of laws • Eliminated injustice • Equality of all citizens before the law • Right of individual to choose a profession • Religious toleration • Abolition of serfdom

  10. A New Bureaucracy • Napoleon establishes order and stability • Supports strong central gov’t, stable economy, and equality in taxation • Didn’t care about rank in society or birth • Set up tax-collecting system and national bank • Promoted sound financial management • Better control of gov’t

  11. Created a new aristocracy • Based on meritorious service to the nation • 1808-1814 – created 3200 nobles • 60% were military officers • 40% civil service or state and local officials

  12. Reduced gov’t corruption • Dismissed corrupt officials • Established lycees – gov’t-run public schools • Open to male students of all backgrounds • Jobs given based on merit, not family connections

  13. Does the image portray Napoleon as a positive or negative person? • How can you tell? What images/colors/symbols lead you to believe this? • Was this created by a person inside or outside of France?

  14. Preserver of the Revolution? • Good • Equality before the law • Gov’t careers open to anyone • Bad • Limited liberty • Promoted order and authority over individual rights • Restricted freedom of speech and press • gov’t inspected all manuscripts and mail

  15. Napoleon Crowned as Emperor • 1804 – declared himself emperor • Supported by French voters • Crowned himself, instead of pope

  16. Building the Empire • 1799 – France at war w/ Russia, GB and Austria • Began signing peace treaties in 1802 • 1803 - GB, Russia, Austria and Sweden form coalition against France • Takes army against coalition • Crushes opposition • Unpredictable • Rulers of Austria, Prussia, and Russia sign treaties

  17. Loss of American Territories • Napoleon sells Louisiana • United States buys in 1803 - $15 million • $211,699,586.02 • Gained $ and punished British enemies

  18. 1807-1812 Napoleon is master of Europe • Three major parts of Grand Empire • French Empire • Dependent states • Allied states • French Empire • Enlarged France extending to Rhine River • Also included parts of northern Italy

  19. Dependent states • Areas ruled by Napoleon’s relatives • Spain, Holland, Italy, Swiss Republic, Grand Duchy of Warsaw, Confederation of the Rhine • Allied states • Defeated by Napoleon and forced to join fight against GB • Prussia, Austria, Russia

  20. French Empire • 1812 – few countries free of Napoleon’s control • GB, Ottoman Empire, Sweden, Portugal • Conquered people feel loyalty to homeland • Huge and unstable empire

  21. Spreading the Principles of the Revolution • French ideals spread throughout Grand Empire • Legal equality • Religious toleration • Economic freedom • Destroy old order in inner core and dependent states • Nobility and clergy lose power and privileges

  22. British Resistance • Battle of Trafalgar - 1805 • Only battle lost by Napoleon to Coalition • Major naval defeat – British Admiral Horatio Nelson • French fleet destroyed • Assured supremacy of GB on the seas • Forced Napoleon to give up plans of invading GB

  23. The Continental System • Nov. 1806 – Napoleon orders blockade of GB • Prevent all trade and communication w/other countries • Continental system • Make continental Europe more self-sufficient • Intended to destroy economy of GB

  24. Blockade unsuccessful • Smugglers bring cargo from Britain to Europe • Allies disregarded his orders • New markets in Middle East and Latin America • Britain Blockades France • Stopped neutral ships bound for Europe • Hurts Napoleon more than GB

  25. Nationalism • Sense of a unique identity of a group of people • As Napoleon conquered, people became united in their hatred of him • Increased their sense of national identity • Gave them more power

  26. Invasion of Russia • 1812 – thirst for power leads to disastrous mistake • Alexander I, czar of Russia, refuses to stop selling grain to GB • Napoleon and Alexander suspect each other of having plans for Poland • Napoleon decides to invade Russia

  27. Jun 1812 – Napoleon leads Grand Army into Russia • Many troops were not French • Feel little loyalty • Scorched-Earth Policy • Russian army retreats toward Moscow • Burn crops and land so French cannot live off land • Soldiers desert French army

  28. Sept. 7, 1812 – Battle of Borodino • Battle swings between both sides • Russia eventually retreats and Napoleon takes Moscow • Alexander torches Moscow so Napoleon couldn’t have it • Napoleon stays for 5 weeks

  29. October – Napoleon orders return to France • Begins the retreat with 100,000 • Snow fall begins in November and soldiers freeze • Napoleon returns to France in January 1813 w/40,000 troops

  30. The Final Defeat • Coalition Defeats Napoleon • Fights Coalition of GB, Russia, Prussia, and Sweden • Napoleon raises another army in a few months • Untrained soldiers • Battle of Lepzig – Oct. 1813 – army severely beaten • Empire Crumbles • Jan 1814 – Prussians, Russians, and Austrians march on Paris • March – Czar Alexander I and Frederick William III of Prussia march through Paris

  31. April 1814 – Napoleon gives up throne • Exiled to Elba – island off coast of Italy

  32. The Hundred Days • Louis XVIII takes thrown • Brother of Louis XVI • Unpopular among peasants • Suspected of wanting to undo reforms of revolution • Napoleon escapes from Elba • Thousands welcome him in Paris • Volunteers join his army • Napoleon regains position as emperor

  33. Battle of Waterloo – June 18, 1815 • British army defeats Napoleon • Prussian army helped

  34. Ends Hundred Days • Napoleon’s second reign as Emperor • Napoleon exiled to St. Helena • island in Atlantic Ocean • Dies after 6 years • 1821 at age of 53

  35. Congress of Vienna Convenes Ch. 12 Sec 2

  36. After defeat of Napoleon • Goal of new European order • Collective security and stability for entire continent • Congress of Vienna • Series of meetings in Vienna to set up policies to achieve this goal

  37. Metternich Restores Stability • “Five Great Powers” • Prussia, Russia, Austria • represented by rulers • GB, France • represented by foreign ministers • Klemens von Metternich • Foreign minister of Austria

  38. Three Goals of Metternich • Prevent future French aggression by surrounding France with strong countries • Restore balance of power so that no country would be threat • Restore Europe’s royal families to thrones held before Napoleon – legitimacy

  39. Containment of France • Congress makes weak countries around France stronger • Allow countries of Europe to contain France

  40. Balance of Power • Leaders of Europe don’t want to go too far • Too severe – France may take revenge • Break up France – another country might become too strong • Easy on French • Give up all territories Napoleon took • France remains intact • Keeps overseas possessions, army, and independent gov’t

  41. Conservatism • Based on tradition and belief in value of social stability • Obedience to public authority • Relied heavily on influence of religion • Hated revolutions • Unwilling to accept demands of people • Want individual rights or representative government

  42. Principle of Intervention • Great powers of Europe had right to send armies into other countries • Restore legitimate monarchs to their thrones • GB refuses this • Doesn’t think great powers should interfere in other nations internal affairs

  43. Legitimacy • Powers affirm principle of legitimacy • Agreement that as many as possible of the rulers Napoleon had driven out be restored • France – Louis XVIII given throne • Bourbon rulers of Spain and Kingdom of Two Sicilies • Former rulers of the German States

More Related