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France was in turmoil. Poverty was everywhere and corruption
was widespread.
The government was worthless. According to the constitution, the
Council of Elder and the Assembly of Five Hundred made laws that
the Directory upholds. The members were greedy and unable to cooperate.
Some politicians knew a coup d’État, a sudden overthrow of
the government, would serve their purpose. However, they needed
a general to lead.
The people saw Napoleon as a shining star in a dark sky. His victories
overshadowed his defeats. Napoleon worked with Emmanuel Sieyes to
overthrow the Directory, succeeding on 9 November 1799 -- 18 Brumaire,
by the Revolutionary calendar.
On November 9, 1799, the plotters convinced the government to move
to a palace outside Paris. They agreed and walked right into a trap.
The next day, Napoleon walked into the Council of Elders and told
threatened them to hand over their power. After ranting for minutes,
Napoleon walked out disappointed. He had gained nothing.
The
Assembly of Five Hundred knew about Napoleon’s plot. As soon as
he walked in, they ganged up on him. Napoleon's fear of mobs (from
the Tuileries massacre in 1792) got the better of him and Napoleon
started shaking and had to be dragged out.
Once outside, Napoleon regained his sanity.
Napoleon rallied his troops and rushed back into the building.
The assembly members ran from the bayonets coming at them and fled
the building.
The Coup d’État of Eighteenth Brumaire worked.
A new constitution was put forth by Napoleon. The French people
overwhelmingly approved it.
The Directory was replaced by a three-member Consulate, and Napoleon
became First Consul. The other two consuls merely gave advice to
Napoleon. France now had a strong leader, a dictator.
Napoleon's response to the threat facing France was to reorganize
his armies and restructure his defense.
In May 1800, Napoleon led his famous march across the Alps. Going
through the Great St. Bernard Pass, he entered the Po Valley of
northern Italy. In June, Napoleon defeated the Austrians at the
Battle of Marengo.
In 1801, the Austrians signed the Treaty of Lunéville, which
reaffirmed the Treaty of Campoformio.
Russia had dropped out of the Second
Coalition in 1799, and now Austria surrendered. Great Britain
was left alone and was weary of war. The Treaty of Amiens was signed
between the British and French in 1802. The
Second Coalition was destroyed. For the first and only time
in Napoleon’s reign, France was at peace with the world.
At
the same time, he saw to his political stability. Establishing the
Concordat of 1801 with Pope Pius VII, Napoleon gave the Catholics
the right of free practice and Napoleon got control of the church
in France.
Napoleon also established the Bank of France to help economic recovery
along.
In 1800 and 1802, Napoleon granted amnesty to 100,000 banished
political enemies, on the condition that them would come and take
a loyalty oath.
As time went on, Napoleon’s thoughts turned back to conquest. In
1800, Spain was forced to cede the Louisiana Territory to France.
Hoping to make a western sphere of influence, Napoleon sent troops
to the newly gained territory. However, the French forces sent were
destroyed in Haiti by disease and slave revolts. A frustrated Napoleon
abandoned his plans for the Western Hemisphere. Selling the Louisiana
Territory to America, Napoleon turned his attention back to Europe.
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