fbpx
Wikipedia

French Consulate

The Consulate (French: Le Consulat) was the top-level Government of France from the fall of the Directory in the coup of 18 Brumaire on 10 November 1799 until the start of the Napoleonic Empire on 18 May 1804. By extension, the term The Consulate also refers to this period of French history.

French Consulate

Consulat français
Executive government of the French First Republic
History
Established10 November 1799
Disbanded18 May 1804
Preceded byFrench Directory
Succeeded byFirst French Empire
(with Napoleon Bonaparte as emperor)

During this period, Napoleon Bonaparte, as First Consul (Premier consul), established himself as the head of a more authoritarian, autocratic, and centralized republican government in France while not declaring himself sole ruler. Due to the long-lasting institutions established during these years, Robert B. Holtman has called the Consulate "one of the most important periods of all French history."[1] Napoleon brought authoritarian personal rule which has been viewed as military dictatorship.[2]

Fall of the Directory government

 
5f Bonaparte Premier consul - AN XI - 1802

French military disasters in 1798 and 1799 had shaken the Directory, and eventually shattered it in November 1799. Historians sometimes date the start of the political downfall of the Directory to 18 June 1799 (Coup of 30 Prairial VII by the French Republican calendar). This was when anti-Jacobin Director Emmanuel-Joseph Sieyès, after only a month in office, with the help of the Directory's only surviving original member, Paul Barras, also an anti-Jacobin, successfully rid himself of the other three then-sitting directors.[citation needed] The March–April 1799 elections to the two councils had produced a new Neo-Jacobin majority in the two bodies, and being unhappy with the existing five man Directory, by 5 June 1799, these councils had found an irregularity in the election of the Director Jean Baptiste Treilhard, who thus retired in favor of Louis Jérôme Gohier, a Jacobin more 'in tune' with the feelings in the two councils. The very next day, 18 June 1799, the anti-Jacobins Philippe-Antoine Merlin (Merlin de Douai) and Louis-Marie de La Revellière-Lépeaux were also driven to resign, although one long time anti-Jacobin, popularly known for his cunning, survived the day's coup; they were replaced by the Jacobin Baron Jean-François-Auguste Moulin and by the non-Jacobin, or 'weak' Jacobin, Roger Ducos. The three new directors were generally seen by the anti-Jacobin elite of France as non-entities, a 'put-down' if ever there was one, but that same elite could take some comfort in knowing that the five man Directory was still in anti-Jacobin hands, but with a reduced majority.

A few more military disasters, royalist insurrections in the south, Chouan disturbances in a dozen departments of the western part of France (mainly in Brittany, Maine and eventually Normandy), Orléanist intrigues, and the end became certain.[citation needed] In order to soothe the populace and protect the frontier, more than the French Revolution's usual terrorist measures (such as the law of hostages) was necessary. The new Directory government, led by the anti-Jacobin Sieyès, decided that the necessary revision of the constitution would require "a head" (his own) and "a sword" (a general to back him). Jean Victor Moreau being unattainable as his sword, Sieyès favoured Barthélemy Catherine Joubert; but, when Joubert was killed at the Battle of Novi (15 August 1799), he turned to General Napoleon Bonaparte.[3]

Although Guillaume Marie Anne Brune and André Masséna won the Battles of Bergen and of Zürich, and although the Allies of the Second Coalition lingered on the frontier as they had done after the Battle of Valmy, still the fortunes of the Directory were not restored. Success was reserved for Bonaparte, suddenly landing at Fréjus with the prestige of his victories in the East, and now, after Hoche's death (1797), appearing as sole master of the armies.[3]

In the coup of 18 Brumaire Year VIII (9 November 1799), Napoleon seized French parliamentary and military power in a two-fold coup d'état, forcing the sitting directors of the government to resign. On the night of the 19 Brumaire (10 November 1799) a remnant of the Council of Ancients abolished the Constitution of the Year III, ordained the consulate, and legalised the coup d'Etat in favour of Bonaparte with the Constitution of the Year VIII.[3]

The new government

The initial 18 Brumaire coup seemed to be a victory for Sieyès, rather than for Bonaparte. Sieyès was a proponent of a new system of government for the Republic, and the coup initially seemed certain to bring his system into force. Bonaparte's cleverness lay in counterposing Pierre Claude François Daunou's plan to that of Sieyès, and in retaining only those portions of each which could serve his ambition.[4][3]

 
Constitution of the year VIII and later the French Empire

The new government was composed of three parliamentary assemblies: the Council of State which drafted bills, the Tribunate which could not vote on the bills but instead debated them, and the Corps législatif, whose members could not discuss the bills but voted on them after reviewing the Tribunate's debate record. The Sénat conservateur was a governmental body equal to the three aforementioned legislative assemblies and verified the draft bills and directly advised the First Consul on the implications of such bills. Ultimate executive authority was vested in three consuls, who were elected for ten years. Popular suffrage was retained, though mutilated by the lists of notables (on which the members of the Assemblies were to be chosen by the Senate). The four aforementioned governmental organs were retained under the Constitution of the Year XII, which recognized Napoleon as the French sovereign Emperor, but their respective powers were greatly diminished.

Napoleon vetoed Sieyès' original idea of having a single Grand Elector as supreme executive and Head of State. Sieyès had intended to reserve this important position for himself, and by denying him the job Napoleon helped reinforce the authority of the consuls, an office which he would assume. Nor was Napoleon content simply to be part of an equal triumvirate. As the years would progress he would move to consolidate his own power as First Consul, and leave the two other consuls, Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès and Charles-François Lebrun, as well as the Assemblies, weak and subservient.

By consolidating power, Bonaparte was able to transform the aristocratic constitution of Sieyès into an unavowed dictatorship.[3]

On 7 February 1800, a public referendum confirmed the new constitution. It vested all of the real power in the hands of the First Consul, leaving only a nominal role for the other two consuls. A full 99.9% of voters approved the motion, according to the released results.

While this near-unanimity is certainly open to question, Napoleon was genuinely popular among many voters, and after a period of strife, many in France were reassured by his dazzling but unsuccessful offers of peace to the victorious Second Coalition, his rapid disarmament of La Vendée, and his talk of stability of government, order, justice and moderation. He gave everyone a feeling that France was governed once more by a real statesman, and that a competent government was finally in charge.[3]

Napoleon's consolidation of power

 
Portrait of First Consul Bonaparte, by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres

Bonaparte needed to rid himself of Sieyès and of those republicans who had no desire to hand over the republic to one man, particularly of Moreau and Masséna, his military rivals. The victory of Marengo (14 June 1800) momentarily in the balance, but secured by Desaix and Kellermann, offered a further opportunity to his ambition by increasing his popularity. The royalist plot of the Rue Saint-Nicaise on 24 December 1800 allowed him to make a clean sweep of the democratic republicans, who despite their innocence were deported to French Guiana. He annulled the Assemblies and made the Senate omnipotent in constitutional matters.[3]

The Treaty of Lunéville, signed in February 1801 with Austria (which had been disarmed by Moreau’s victory at Hohenlinden), restored peace to Europe, gave nearly the whole of Italy to France, and permitted Bonaparte to eliminate from the Assemblies all the leaders of the opposition in the discussion of the Civil Code. The Concordat of 1801, drawn up not in the Church's interest but in that of his own policy, by giving satisfaction to the religious feeling of the country, allowed him to put down the constitutional democratic Church, to rally round him the consciences of the peasants, and above all to deprive the royalists of their best weapon. The Articles Organiques hid from the eyes of his companions-in-arms and councillors a reaction which, in fact if not in law, restored to a submissive Church, despoiled of her revenues, her position as the religion of the state.[3]

The Peace of Amiens (25 March 1802) with the United Kingdom, of which France's allies, Spain and the Batavian Republic, paid all the costs, finally gave the peacemaker a pretext for endowing himself with a Consulate, not for ten years but for life, as a recompense from the nation. The Rubicon was crossed on that day: Bonaparte’s march to empire began with the Constitution of the Year X dated 16 Thermidor or 4 August 1802.[3]

On 2 August 1802 (14 Thermidor, An X), a second national referendum was held, this time to confirm Napoleon as "First Consul for Life."[5] Once again, a vote claimed 99.7% approval.[6][7]

As Napoleon increased his power, he borrowed many techniques of the Ancien Régime in his new form of one-man government. Like the old monarchy, he re-introduced plenipotentiaries; over-centralised, strictly utilitarian administrative and bureaucratic methods, and a policy of subservient pedantic scholasticism towards the nation's universities. He constructed or consolidated the funds necessary for national institutions, local governments, a judiciary system, organs of finance, banking, codes, traditions of conscientious well-disciplined labour force.[8]

France enjoyed a high level of peace and order under Napoleon that helped to raise the standard of comfort. Prior to this, Paris had often suffered from hunger and thirst, and lacked fire and light, but under Napoleon, provisions became cheap and abundant, while trade prospered and wages ran high. The pomp and luxury of the nouveaux riches were displayed in the salons of the good Joséphine, the beautiful Madame Tallien, and the "divine" Juliette Récamier.[8]

In strengthening the machinery of state, Napoleon created the elite order of the Légion d'honneur (The Legion of Honour), the Concordat, and restored indirect taxes, an act seen as a betrayal of the Revolution.

Napoleon was largely able to quell dissent within government by expelling his more vocal critics, such as Benjamin Constant and Madame de Staël. The expedition to Saint-Domingue reduced the republican army to a nullity. Constant war helped demoralise and scatter the military's leaders, who were jealous of their "comrade" Bonaparte. The last major challenge to Napoleon's authority came from Moreau, who was compromised in a royalist plot; he too was sent into exile.[8]

In contradistinction to the opposition of senators and republican generals, the majority of the French populace remained uncritical of Bonaparte's authority. No suggestion of the possibility of his death was tolerated.[8] The Napoleonic age began here when he became officer of the French state and established the consulate.

The Duke of Enghien affair

 
Portrait of Louis Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien, by Jean-Michel Moreau

Because Napoleon's hold on political power was still tenuous, French Royalists devised a plot that involved kidnapping and assassinating him and inviting Louis Antoine de Bourbon, the Duke of Enghien, to lead a coup d'état that would precede the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy with Louis XVIII on the throne. The British government of William Pitt the Younger had contributed to this Royalist conspiracy by financing one million pounds and providing naval transport (with the ship of Captain John Wesley Wright) to the conspirators Georges Cadoudal and General Charles Pichegru for their return to France from England. Pichegru met Jean Victor Marie Moreau, one of Napoleon's generals and a former protege of Pichegru, on 28 January 1804. The next day, a British secret agent named Courson was arrested and he, under torture, confessed that Pichegru, Moreau and Cadoudal were conspiring to overthrow the consulate. The French government sought more details of this plot by arresting and torturing Louis Picot, Cadoudal's servant. Joachim Murat ordered the city gates of Paris to be closed from 7 pm to 6 am while Pichegru and Moreau were arrested during the next month.

These further arrests revealed that the Royalist conspiracy would eventually involve the active participation of the Duke of Enghien, who was a relatively young Bourbon prince and thus another possible heir to a restored Bourbon monarchy. The Duke, at that time, was living as a French émigré in the future Grand Duchy of Baden, but then still the 1803-1806 Electorate of Baden, but he also kept a rented house in Ettenheim, which was close to the French border. Perhaps at the urging of Talleyrand, Napoleon's foreign minister, and Fouché, Napoleon's minister of police who had warned that "the air is full of daggers", the First Consul came to the political conclusion that the Duke must be dealt with. Two hundred French soldiers crossed the border, surrounded the Duke's home in Baden and arrested him.

On the way back to France d'Enghien stated that "he had sworn implacable hatred against Bonaparte as well as against the French; he would take every occasion to make war on them."[9]

After three plots to assassinate him and the further financing of a supposed insurrection in Strasbourg, Napoleon had enough. Based on d'Enghien's who were seized at his home in Germany and the material from the police, d'Enghien was charged as a conspirator in time of war and was subject to a military court. He was ordered to be tried by a court of seven colonels at Vincennes.

D'Enghien during his questioning at the court told them that he was being paid £4,200 per year by England "in order to combat not France but a government to which his birth had made him hostile." Further, he stated that "I asked England if I might serve in her armies, but she replied that that was impossible: I must wait on the Rhine, where I would have a part to play immediately, and I was in fact waiting."[10]

D'Enghien was found guilty of being in violation of Article 2 of a law of 6 October 1791, to wit, "Any conspiracy and plot aimed at disturbing the State by civil war, and arming the citizens against one another, or against lawful authority, will be punished by death." He was executed in the ditch of the fortress of Vincennes.

The aftermath caused hardly a ripple in France, but abroad, it produced a storm of anger. Many of those who had favored or been neutral to Napoleon now turned against him. But Napoleon always assumed full responsibility for allowing the execution and continued to believe that, on balance, he had done the right thing.

Consuls

The provisional Consuls (10 November – 12 December 1799)
     
Napoleon Bonaparte
Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès
Roger Ducos
Consulate (12 December 1799 – 18 May 1804)
     
Napoleon Bonaparte
First Consul
J.J. Cambacérès
Second Consul
Charles-François Lebrun
Third Consul

Ministers

See Cabinet of the French Consulate

The Ministers under the consulate were:[11]

Ministry Start End Minister
Foreign Affairs 11 November 1799 22 November 1799 Charles-Frédéric Reinhard
22 November 1799 18 May 1804 Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord
Justice 11 November 1799 25 December 1799 Jean Jacques Régis de Cambacérès
25 December 1799 14 September 1802 André Joseph Abrial
14 September 1802 18 May 1804 Claude Ambroise Régnier
War 11 November 1799 2 April 1800 Louis-Alexandre Berthier
2 April 1800 8 October 1800 Lazare Carnot
8 October 1800 18 May 1804 Louis-Alexandre Berthier
Finance 11 November 1799 18 May 1804 Martin-Michel-Charles Gaudin
Police 11 November 1799 18 May 1804 Joseph Fouché
Interior 12 November 1799 25 December 1799 Pierre-Simon Laplace
25 December 1799 21 January 1801 Lucien Bonaparte
21 January 1801 18 May 1804 Jean-Antoine Chaptal
Navy and Colonies 12 November 1799 22 November 1799 Marc Antoine Bourdon de Vatry
22 November 1799 3 October 1801 Pierre-Alexandre-Laurent Forfait
3 October 1801 18 May 1804 Denis Decrès
Secretary of State 25 December 1799 18 May 1804 Hugues-Bernard Maret, duc de Bassano
Treasury 27 September 1801 18 May 1804 François Barbé-Marbois
War Administration 12 March 1802 18 May 1804 Jean François Aimé Dejean

References

  1. ^ Robert B. Holtman, The Napoleonic Revolution (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1981), 31.
  2. ^ Jones, Colin (1994). The Cambridge Illustrated History of France (1st ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 193–94. ISBN 0-521-43294-4.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wiriath 1911, p. 860.
  4. ^ Antoine-Claire Thibaudeau, "Creation of the Consular Government," Napoleon: Symbol for an Age, A Brief History with Documents, ed. Rafe Blaufarb (New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2008), 54–56.
  5. ^ "From Life Consulship to the hereditary Empire (1802–1804)". Napoleon.org. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  6. ^ Frank McLynn (2002). Napoleon. Arcade Publishing. pp. 253–54. ISBN 978-1-55970-631-5. August 1802 referendum.
  7. ^ Lucius Hudson Holt, Alexander Wheeler Chilton (1919). A Brief History of Europe from 1789–1815. The Macmillan Company. p. 206. August 1802 referendum napoleon.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  8. ^ a b c d Wiriath 1911, p. 861.
  9. ^ Cronin 1994, p. 242
  10. ^ Cronin 1994, pp. 243–44
  11. ^ *Muel, Léon (1891). Gouvernements, ministères et constitutions de la France depuis cent ans: Précis historique des révolutions, des crises ministérielles et gouvernementales, et des changements de constitutions de la France depuis 1789 jusqu'en 1890 ... Marchal et Billard. p. 61. Retrieved 3 May 2014.

Bibliography

  • Histoire et Figurines website (English language version). Accessed October 2006.
  • Tom Holmberg, "The d'Enghien Affair: Crime or Blunder?" (September 2005), The Napoleonic Series website. Accessed October 2006.
  • ""
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainWiriath, Paul (1911). "France § History". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 859–860.

french, consulate, this, article, about, government, france, from, 1799, 1804, france, diplomatic, missions, also, known, consulates, list, diplomatic, missions, france, consulate, french, consulat, level, government, france, from, fall, directory, coup, bruma. This article is about the Government of France from 1799 1804 For France s diplomatic missions also known as consulates see List of diplomatic missions of France The Consulate French Le Consulat was the top level Government of France from the fall of the Directory in the coup of 18 Brumaire on 10 November 1799 until the start of the Napoleonic Empire on 18 May 1804 By extension the term The Consulate also refers to this period of French history French Consulate Consulat francaisExecutive government of the French First RepublicThe three consuls Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres Napoleon Bonaparte and Charles Francois Lebrun left to right by Auguste CouderHistoryEstablished10 November 1799Disbanded18 May 1804Preceded byFrench DirectorySucceeded byFirst French Empire with Napoleon Bonaparte as emperor During this period Napoleon Bonaparte as First Consul Premier consul established himself as the head of a more authoritarian autocratic and centralized republican government in France while not declaring himself sole ruler Due to the long lasting institutions established during these years Robert B Holtman has called the Consulate one of the most important periods of all French history 1 Napoleon brought authoritarian personal rule which has been viewed as military dictatorship 2 Contents 1 Fall of the Directory government 2 The new government 3 Napoleon s consolidation of power 4 The Duke of Enghien affair 5 Consuls 6 Ministers 7 References 8 BibliographyFall of the Directory government EditMain articles 30 Prairial and 18 Brumaire 5f Bonaparte Premier consul AN XI 1802 French military disasters in 1798 and 1799 had shaken the Directory and eventually shattered it in November 1799 Historians sometimes date the start of the political downfall of the Directory to 18 June 1799 Coup of 30 Prairial VII by the French Republican calendar This was when anti Jacobin Director Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes after only a month in office with the help of the Directory s only surviving original member Paul Barras also an anti Jacobin successfully rid himself of the other three then sitting directors citation needed The March April 1799 elections to the two councils had produced a new Neo Jacobin majority in the two bodies and being unhappy with the existing five man Directory by 5 June 1799 these councils had found an irregularity in the election of the Director Jean Baptiste Treilhard who thus retired in favor of Louis Jerome Gohier a Jacobin more in tune with the feelings in the two councils The very next day 18 June 1799 the anti Jacobins Philippe Antoine Merlin Merlin de Douai and Louis Marie de La Revelliere Lepeaux were also driven to resign although one long time anti Jacobin popularly known for his cunning survived the day s coup they were replaced by the Jacobin Baron Jean Francois Auguste Moulin and by the non Jacobin or weak Jacobin Roger Ducos The three new directors were generally seen by the anti Jacobin elite of France as non entities a put down if ever there was one but that same elite could take some comfort in knowing that the five man Directory was still in anti Jacobin hands but with a reduced majority A few more military disasters royalist insurrections in the south Chouan disturbances in a dozen departments of the western part of France mainly in Brittany Maine and eventually Normandy Orleanist intrigues and the end became certain citation needed In order to soothe the populace and protect the frontier more than the French Revolution s usual terrorist measures such as the law of hostages was necessary The new Directory government led by the anti Jacobin Sieyes decided that the necessary revision of the constitution would require a head his own and a sword a general to back him Jean Victor Moreau being unattainable as his sword Sieyes favoured Barthelemy Catherine Joubert but when Joubert was killed at the Battle of Novi 15 August 1799 he turned to General Napoleon Bonaparte 3 Although Guillaume Marie Anne Brune and Andre Massena won the Battles of Bergen and of Zurich and although the Allies of the Second Coalition lingered on the frontier as they had done after the Battle of Valmy still the fortunes of the Directory were not restored Success was reserved for Bonaparte suddenly landing at Frejus with the prestige of his victories in the East and now after Hoche s death 1797 appearing as sole master of the armies 3 In the coup of 18 Brumaire Year VIII 9 November 1799 Napoleon seized French parliamentary and military power in a two fold coup d etat forcing the sitting directors of the government to resign On the night of the 19 Brumaire 10 November 1799 a remnant of the Council of Ancients abolished the Constitution of the Year III ordained the consulate and legalised the coup d Etat in favour of Bonaparte with the Constitution of the Year VIII 3 The new government EditThe initial 18 Brumaire coup seemed to be a victory for Sieyes rather than for Bonaparte Sieyes was a proponent of a new system of government for the Republic and the coup initially seemed certain to bring his system into force Bonaparte s cleverness lay in counterposing Pierre Claude Francois Daunou s plan to that of Sieyes and in retaining only those portions of each which could serve his ambition 4 3 Constitution of the year VIII and later the French Empire The new government was composed of three parliamentary assemblies the Council of State which drafted bills the Tribunate which could not vote on the bills but instead debated them and the Corps legislatif whose members could not discuss the bills but voted on them after reviewing the Tribunate s debate record The Senat conservateur was a governmental body equal to the three aforementioned legislative assemblies and verified the draft bills and directly advised the First Consul on the implications of such bills Ultimate executive authority was vested in three consuls who were elected for ten years Popular suffrage was retained though mutilated by the lists of notables on which the members of the Assemblies were to be chosen by the Senate The four aforementioned governmental organs were retained under the Constitution of the Year XII which recognized Napoleon as the French sovereign Emperor but their respective powers were greatly diminished Napoleon vetoed Sieyes original idea of having a single Grand Elector as supreme executive and Head of State Sieyes had intended to reserve this important position for himself and by denying him the job Napoleon helped reinforce the authority of the consuls an office which he would assume Nor was Napoleon content simply to be part of an equal triumvirate As the years would progress he would move to consolidate his own power as First Consul and leave the two other consuls Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres and Charles Francois Lebrun as well as the Assemblies weak and subservient By consolidating power Bonaparte was able to transform the aristocratic constitution of Sieyes into an unavowed dictatorship 3 On 7 February 1800 a public referendum confirmed the new constitution It vested all of the real power in the hands of the First Consul leaving only a nominal role for the other two consuls A full 99 9 of voters approved the motion according to the released results While this near unanimity is certainly open to question Napoleon was genuinely popular among many voters and after a period of strife many in France were reassured by his dazzling but unsuccessful offers of peace to the victorious Second Coalition his rapid disarmament of La Vendee and his talk of stability of government order justice and moderation He gave everyone a feeling that France was governed once more by a real statesman and that a competent government was finally in charge 3 Napoleon s consolidation of power EditThis article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Portrait of First Consul Bonaparte by Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres Bonaparte needed to rid himself of Sieyes and of those republicans who had no desire to hand over the republic to one man particularly of Moreau and Massena his military rivals The victory of Marengo 14 June 1800 momentarily in the balance but secured by Desaix and Kellermann offered a further opportunity to his ambition by increasing his popularity The royalist plot of the Rue Saint Nicaise on 24 December 1800 allowed him to make a clean sweep of the democratic republicans who despite their innocence were deported to French Guiana He annulled the Assemblies and made the Senate omnipotent in constitutional matters 3 The Treaty of Luneville signed in February 1801 with Austria which had been disarmed by Moreau s victory at Hohenlinden restored peace to Europe gave nearly the whole of Italy to France and permitted Bonaparte to eliminate from the Assemblies all the leaders of the opposition in the discussion of the Civil Code The Concordat of 1801 drawn up not in the Church s interest but in that of his own policy by giving satisfaction to the religious feeling of the country allowed him to put down the constitutional democratic Church to rally round him the consciences of the peasants and above all to deprive the royalists of their best weapon The Articles Organiques hid from the eyes of his companions in arms and councillors a reaction which in fact if not in law restored to a submissive Church despoiled of her revenues her position as the religion of the state 3 The Peace of Amiens 25 March 1802 with the United Kingdom of which France s allies Spain and the Batavian Republic paid all the costs finally gave the peacemaker a pretext for endowing himself with a Consulate not for ten years but for life as a recompense from the nation The Rubicon was crossed on that day Bonaparte s march to empire began with the Constitution of the Year X dated 16 Thermidor or 4 August 1802 3 On 2 August 1802 14 Thermidor An X a second national referendum was held this time to confirm Napoleon as First Consul for Life 5 Once again a vote claimed 99 7 approval 6 7 As Napoleon increased his power he borrowed many techniques of the Ancien Regime in his new form of one man government Like the old monarchy he re introduced plenipotentiaries over centralised strictly utilitarian administrative and bureaucratic methods and a policy of subservient pedantic scholasticism towards the nation s universities He constructed or consolidated the funds necessary for national institutions local governments a judiciary system organs of finance banking codes traditions of conscientious well disciplined labour force 8 France enjoyed a high level of peace and order under Napoleon that helped to raise the standard of comfort Prior to this Paris had often suffered from hunger and thirst and lacked fire and light but under Napoleon provisions became cheap and abundant while trade prospered and wages ran high The pomp and luxury of the nouveaux riches were displayed in the salons of the good Josephine the beautiful Madame Tallien and the divine Juliette Recamier 8 In strengthening the machinery of state Napoleon created the elite order of the Legion d honneur The Legion of Honour the Concordat and restored indirect taxes an act seen as a betrayal of the Revolution Napoleon was largely able to quell dissent within government by expelling his more vocal critics such as Benjamin Constant and Madame de Stael The expedition to Saint Domingue reduced the republican army to a nullity Constant war helped demoralise and scatter the military s leaders who were jealous of their comrade Bonaparte The last major challenge to Napoleon s authority came from Moreau who was compromised in a royalist plot he too was sent into exile 8 In contradistinction to the opposition of senators and republican generals the majority of the French populace remained uncritical of Bonaparte s authority No suggestion of the possibility of his death was tolerated 8 The Napoleonic age began here when he became officer of the French state and established the consulate The Duke of Enghien affair Edit Portrait of Louis Antoine de Bourbon Duke of Enghien by Jean Michel Moreau Because Napoleon s hold on political power was still tenuous French Royalists devised a plot that involved kidnapping and assassinating him and inviting Louis Antoine de Bourbon the Duke of Enghien to lead a coup d etat that would precede the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy with Louis XVIII on the throne The British government of William Pitt the Younger had contributed to this Royalist conspiracy by financing one million pounds and providing naval transport with the ship of Captain John Wesley Wright to the conspirators Georges Cadoudal and General Charles Pichegru for their return to France from England Pichegru met Jean Victor Marie Moreau one of Napoleon s generals and a former protege of Pichegru on 28 January 1804 The next day a British secret agent named Courson was arrested and he under torture confessed that Pichegru Moreau and Cadoudal were conspiring to overthrow the consulate The French government sought more details of this plot by arresting and torturing Louis Picot Cadoudal s servant Joachim Murat ordered the city gates of Paris to be closed from 7 pm to 6 am while Pichegru and Moreau were arrested during the next month These further arrests revealed that the Royalist conspiracy would eventually involve the active participation of the Duke of Enghien who was a relatively young Bourbon prince and thus another possible heir to a restored Bourbon monarchy The Duke at that time was living as a French emigre in the future Grand Duchy of Baden but then still the 1803 1806 Electorate of Baden but he also kept a rented house in Ettenheim which was close to the French border Perhaps at the urging of Talleyrand Napoleon s foreign minister and Fouche Napoleon s minister of police who had warned that the air is full of daggers the First Consul came to the political conclusion that the Duke must be dealt with Two hundred French soldiers crossed the border surrounded the Duke s home in Baden and arrested him On the way back to France d Enghien stated that he had sworn implacable hatred against Bonaparte as well as against the French he would take every occasion to make war on them 9 After three plots to assassinate him and the further financing of a supposed insurrection in Strasbourg Napoleon had enough Based on d Enghien s who were seized at his home in Germany and the material from the police d Enghien was charged as a conspirator in time of war and was subject to a military court He was ordered to be tried by a court of seven colonels at Vincennes D Enghien during his questioning at the court told them that he was being paid 4 200 per year by England in order to combat not France but a government to which his birth had made him hostile Further he stated that I asked England if I might serve in her armies but she replied that that was impossible I must wait on the Rhine where I would have a part to play immediately and I was in fact waiting 10 D Enghien was found guilty of being in violation of Article 2 of a law of 6 October 1791 to wit Any conspiracy and plot aimed at disturbing the State by civil war and arming the citizens against one another or against lawful authority will be punished by death He was executed in the ditch of the fortress of Vincennes The aftermath caused hardly a ripple in France but abroad it produced a storm of anger Many of those who had favored or been neutral to Napoleon now turned against him But Napoleon always assumed full responsibility for allowing the execution and continued to believe that on balance he had done the right thing Consuls EditThe provisional Consuls 10 November 12 December 1799 Napoleon Bonaparte Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes Roger DucosConsulate 12 December 1799 18 May 1804 Napoleon BonaparteFirst Consul J J CambaceresSecond Consul Charles Francois LebrunThird ConsulMinisters EditSee Cabinet of the French ConsulateThe Ministers under the consulate were 11 Ministry Start End MinisterForeign Affairs 11 November 1799 22 November 1799 Charles Frederic Reinhard22 November 1799 18 May 1804 Charles Maurice de Talleyrand PerigordJustice 11 November 1799 25 December 1799 Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres25 December 1799 14 September 1802 Andre Joseph Abrial14 September 1802 18 May 1804 Claude Ambroise RegnierWar 11 November 1799 2 April 1800 Louis Alexandre Berthier2 April 1800 8 October 1800 Lazare Carnot8 October 1800 18 May 1804 Louis Alexandre BerthierFinance 11 November 1799 18 May 1804 Martin Michel Charles GaudinPolice 11 November 1799 18 May 1804 Joseph FoucheInterior 12 November 1799 25 December 1799 Pierre Simon Laplace25 December 1799 21 January 1801 Lucien Bonaparte21 January 1801 18 May 1804 Jean Antoine ChaptalNavy and Colonies 12 November 1799 22 November 1799 Marc Antoine Bourdon de Vatry22 November 1799 3 October 1801 Pierre Alexandre Laurent Forfait3 October 1801 18 May 1804 Denis DecresSecretary of State 25 December 1799 18 May 1804 Hugues Bernard Maret duc de BassanoTreasury 27 September 1801 18 May 1804 Francois Barbe MarboisWar Administration 12 March 1802 18 May 1804 Jean Francois Aime DejeanReferences Edit Robert B Holtman The Napoleonic Revolution Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1981 31 Jones Colin 1994 The Cambridge Illustrated History of France 1st ed Cambridge University Press pp 193 94 ISBN 0 521 43294 4 a b c d e f g h i Wiriath 1911 p 860 Antoine Claire Thibaudeau Creation of the Consular Government Napoleon Symbol for an Age A Brief History with Documents ed Rafe Blaufarb New York Bedford St Martin s 2008 54 56 From Life Consulship to the hereditary Empire 1802 1804 Napoleon org Retrieved 9 January 2012 Frank McLynn 2002 Napoleon Arcade Publishing pp 253 54 ISBN 978 1 55970 631 5 August 1802 referendum Lucius Hudson Holt Alexander Wheeler Chilton 1919 A Brief History of Europe from 1789 1815 The Macmillan Company p 206 August 1802 referendum napoleon a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b c d Wiriath 1911 p 861 Cronin 1994 p 242 Cronin 1994 pp 243 44 Muel Leon 1891 Gouvernements ministeres et constitutions de la France depuis cent ans Precis historique des revolutions des crises ministerielles et gouvernementales et des changements de constitutions de la France depuis 1789 jusqu en 1890 Marchal et Billard p 61 Retrieved 3 May 2014 Bibliography EditHistoire et Figurines website English language version Accessed October 2006 Tom Holmberg The d Enghien Affair Crime or Blunder September 2005 The Napoleonic Series website Accessed October 2006 Louis Antoine Henri duke of Enghien This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wiriath Paul 1911 France History In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 859 860 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French Consulate amp oldid 1131165006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.