Napoleon Bonaparte

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Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821) was a military and political genius of historic proportions. As Emperor (self-proclaimed in 1804), he established a strong central administration and code of law, consolidating and institutionalizing many of the reforms of the French Revolution. More so than any former ruler, including Louis XVI, Maximilien Robespierre or the Directory, Napoleon brought stability where financial, political, and social turmoil had previously reigned. War had plunged the country into debt and brought about an economic recession. The middle class, or the bourgeoisie, felt strangulation by the nobility and the clergy, preventing them from progressing socially or politically. During the ten years of the revolution, the political systems in France were replaced with an ever-changing series of governments. None lasted for more than a few years.
The ruler, and King, of France at the beginning of the Revolution in 1789, was Louis XVI. He ruled as an absolute monarch, yet his abuses of the National Assembly and his excesses of power ultimately brought about his downfall. Louis tried to flee the country, but was captured and brought back to Paris where he was tried and sentenced to death by the guillotine (by one vote) for treason. Maximilien Robespierre, the leader of the Jacobins, who instituted France’s first republic, held power after Louis’ execution. Despite the new republican fervor and the nominally naming of the Republic, he ruled as absolutely as the monarchy h...

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