Napoleon Bonaparte Napoleonic Code Analysis

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Given his significance throughout the late 1700s and the early 1800’s, Napoleon Bonaparte has been deemed a controversial figure by many historians. Born Napoleone di Buonaparte, he was a French military leader and a political figure who was feared by many and hailed as a military genius by others. Notwithstanding the praise, Napoleon disguised policies of his own interests as reforms that served the needs of the state. An analysis of the Napoleonic Code, Napoleon Bonaparte’s excessive use of military force and his reintroduction of Catholicism through the Concordat of 1801, provides a balanced overview of Napoleon as a corrupt leader.
Napoleon Bonaparte was one of the greatest masters of propaganda. Various forms of press, laws, documents
However, the ideas of female equality received a setback. The Napoleonic Code made the authority of men over their families stronger and deprived women of any individual rights. White adult males were considered above the law and given numerous privileges. This generalization instituted by Napoleon promoted gender inequality and racism. “Women are nothing but machines for producing children”- Napoleon Bonaparte. Women lost rights that they gained in the French Revolution. For example, women were not allowed to vote. When women were married, their husbands controlled all of their assets, money and property. A wife “owed” obedience to her husband and could not do anything without his permission, which included divorcing him. Under certain circumstances men could legally kill their wives if they found them to be unfaithful. To avoid this some women chose not to marry. However, under the Napoleonic Code, those who chose not to marry had fewer rights and could not be a legal guardian or receive wills. Moreover, the Napoleonic Code disenfranchised women in every sense by
As a former high-ranked military leader, Napoleon manipulated those into believing he was a Revolutionary hero. It was Napoleon’s so called “nationalism” that was responsible for millions of deaths. The innocent lives he took and countless countries and towns he destroyed can only be compared in modern history to Hitler and Stalin. Napoleon had an appetite for war, beginning with the 23 year period of the Napoleonic Wars. The wars stemmed from unresolved conflicts brought by the French Revolutionary Wars. In these wars, France faced the First and Second Coalitions. The size of France’s military was larger than the other opposing armies because Napoleon subjected civilians to conscription. Under Napoleon’s reign, families were forced to sacrifice their sons. Despite their size, the French lost control of Germany and Italy. The Napoleonic Wars divided France and threw much of Europe into turmoil. “Death is nothing, but to live defeated & inglorious is to die daily”- Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon was a power- hungry leader who only cared about winning wars. The 19th century witnessed death and slaughter on an unprecedented scale. Many people were slaughtered to satisfy Napoleon’s megalomaniac needs. Military deaths are invariably put at between 2.5 million to 3.5 million and civilian death tolls vary from 750,000 to 3 million. Thus there is an estimated of 3,250,000 to 6,500,000

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