When Britain does it it's an excuse, but when France does it it's justified.
Does
what, exactly? Napoleon did not breach any part of the Treaty of Amiens. Britain whined about French actions in Piedmont and Switzerland, but the frontiers of Europe should have been discussed before the Treaty of Amiens, not after.
Still deny that you're a fanboy?
You know, I haven't called you names so far. Should I start now?
There was no popular movement akin to the French Revolution in Switzerland. There was some civil unrest, but it was of an entirely different nature. It was anti-landlord - much like similar disturbance in rural China before WWI, in fact - rather than anti-monarchy/oligarchy.
Could you elaborate on this? I'm not sure where you got that it was not a anti-monarchy civil unrest.
France entered Switzerland to create a satellite and to deny their enemies an ally, nothing more or less
This is a matter of perspective here. While securing Switzerland would certainly protect its weak flank, there was as much idealogical as their was practical reasons to secure Switzerland.
You mean they attempted to restore the government overthrown by French arms?
The very same, the same that was also very controversial, with support both for it and against it. The Helvetic Republic period of Switzerland is still controversial, so I'm not getting into it too much. Again, matter of perspective; some see it as a negative period because of foreign interference, others see it as the beginnings of Swiss federalism, especially Napoleon's Act of Mediation.
I bolded that section because it's hardly progressive. It's actually more repressive than Roman marriage and family law in several places.
Again, perspective. That was in the Code because since the Revolution increased the power of the State at the expense of the family, Napoleon wished to right the balance by strengthening the family, particularly its head. He also considered the family the best safeguard of the weak and underprivileged. Whether that's right or wrong is not up to me to discuss.
He was also elected. He didn't become President by launching a military coup against his superiors.
Yet they both lived in different time periods and political balance. Eisenhower's government was stable, not at war with most of the civilized world, and not teetering on the edge of civil war. The Directory was much different. Government was virtually non-existent, inflation was rampant, unemployment was big, roads were unsafe, Brittany and Vendee were again up in arms.
It wasn't as though he simply marched into Paris and overthrew the government. His first idea was to be elected as a Director, but was rejected, since the Constitution disallowed anyone under forty (Napoleon was 30 at that time).
Next he met Joseph Sieyes, who was the author of
What is the Third Estate? It was then that he got involved in a conspiracy to force the current government to resign and create a new Constitution.
He could always have stepped down.
There was not a lot of people around that was able to work like Napoleon did. If one were to look at the amount of effort he put every day into rebuilding France, well, I doubt few would be up to the task.
Failing that, he could have chosen his successor without need of returning to an hereditary monarchy
This I do agree with. When he was named First Consul for life, that was essentially Emperor. Establishing a imperial dynasty might have seemed right, and I can certainly see why he did it (not out of personal glory or to "raise himself higher and higher), but it alienated much of monarchical Europe.
A new nobility based on military officers and the Bonaparte family isn't oligarchical?
How does Bonaparte's families ruling over certain parts of Europe a bad thing? Foreign leaders were commonplace at that time. Britain was ruled by a German, and Sweden was eventually to be ruled by a ex-Napoleonic marshal.
Focusing on Naples first, ruled by Joseph: until 1806 Naples was ruled by a incompetent Ferdinand I, ruling for over fifty years, making the inhabitants of Naples among the most poorest and worst treated in Europe. 31,000 nobles and 82,000 clergy possessed 2/3 of the land.
Napoleon sent Joseph to Naples with orders to abolish feudalism, introduce the rights of man and protect his coast against the British navy. On August 2, 1806 he abolished all baronial jurisdiction, all rights up to personal services, and all water rights. A month later he divided up all feudal estates among the small farmers who worked them. Each province had a Council as the first step to parliamentary government, which was favored by liberal Neapolitans. The national debt of 130 million ducats was huge; to wipe it out, he sold off 213 monastic estates, and pensioned the monks with between 265 and 530 francs yearly. The new tax system favored the poor.
Next on Spain: Joseph did all the right things when he (reluctantly) was sent there by Napoleon. He gave Spain its first constitution, with a two-chamber legislature comprising a senate of 24 nominated by Joseph and a chamber of 162 deputies representing the three estates. So basically, the same formula as Naples; the only difference is that it failed.
Holland became ruled by Louis Bonaparte, and he eventually became popular with the Dutch: introducing a more humane criminal code, organizing an annual exhibition to encourage Dutch industry, persuading Napoleon to withdraw French troops and to dispense the Dutch from conscription, all made him popular with the Dutch people. Eventually he got on bad terms with his brother, becoming more acquiescent to Dutch demands: when they wanted a nobility, Louis created one; Napoleon had to step in and make him cancel it. Louis was too conscientious to compromise, and a worsening military situation made it clear Napoleon couldn't compromise either, so in 1810 he annexed Holland to France.
I'd say, for the most part (with the exception of Jerome), Napoleon's brothers ruled well. I wouldn't call it an "oligarchy", either. Even though they ruled countries allied to France or were client states, they were still, governmental wise, separate from the constitutional monarchy of the French Empire.
Bullplop. The Continental System was designed to cripple the European economy, making it dependent upon France. He made several statements of such. Napoleon wasn't stupid enough to think he could seriously damage the British economy through the Continental System; in fact, he turned a blind eye to under-the-table trade between Britain and the Continent wen it suited him. Even between Britain and France!
Yes, let's disregard the fact that Napoleon was economically intelligent, he just decided to cripple the entire Continent merely to make it dependent on him.
I heartily disagree with this, but it is, as has been said in this thread, an alternate interpretation. If that's really how you perceive it to be, so be it.
Just because they weren't too interested in gaining it didn't mean they were going to give it up once they had it. It was useful, just not worth the effort of pushing for until it was literally handed to them.
But in 1808 Finland was not part of Russia, and Napoleon did not actually order or pressure Alexander to take Finland, only encouraging him to do so. Plus, ask any Romanav and they will tell you Finland was always a dream province of theirs.
Except that it didn't. Much like the truce in the Peloponnessian War, both sides were breaking the treaty from the start.
Except that it did. I have yet to hear how, exactly, Napoleon violated Amiens.
You're actually colaiming the raid on Copenhagen as a sign of British belligerency? Napoleon demanded use of the Danish Fleet for use against Britain mere days later; it was a pre-emptive strike, and obviously a timely one.
It was still an attack on a neutral country that Napoleon had no interests in until after 1807, the few days after it was attacked. Similar to how Napoleon violated the neutrality of Baden by capturing the Duke of Enghien, except he didn't blast a capital city to bits.
The loss of Haiti deprived France of its only major port facility in the region. If you don't understand the need for such a facility when embarking on a process of mass colonial expansion/ warfare, you have no business on a forum devoted to a strategic war game.
Define "region". If you mean the Antilles then you are correct. But Napoleon still possessed other ports, namely New Orleans. However this is, again, another matter of perspective: one can argue that because of the cutting of sugar revenue from Haiti, Napoleon considered the Louisiana Territory useless and thus sold it off.
You are hopelessly biased, completely non-objective and, unless you recognise this and correct it soon, entirely unworthy of our time and argumentative abilities.
And I say the exact same thing for your Anglo-Saxon dominated views. If I'm so unworthy of your time, then simply stop replying.
So you textually fellate him because others don't?
...Wow. You know, I really thought you wouldn't sink so low in gross terminology. I really thought I could have a debate with someone whose interpretation and perspective is different without them resorting to vulgar language.
Bravo.
Might as well simply admit that this is nothing but a pitiful attempt at being edgy and nonconformative.
Whatever floats your moral boat.
He had no choice if he wanted to be left in power. He had to at least try to convince Europe he intended to remain peaceful. Didn't work.
Didn't work because of monarchical hostility, not Napoleon.
Considering the previous actions of France, this was entirely in self-defence. As was re-establishing the friendly Bourbon regime. Simple realpolitik in that case.
Alternate interpretation: it was a move to install a puppet government in France and to take advantage of its weakness, just like the monarchical powers did in the last years of the 18th century.
So Britain is only the bad guy when they don't support your view?
I didn't imply that; I was giving an example as to how much opposition there was to this seventh anti-French crusade.
You are not in the least bit reliable in an argument about Napoleon, as you are proving over and over again in this thread.
And you haven't shown that you can respect other people's opinions and interpretations. Name-calling, use of vulgar language and generally seeming to attempt to deface opinions that don't agree with you. If I'm not reliable, then stop wasting your time here.
As I said, I don't deny that Napoleon was perfect. He was just as flawed as a human being should, and made catastrophic mistakes, the Peninsular War coming to mind there. With such a colossus of a historical figure there very well should be both admiration and controversy surrounding him, and some of the things he did I frown upon (becoming emperor, executing the Duke of Enghien, the Continental System), but I for the most part view him as a positive force in history, despite his faults. I refer again to this:
http://www.napoleon-series.org/faq/c_leader.html