Revolutions - 3.52- There is Your Man
Episode Date: September 21, 2015And his name is Napoleon Bonaparte. Sponsor Link: lynda.com/revolutions Me on Twitter: twitter.com/mikeduncan...
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Hello and welcome to revolutions.
Episode 3.52, There is Your Man.
So we have somehow, amazingly, come to the end of the French Revolution.
We've been at this together for 14 months, more than 50 episodes, and over 250,000 words of transcript.
But today, the directory will be overthrown and Napoleon Bonaparte will come to power.
There are lots of places to date the end of the French Revolution.
The coup of Dermidor that toppled Robespierre might have actually been a good place to stop.
The referendum in 1802 that makes Bonaparte First Consul for Life is another good candidate.
That time Napoleon becomes emperor in 1804.
But we are stopping here today with the coup of 18 Brumere that brings Bonaparte to power for the first time.
And we're just going to go ahead and say that this is the end of the French Revolution.
In the late summer of 1799, the French Republic appeared to be facing a crisis not seen since the dark days of 1793.
The French armies were losing on all fronts. An invasion of France seemed not just possible, but probable.
And on top of that, anger over taxes and conscription was leading to domestic uprisings.
Uprisings egged on by royalist agitators still trying to bring the Republic to its knees.
And the response in Paris very much echoed the response to the great crisis.
of 1793. The neo-jacubans were on the rise. A de facto Levei en masse had been declared.
Nobles and emigres faced summary persecution. The central government was hemorrhaging legitimacy,
and talk of another great revolutionary insurrection was in the air. But by the end of the year,
the directory would be overthrown, just not by radical revolutionaries, but rather a clique of
authoritarian who believed the way forward was not liberty and democracy, but power and order.
During the summer, Emmanuel Joseph C.S., now the dominant personality in the directory,
was already organizing an effort to nip any nascent left-wing revolutionary uprising in the bud.
On July the 20th, 1799, he and his new ally, Paul Barra, contrived to appoint Joseph Foucher,
Minister of Police. Foucher, remember, was one of the leaders of Deutche, he was one of the leaders of
de-Christianization, and he had played a major role in the reign of terror in Lyon, but had by now
restyled himself as a Terminatorian-style moderate, opposed to radical Jacobinism. On August
the 13th, the new minister of police decided the Menege club, that Neo-Jacobin club that
now boasted some 3,000 members, was a threat to public safety. Fouche ordered the club first
to vacate the Menege, and then outlawed it completely a few days later. And then, just a few days after that,
moderates in the legislative councils tossed out the indictments of the former directors who had been purged during the coup of Prairieal.
But then events beyond the control of Cies and Barra undermined these efforts.
In August, Paris would be told that A, anti-conscription peasant uprisings were breaking out.
B, General Joubert had been killed while getting beat by the Russians and Austrians at the Battle of Novi.
And C, the British and Russians had invaded the Batavian Republic.
Now, we dealt with Jeaubert at the end of last week's episode, so today we'll take the first and third of these new threats.
The directory had already dealt with a full-blown peasant uprising in Belgium over conscription.
And though that uprising had been suppressed, the atmosphere there was still thick with resentment.
It's one of the reasons the British and Russians were about to feel so confident about invading the Netherlands.
Through the spring and summer of 1799, resistance to the draft was widespread across France.
Royalist agents took notice and decided to exploit it.
It goes without saying that in the Western departments, the old Shuwan and Catholic and Royal Army Network started to reform and reconnect.
Scattered raids and guerrilla ambushes signaled a possible return of civil war in the West.
But the hottest bet of resistance in 1799 turned out to be way down in the very southwest around the city of Toulouse.
At the beginning of August, a peasant mob fully 10,000
strong organized and started rampaging around the countryside.
Unfortunately for this mob, though, the city of Toulouse itself had always been a fairly
strong Jacobin stronghold, and so the city's far better equipped, trained, and led National Guard
units were able to quash the uprising by the end of the month.
So within weeks of finding out that an entire department was in revolt, Paris learned that
it really wasn't anymore.
But this was good news, bad news for the directorial regime.
Putting down peasant revolts is always good news, but it was worrisome that it had been suppressed by enthusiastic left-wing Jacobins.
It only added further momentum to a movement the directory was trying to squelch.
But no sooner had this good news, bad news, come in, then Paris received really bad news.
The Allied victories in Switzerland and Italy had given the second coalition an enormous boost of confidence,
so much so that the British and Russians had decided to launch a joint invasion of the Batavian Republic.
Bringing the Netherlands back into the British sphere of influence was the war aim of the British on the continent.
But in the larger strategic attack on France, invading the Netherlands would open up a new front in the war
that would prevent the French from effectively reinforcing their armies down around the Alps
and hopefully dealing with spreading domestic unrest.
The belief inside the British ministry was that the French occupation of the Netherlands was really unpopular,
and that any force they landed would be greeted as liberators. So a deal was struck between
Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and Tsar Paul. In exchange for a boatload of British money,
the Russians would provide 17,000 troops to augment a British expeditionary force 13 to 20,000 strong.
Together, they would invade the Batavian Republic and evict the French without breaking a sweat.
But as I mentioned back in episode 3.47, though the Dutch were not thrilled with their burdensome alliance with the French, they were not at all interested in welcoming back the British-supported William Prince of Orange.
William had become even more reactionary than the exiled King Louis XVI, and he was promising to restore the old Orange's oligarchy in its entirety and exact reprisals on anyone who would help boot him out of his country.
But the British didn't know this because they were getting their intelligence from agents of William Prince of Orange, and they were spinning great whoppers about how ready the Dutch were to rise up against the French and welcome William home.
Full of optimism, the British sailed down advance units towards the port of Dan Helder at the end of August, and their initial optimism was reinforced when the Dutch fleet that should have been preventing a landing just sailed out of the way and let the British pass.
On August the 27th, 1799, the British established a beachhead, and three days after that,
the crews of the Dutch fleet mutinied and defected to the Allies.
But the demoralized Dutch sailors, who wanted no part of fighting the British Navy,
did not really reflect the general attitude of their countrymen, as the British and Russians
would soon discover.
Opposing the British was a Dutch army about 20,000 strong, backed up by a French occupation
force of about 15,000.
That was the army that was supposed to be 25,000, and that's what the Dutch were paying for,
but it's still only just the 15,000.
Not knowing where the British planned to land, these forces were spread out all along the coast,
and it took a few days to concentrate once the British put in at Dan Helder.
But even when they did, they got beat at Crabondam on September the 10th,
which paved the way for the Russians to land their half of the Allied army,
plus additional British reinforcements.
By the second week of September, the combined British and Russian army numbered over 40,000.
Back in Paris, this new crisis triggered a showdown between the resurgent neo-jackabins
and the more moderate leaders of the Terminodorian variety, who were both appalled and terrified
that the left was getting ready to drag France back into the horrors of year two.
This battle culminated with a proposal by General Jordan.
Jordan was deeply annoyed with the directory for mismanaging.
the war and constantly sending him out there to lose, and so was now firmly aligned with the
Neo-Jaccovin opposition. On September the 13th, Jordan rose and proposed that the
councils declare the country in danger, just as the legislative assembly had done in July of 1792.
If the council so declared, the normal constitution would be suspended, and emergency powers
would go into effect. The neo-jackabin said this was an absolutely necessary step if France is going
to survive. The old revolutionary spirit must be renewed, and nothing could be allowed to stand
in the way of that renewed revolutionary spirit. But the moderate center was not at all convinced that this
was the case. Emergency powers had been necessary when we didn't have a stable constitution, they said,
but we have one now, and we should let it work. Everyone has the authority they need to organize and
rally the nation to victory. We just need to let them do their jobs. Plus, in case you've somehow
forgotten, it was the declaration that the country was in danger that led directly to the
insurrection of August 10th, the September massacres, and eventually the reign of terror,
and we do not want to go back to that. When the vote was taken the next day, the memory of all that
had been bad about emergency powers outweighed the memory of all that had been good about it.
In the Council of 500, the motion was defeated 245 to 171. Then, as luck would have it, the moderates were
proven entirely correct. They did not, in fact, need emergency powers to win the war.
And just as the spring and summer had brought nothing but bad news from the front,
the fall brought nothing but good news.
Up in the Netherlands, the British and Russian invasion was already stalling out.
Despite their hefty numerical advantage, or perhaps because of it, the British and Russians
were having trouble collaborating with each other. They were sweeping south across a wide front,
but not showing particularly strong discipline or coordination.
On top of that, large parts of the countryside were starting to flood,
and supply lines became treacherous, washed out, or impassable.
And of course, the kicker was that the Dutch were absolutely not rallying to their cause,
but instead rallying against it.
The Franco-Dutch Army scored a victory at Bergen on September the 19th,
and then fought the Allies to a draw at Alkmar on October 2nd,
though they did leave the Allies in strategic control of the field.
That set up what turned out to be the decisive battle of the campaign
at Astrakum on October 6th.
After an all-day fight, the British and Russians were broken into a chaotic retreat.
This defeat led to a strategic retreat all the way back to their original beachhead.
When they got there, the weather took a terrible turn,
making resupply and reinforcement from the North Sea nearly impossible.
With neither side looking to get bogged down in the siege through the winter, the French and British
negotiated an agreement that allowed the Allied forces to withdraw under very favorable terms,
including keeping the ships they had captured from the Dutch.
Signed on October the 18th, the Allies started to evacuate,
and the brief Anglo-Russian invasion of the Batavian Republic was over.
Meanwhile, down in Switzerland, the French were about to enjoy a similar run of success.
As a consequence of the invasion of the Batavian Republic, the Austrian and Russian forces down in Switzerland and Italy were shuffled around, much to the great dread of their two best generals, Archduke Charles for the Austrians, and the old undefeated Alexander Suvorov for the Russians.
In mid-August, new orders came in from the Austrian High Command. Archduke Charles was to withdraw the bulk of his army from Switzerland and marched them north to anchor the Rhineland, leaving behind 25,000.
Austrians and about 30,000 Russians to hold Switzerland.
To replace Charles's army, Suvarov was ordered to stop his attacks on the French in Italy
and instead come north to replace the Austrians in Switzerland.
Neither commander was happy about these orders.
And Charles, like intentionally lingered and delayed as long as possible before leaving Zurich.
His entirely justified concern was that the French general André Massana had gathered 80,000 men
and the window between Charles leaving and Suverov arriving would leave Masana with a local numerical advantage
as there would only be about 50,000 Russians and Austrians left holding Zurich.
When Charles withdrew, Masana was like, oh, happy day, and immediately drew up plans to go retake Zurich before Suverov arrived.
On September the 25th, Massana led his army on an attack on the city and found the Russian defenders overconfident and underprepared
and coordination between them and the Austrians profoundly lacking.
After heavy fighting, the French pushed the Allies back into Zurich itself,
and then the next day expelled them from the city in chaos and confusion.
The Allies lost something like 13,000 killed, captured, wounded,
and the Russians were now in full flight out of the mountains.
Meanwhile, Suvorov was just now pushing his way up to reinforce Zurich,
only to find that it had already been taken by the French,
who were now pivoting south to trap Suvorov in the mountains.
But Suverov slipped the trap and was forced to go on a pretty brutal march through the now
snow-covered Alps to escape. His men were exhausted, starving and frost-bitten when they got out,
but they got out.
Tsar Paul received word that his two armies in the West were in full retreat at almost the same
moment. First news that the invasion of the Netherlands had just flat out gone nowhere,
and then that his great armies in Switzerland and Italy, who had been steamrolling the French,
were now in a bloody, broken, and exhausted retreat.
Paul blamed the Austrians for setting his forces up to fail.
And so he did what the Austrians had been worried he would do before they decided to form
the second coalition in the first place.
In October 1799, Tsar Paul tore up the alliance with the Austrians and withdrew from the war.
Now, Paul was also pretty ticked off at the British because the Russians had,
endured the majority of the casualties in the invasion of the Netherlands.
The final break with the British would not come until mid-1800, though, by which point the
Tsar was chatting it up with French First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte about the possibility of a mutually
beneficial alliance, and the stately quadrille danced on. Ironically, the great victories of the French
in the fall of 1799 and the sudden withdrawal of the Russians from the second coalition did not strengthen
and stabilized the directory, but instead paved the way for its overthrow.
And that brings us to the final act of our drama, the coup of 18 Bremere.
Now, the thing about the coup of 18 Bremere is that Napoleon Bonaparte was not, in fact,
its principal mastermind. That honor goes to recently elected director C.S., who was
ably aided behind the scenes by recently ousted foreign minister Talleyrand.
Now, CS, as we've already established, has never been able to be able to beaded behind the scenes, who was
never been a fan of the directory, and his primary goal in joining it seems to have been tearing
it down from the inside. And this is something that he had been planning pretty much from the
beginning, and then really super planning when the Neo-Jacobans started to rise back up again.
C.S. believed it would be disastrous for France to fall back into the dark chaos of revolutionary
democracy. To accomplish his goal, C.S. said that he would need a head and a sword. The head
would of course be his own, so all he really needed was a sword.
C.S. had initially settled on young general Jobert to be his sword, and had engineered
Jobert's promotion to head the army of Italy in order to enhance Jobeer's reputation.
But then Jobert got beaten, killed at the Battle of Novi, and C.S. was back to square one.
None of the other possible candidates, though, were reliable.
Jordan was clearly allied with the neo-jackabins, the Minister of War, Jean-Beptus,
Bernadote was too, and indeed at that same moment those neo-jacobins were talking to Bernadote
about possibly leading a coup from the left, but that never went anywhere. C.S. finally came around
to call on General Moreau, who appears to have hated the directory with a passion,
but he was a soldier, not a politician, and didn't want to lead any political revolution.
As the story goes, C.S. was meeting with Moreau in mid-October 1799, trying to convince him to be the
sword, when word came through that General Bonaparte had landed in France. Both were shocked at
the no-onews as no one knew that Bonaparte had secretly ditched Egypt at the end of August,
but Morel allegedly turned to CS and said, there is your man. Bonaparte had finally arrived in
France on October the 10th, after a 40-plus-day voyage of successfully dodging British naval
patrols. After he landed, word spread like wildfire that the conquering hero had. The
conquering hero had come home. And as he traveled to Paris, he was greeted by jubilant celebrations
in every town he passed through. Local dignitaries would come out and meet him and glad hand him and
generally just cheer and wave their hats. This enthusiastic reception was based primarily on Bonaparte's
reputation as the bringer of peace. Everyone knew that it was Bonaparte who had ended the war,
and everyone knew that when he left, it had just started back up again. Of course, everyone did not know,
about Bonaparte's failures in Egypt yet, or the central role his invasion had played in starting
the war of the second coalition in the first place. The people wanted peace, and they believed
Bonaparte could deliver it. But if that was really the dream, then wow, guys, Bonaparte is really
not your man. When young Bonaparte arrived in Paris, now all of 30 years old, he was scrupulously
reserved about what his intentions were, and everyone in the capital projected their hopes onto him.
men who supported the directory wanted him to support the directory.
The neo-jacobins wanted him to lead a coup from the left.
CS and his faction wanted him to lead an authoritarian coup from the middle.
The only men who didn't see Bonaparte as a potential champion were the royalists.
It was Talirand who took the lead in drawing Bonaparte towards the conspiracy surrounding CS.
CS may have been looking everywhere for a sword, but Talryan had picked his man right from the moment
he returned from his exile in America. All that was left was to convince CS that Bonaparte was,
in fact, the guy. But there was a problem. Bonaparte and C.S. detested each other.
C.S. saw Napoleon as a rustic, uneducated provincial with an overinflated ego.
Napoleon saw C.S. as a pompous aristocrat of dubious loyalties with an overinflated ego.
Their partnership nearly failed before it even started, due to a little bit of aftorpearlane.
standoff between their mutually overinflated egos. When Bonaparte arrived in Paris, both men
wanted the other to pay the first call. C.S. couldn't believe Bonaparte wouldn't come around to pay his
respects, and Bonaparte said, I pay calls on no one, and was angry C.S. wouldn't come to him. It became
like a whole thing. Finally, Talleyrand went round to Napoleon and said, you're being an ass. You
have to make the first move, so just do it. And Bonaparte reluctantly agreed. It was the last,
time he would let CS win. For the next two weeks, a secret meetings were regularly held to
plot the fall of the directory. Besides Bonaparte, CS, and Talleyrand, the other principal conspirators
turned out to be Napoleon's brother Lucian, who was helpfully about to be elected president of
the Council of 500, police minister Joseph Houcher, who wasn't supposed to begin on it, but who said,
I'll help out when his spies uncover the plot. Also, including
were two of the four other directors, Pierre Roge de Coux and Paul Barra. But Barrae was included
in the plot specifically to prevent him from spilling the beans if he got wind of it. The secret
secret plan was to purge Barra along with everyone else when the time came because nobody
trusted him. For now, though, he was allowed to believe he was one of the inner circle conspirators.
The coup was arranged to unfold in three stages. First, all five directors would resign simultaneously.
Second, the legislative councils would be induced to appoint a new provisional executive to replace the
directory, and then third, that provisional executive would draft a new constitution.
But despite their careful planning, the coup was a very near-run thing.
Partly because it was planned to unfold too slowly, partly because it paid too much attention
to constitutional protocol, and partly because Bonaparte himself was impetuous and impatient.
As Duff Cooper says in his classic biography of Talleyrand, if you're going to stage a coup,
it has to be fast, it has to be willing to break the law, and you need a level head.
And that does not really describe the coup of 18 Premier.
But because there wasn't a real emergency out there that the conspirators could point to and say,
hey, we need to rewrite the Constitution because emergency emergency, they had to invent one.
For this, they could have gone one of two ways, either trump up a royalist insurrection,
or trump up a neo-jacobin insurrection.
After multiple discussions, the plotters settled on an invented insurrection from the left.
The left was stronger and would likely fight harder, and so it would be helpful to take them out
at the knees before they knew what hit him.
After securing the services of some friendly printers to pump out propaganda, financing from some
friendly bankers, and assurances from a cadre of officers that they would follow Bonaparte when the time came,
There was nothing left to do, but do it.
On the morning of November 9, 1799, 18 Bremere, year 8, Paris woke to find posters plastered
all over the city warning of a Jacobin plot to overthrow the government.
C.S. then dispatched a summons to the delegates of the Council of 500 to meet for an early
emergency session. A summons he accidentally forgot to give 60 delegates identified as
most likely to be hostile. When this emergency session met, Council President
Lucian Bonaparte stood up and said, gentlemen, we are all in imminent danger. A mob uprising not seen since the old days of revolutionary chaos is in the making.
Lucian then recommended the council immediately quit Paris and relocate to the nearby town of San Clu. The bewildered and nervous delegates agreed.
When the council of ancients met a few hours later, they were surprised to find the council of 500 had already approved the move and that they all had to like beat it out of town right away.
To protect the fleeing delegates and defend the government, the Council of 500 transferred command of all Paris area soldiers to General Napoleon Bonaparte.
After all, General Bonaparte had once saved the government from a royalist uprising on 13 von der Maier with his fabled whiff of grape shot.
Who better to protect us? And so the sword was given his sword.
So, so far things are going pretty good. As the Council's evacuated Paris, it was time for the five.
directors to resign. But only two of them were actually in on it, though, C.S. and Roger Ducco.
Barra, like I said, thought he was in on it. But then on the morning of 18 Bremere,
C.S. and Duccoe dropped out of sight, and Barra could not locate them or contact them.
Then the other two directors, General Moulon and Louis-Gerom Goyer, started sending Barra frantic
messages. What is going on? You have to do something. And Barra must have been like, well, I thought I was
doing something, but it looks like something is being done to me. Then Talleyrand came round to
Barra's house with a pre-written letter of resignation and said, sorry, old chum, but you need to go.
Realizing he had been dealt a fake hand, Barra decided it wasn't worth fighting. It's also like
99% certain that Talleyrand also delivered an enormous bribe to make this all go down easier,
though Barra later denied it. Barra was in his carriage and on his way out of Paris by the end of the day.
In the meantime, S.S. and Du Coe already signed their own resignations, leaving Moulon and Goyer as an impotent rump. Then General Moreau played his part in the coup. He showed up their apartments with a company of soldiers, arrested the two directors, and kept them under lock and key until they two agreed to resign.
But then things started to get dicey, and dicey in part because this was all planned to unfold over two days instead of being wrapped up by day one.
because when the councils convened in San Clue the following day, they discovered there was
shockingly little evidence to support Lucian Bonaparte's claim about this alleged Jacoban uprising.
It was starting to become very clear that they had been duped, but to what end and for what purpose
they did not yet know.
And that is when Napoleon blundered in.
Under the impression that the councils would compliantly agree to create a new provisional
government and then go away, he was annoyed that this was all taking too long.
So he pushed his way into the Council of Ancients flanked by soldiers, and the delegates were like,
oh, we get it now.
Bonaparte is trying to overthrow us.
The General tried to address them to demand that they order constitutional revisions,
but he was heckled pretty mercilessly, causing him to lose his temper and storm out.
He marched over to the Council of 500, and there received an even more hostile reception.
They too shouted him down, called him a tyrant, calls went out to outlaw him,
declare him an enemy of the state. Some of the delegates went so far as to actually manhandle Bonaparte
and push him out of the hall, cutting his cheek in the process. Bonaparte had stormed into the councils
to cow them into submission, and instead had left them agitated and emboldened and not wanting to go
along with anything. The success of the coup was now very much in doubt. The Bonaparte who saved the day
was Lucian. He followed his brother out of the Council of 500 and spun a wild lie to the
assembled soldiers that a company of ultra-radical delegates were inside that they had daggers,
that they had just tried to assassinate Napoleon, and were threatening the councils with further
violence. Led by Joachim Murrah, the man who had led the cavalry charge against the Turks
in the last battle in Egypt, and who was one of the few officers chosen to return home with Bonaparte,
the assembled soldiers charged in and cleared the halls.
some of the delegates literally running into the woods to hide.
When the dust settled, the conspirators rounded up enough compliant delegates to form a quorum
and induced them to call for a six-week recess while changes to the Constitution were discussed.
Then they appointed three provisional consuls to take the lead in those discussions,
and wouldn't you know it, those three were CS, Bonaparte, and Roger Duques.
The councils then appointed 50 men to stay in session to work with the consuls on
the revisions to the Constitution, while the rest of the delegates went home to wait for the results.
They would wait forever. The temporary recess turned out to be permanent. When the Council of 500
and Council of Ancients went home on November 10, 1799, they were never recalled. The directory
was dead. But as you can see, the coup of 18 Bremerit doesn't quite get Napoleon all the way into power.
He's one of the three provisional consuls, sure, but CS obviously believes that he is going to be the
dominant personality of the new government. Now that the sword has done his work, C.S. believed he would
be able to run political circles around Bonaparte. The head is craftier than the sword, right?
Except, my God, we're talking about Napoleon Bonaparte here, so obviously C.S. has wildly
underestimated his man. A Bonaparte was able to exploit the fact that the coup of Brumer would not have
been possible without armed intervention from the army. And because that army was loyal to Bonaparte,
Napoleon wound up playing a super active role in the writing of the Constitution of Year 8, which set up
what we call the French consulate. Now Bonaparte and CS did agree on a few things. Otherwise,
they wouldn't have even gotten into the business of using each other to seize power. They agreed,
for example, that too much democracy, too many destabilizing elections, was not a good thing. So the
Constitution of year eight created this unwieldy apparatus where a commune voters would get together
and vote 10% of their members to a departmental assembly, who would vote 10% of their members to a
national assembly, and then from that assembly, a wholly new unelected institution called the Senate
would pick 100 men to serve in a tribunate and 300 men to serve in a legislative assembly.
The tribunes would be allowed to debate a bill, the legislative assembly would be allowed
vote on it. But neither would have the right to introduce a bill in the first place. That would be left
to a small and also unelected council of state. The entire thing was designed to keep the people
as far away from the process as possible. But Bonaparte and CS differed on the all-important
executive. Both believed it must be the central power of the state. CS, though, wanted to create
two consuls, one for domestic affairs and one for foreign affairs. CS planned obviously to be one of the
first two consuls, but he did not want the other to be Bonaparte, and Bonaparte knew it.
CS instead dreamed up this office he called the Grand Elector. The Grand Elector would be appointed
for life and serve as a constitutional figurehead, and beyond the power to appoint the consuls,
the grand elector would have no other power. And that is where CS wanted Bonaparte.
to go. Bonaparte famously said, though, that he would not play the part of a fatted pig
and pushed to keep the system of three consuls in place. And once he had this concession in hand,
Bonaparte ensured that it would be an unequal triad, with the first consul enjoying all kinds of
special prerogatives, and wouldn't you know it, Bonaparte got himself appointed first consul.
Totally outmaneuvered. C.S. was shuffled off into the Senate, where he would pull
play an important role, but one clearly subordinate to First Consul Bonaparte, who turned out
to have been both the head and the sword. When the Constitution of Year 8 was promulgated,
it came with a preface that ended by saying that it was based on the sacred rights of property,
equality, and liberty that the revolution had been dedicated to from the beginning,
that the new constitution would be strong and stable, that it would protect the rights of
citizens and the health of the state.
Citizens, it said, the revolution is established on the principles with which it began.
It is over.
And indeed it was.
The constitution of year eight was the first constitution since the beginning of the revolution
that was not prefaced with a clear declaration of rights.
The revolution was indeed over.
But though we know what comes next, no one at the time could have possibly known that it really was the end of the
revolution, and that inside of five years, first consul Bonaparte would transform into Emperor
Napoleon I. Drawing a line between the revolution and the age of Napoleon is a tricky and
inexact and ultimately futile business. The run from the fall of the Bastille to Waterloo is all one
continuous story. But our story is now done. Napoleon Bonaparte is the de facto ruler of France.
but I am not just going to leave you hanging like that.
Next week, we will return for one last plunge into the breach with a special two-part finale.
One episode that looks backward over the ground we've covered to try to make some sense of what we've witnessed,
and one episode that looks forward, to give you at least a summary of what comes next,
and then take a look at what remains of the revolution after the restoration in 1815.
then I am off to welcome our new baby into the world, and so I may as well mention that if you've enjoyed the show and are sad that I will be taking two months off now would be a great time to donate and support the show at Revolutionspodcast.com.
The whole Duncan family, now one member bigger, will have your everlasting gratitude.
