Napoleon III (20 April 1808
9 January 1873), Charles-Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte,
was the first President
of the French Republic and the last monarch of France
. He
was also the nephew of
Napoleon I. Made
President by popular vote in 1848, he undertook a
coup in 1851, becoming dictator before
ascending to the throne as Napoleon III on 2 December 1852, the
forty-eighth anniversary of Napoleon I's coronation. He ruled as
Emperor of the French until September 1870, when he was
captured in the
Franco-Prussian
War. He holds the unusual distinction of being both the first
titular president and the last
monarch of France.
Early life
Napoleon III generally known as"Louis Napoléon" before he became
Emperor, was the nephew of
Napoleon
I by his brother
Louis
Bonaparte, who married
Hortense de Beauharnais, the
daughter by the first marriage of Napoleon's wife
Josephine de Beauharnais. The
Empress Josephine proposed the
marriage as a way to produce an heir for the Emperor, who agreed,
as Josephine was by then infertile. Louis's paternity has been
brought into question (
see Ancestry). Louis
Bonaparte also harboured a lifelong suspicion about his legitimacy,
although most historians have concluded that he was conceived by
Louis Bonaparte and Hortense.
During Napoleon I's reign, Louis-Napoléon's parents had been made
king and queen of a French
puppet
state, the
Kingdom of
Holland. After Napoleon I's military defeats and deposition in
1815 and the restoration of the
Bourbon monarchy in France, all members of
the
Bonaparte dynasty were forced
into
exile.
The little Louis-Napoléon was brought up
in Switzerland
, living with his mother in Arenenberg Castle
in the canton of Thurgau
, and in
Germany
, receiving his education at the gymnasium school at Augsburg
, Bavaria
.
As a young
man he settled in Italy
, where he
and his elder brother Napoléon
Louis espoused liberal politics and
became involved with the Carbonari, an
organization fighting Austria
's domination
of northern Italy
. On
March 17, 1831, while attempting to flee Italy due to a crackdown
on revolutionary activity by Papal and Austrian troops,
Louis-Napoléon's brother, suffering from
measles, died in his arms. His experiences in Italy
later had a profound effect on his
foreign policy.
The Four Napoleons (Collage, about 1858)
France was under both the Bourbon and then the
Orleanist monarchies, the latter a
Bonapartist movement that wanted to restore a
Bonaparte to the throne.
According to the law of succession Napoleon I
had made when he was Emperor, the claim passed first to his son,
the Duke of Reichstadt, known by
Bonapartists as Napoleon II,
or as "the King of Rome", the title his father had given him before
the collapse of the Empire, a sickly youth living under virtual
imprisonment at the court of Vienna
. Next
in line was Napoleon I's eldest brother
Joseph Bonaparte, followed by Louis
Bonaparte and his sons. Since Joseph had no male children, and
because Louis-Napoléon's own elder brother had died in 1831, the
death of the Duke of Reichstadt in 1832 made Louis-Napoléon the
Bonaparte heir in the next generation. His uncle and father,
relatively old men by then, left to him the active leadership of
the Bonapartist cause.
Thus he
secretly returned to France in October 1836, for the first time
since his childhood, to try to lead a Bonapartist coup at Strasbourg
. Louis-Philippe had established the
July Monarchy in 1830, and was
confronted with opposition from the
Legitimists, the Independents and the
Bonapartists. The coup failed and Louis-Napoléon returned to
Switzerland. When Louis-Philippe demanded his
extradition, the Swiss refused to hand over a
man who was a citizen and a member of their armed forces. In order
to avoid a war, Louis-Napoléon left Switzerland of his own
accord.
Louis-Napoléon stayed at No.
6 Clarendon Square, Royal
Leamington Spa
, between 1838-1839. The building is now
called Napoleon House and has a '
Blue
plaque' put up by the local council.
He was
quietly exiled to the United States of America
, and spent four years in New York
. He also sailed to
Central America.
He secretly returned
to France and attempted yet another coup in August 1840, sailing
with some hired soldiers into Boulogne
. This time, he was caught and sentenced to
life imprisonment, albeit in
relative comfort, in the fortress of the town of Ham
in the Department of the Somme. While in the
Ham fortress, his eyesight reportedly became poor. During his years
of imprisonment, he wrote essays and pamphlets that combined his
claim to be emperor with
progressive,
mildly
socialist economic proposals, which
he came to define as
Bonapartism. In
1844, his uncle Joseph died, making him the
heir apparent to the Bonaparte claim.
He
finally escaped to Southport
, England
in May 1846 by changing clothes with a mason
working at the fortress. His enemies would later derisively
nickname him "Badinguet", the name of the mason whose identity he
assumed. A month later, his father Louis died, making
Louis-Napoléon the clear Bonapartist candidate to rule
France.
Return to France
Louis-Napoléon lived within the borders of
the United
Kingdom
until the revolution of February 1848 in
France deposed Louis-Philippe and established a
Republic. He was now free to return to France, which he
immediately did. However, he found himself being asked to leave by
the provisional government, which felt that he was an unnecessary
distraction. Back in England, he volunteered to be a
special constable in the event of
Chartist rioting. In the same month, April,
he ran for, and won, a seat in
the assembly
elected to draft a new constitution. He did not make a great
contribution and, as a mediocre public orator, failed to impress
his fellow members. Some even thought that, having lived outside of
France almost all his life, he spoke
French with a slight German accent. His
temporary exile in 1848 proved to be a blessing in disguise for the
December presidential election, as it meant he played no part in
the
June Days, and was able to
enhance his image as "all things to all men" against his main
opponent,
Louis-Eugène
Cavaignac, who had led the repression against the
working-class of Paris.
President of the French Republic

Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte
When the constitution of the
Second Republic was finally
promulgated and direct elections for the presidency were held on 10
December 1848, Louis-Napoléon won a surprising landslide victory,
with 5,587,759 votes (around 75% of the total); his closest rival,
Cavaignac, received only 1,474,687 votes. Louis-Napoléon had no
long political career behind him and was able to depict himself as
"all things to all men". The
Monarchist
right (supporters of either the
Bourbon or
Orléanist royal households) and much
of the upper class supported him as the "least bad" candidate, as a
man who would restore order, end the instability in France which
had continued since the overthrow of the monarchy in February, and
prevent a proto-communist revolution (in the vein of
Friedrich Engels). A good proportion of the
industrial working class, on the other hand, were won over by
Louis-Napoléon's vague indications of
progressive economic views. His overwhelming
victory was above all due to the support of the non-politicized
rural masses, to whom the name of Bonaparte meant something, as
opposed to the other, little-known contenders. Louis-Napoléon's
platform was the restoration of order after months of political
turmoil, strong government, social consolidation, and national
greatness, to which he appealed with all the credit of his name,
that of France's national hero, Napoleon I, who in popular memory
was credited with raising the nation to its pinnacle of military
greatness and establishing social stability after the turmoil of
the
French Revolution. During his
term as President, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte styled himself
the
Prince-President (
Le Prince-Président).
Despite his landslide victory, Louis-Napoléon was faced with a
Parliament dominated by monarchists, who saw his government only as
a temporary bridge to a restoration of either the House of Bourbon
or of Orléans. Louis-Napoléon governed cautiously during his first
years in office, choosing his ministers from among the more
"
centre-right"
Orleanist Parti de
l'Ordre monarchists, and generally avoiding conflict with the
conservative assembly.
He courted Catholic support by assisting in
the restoration of the Pope's temporal rule in Rome, although he
tried to please secularist conservative opinion at the same time by
combining this with peremptory demands that the Pope introduce
liberal changes to the government of the Papal States
, including appointing a liberal government and
establishing the Code Napoleon there,
which angered the Catholic majority in the assembly. He soon
made another attempt to gain Catholic support, however, by
approving the
Loi Falloux in
1851, which restored a greater role for the Church in the French
educational system.
In the third year of his four-year mandate, President
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte asked the National Assembly for a revision
of the constitution to enable the president to run for re-election,
arguing that four years were not enough to implement his political
and economic program fully. The Constitution of the Second Republic
stated that the Presidency of the Republic was to be held for a
single term of four years, with no possibility of re-election, a
restriction written in the Constitution for fear that a President
would abuse his power to transform the Republic into a dictatorship
with a
president for life. The
National Assembly, dominated by monarchists who wished to restore
the Bourbon dynasty, refused to amend the Constitution.
The National Assembly law placed restrictions on universal male
suffrage, imposing a three-year residency requirement. It prevented
a large proportion of the lower class, which was itinerant, from
voting. In spite of his limited powers forcing him to acquiesce to
this law, Louis-Napoléon was able to seize the opportunity and
break with the Assembly and the conservative ministers opposing his
projects in favour of the dispossessed. He surrounded himself with
lieutenants completely loyal to him, such as
Morny and
Persigny, secured the support of the army,
and toured the country making populist speeches condemning the
assembly and presenting himself as the protector of universal male
suffrage.
After
months of stalemate, and using the money of his mistress, Harriet Howard, he staged a coup d'état and seized
dictatorial powers on 2 December 1851, the 47th
anniversary of Napoleon I's crowning as Emperor, and also the
46th anniversary of the famous Battle of
Austerlitz
(hence another of Louis-Napoléon's nicknames: "The
Man of December", "l'homme de décembre"). The coup
was later declared to have been approved by the French people in a
national referendum, the fairness and legality of which has been
questioned by Napoleon III's detractors ever since. The coup of
1851 definitely alienated the reactionary and careerist elements in
the Assembly.
Victor Hugo, who had
hitherto shown support for Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, decided to go
into exile after the coup, and became one of the harshest critics
of Napoleon III, despite the amnesty of political opponents in
1859.
Emperor of the French
Authoritarian empire
New constitutional statutes were passed which officially maintained
an elected Parliament and re-established universal male
suffrage. However, the Parliament now became
irrelevant as real power was completely concentrated in the hands
of Louis-Napoléon and his
bureaucracy.
Exactly one year after the
coup, on 2 December
1852, after approval by another referendum, the
Second Republic was officially ended
and the Empire restored, ushering in the
Second French Empire. President
Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte became Emperor Napoleon III. The numbering
of Napoleon's reign treats
Napoleon II, who never actually ruled,
as a true Emperor (he had been briefly recognized as emperor from
22 June to 7 July 1814).
That same year, Napoleon III began shipping
political prisoners and criminals
to penal colonies such as Devil's Island
or (in milder cases) New Caledonia
.

Napoleon III in 1863
The emperor, hitherto a bachelor, began quickly to look for a wife
to produce a legitimate heir.
Most of the royal families of Europe were unwilling to marry into the parvenu Bonaparte family, and after rebuffs from
Princess Carola of Sweden and from
Queen Victoria's German niece
Princess
Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Napoleon decided to lower his
sights somewhat and "marry for love", choosing the Countess of
Teba, Eugénie de Montijo, a
Spanish
noblewoman of partial Scottish
ancestry who had been brought up in Paris.
In 1856, Eugenie gave birth to a legitimate son and heir,
Louis Napoléon, the
Prince Impérial.
On 28 April 1855 Napoleon survived an attempted
assassination. On 14 January 1858 Napoleon and
his wife escaped another assassination attempt, plotted by
Felice Orsini.
Until about 1861, Napoleon's regime exhibited decidedly
authoritarian characteristics, using press
censorship to prevent the spread of
opposition, manipulating elections, and depriving the Parliament of
the right to free debate or any real power.
Liberal empire
In the decade of the 1860s, Napoleon III made more concessions to
placate his liberal opponents. This change began by allowing free
debates in Parliament and public reports of parliamentary debates,
continued with the relaxation of press censorship, and culminated
in the appointment of the Liberal
Émile Ollivier, previously a leader of
the opposition to Napoleon's regime, as (effectively) Prime
Minister in 1869. This later period is described by historians as
the
Liberal Empire.
Economic and social policy
The French economy was rapidly modernized under Napoleon III, who
desired a legacy as a reform-minded social engineer. The
industrialization of France during this period, in general,
appealed to members of both the business interests and the working
classes. Downtown Paris was renovated with the clearing of slums,
the widening of streets, and the construction of parks according to
Baron Haussmann's
plan. Working class neighbourhoods were moved to the outskirts
of Paris, where factories utilized their labour. Some of his main
backers were
Saint-Simonians, and
these supporters described Napoleon III as the "socialist emperor."
Saint-Simonians at this time founded a new type of banking
institution, the
Crédit Mobilier, which sold stock to the
public and then used the money raised to invest in industrial
enterprises in France. This sparked a period of rapid economic
development.
Napoleon's Empire has been said to be the first regime in France to
give "distinct priority to economic objectives". Napoleon sought to
advance his belief in
free trade, cheap
credit, and the need to develop
infrastructure as ways of ensuring
progress and prosperity through government policy. Napoleon, like
Haussmann and
Pesigny,
believed that the
budget deficits
that the state incurred due to its high contributions would be
offset by subsequent high profits. His regime has also been cited
as one of the few in French history to make a concerted effort
towards breaking down trade barriers.
As it turned out, this time period was favourable for industrial
expansion. The
gold rush in
California, and later
Australia, increased the European money
supply. In the early years of the Empire, the economy also
benefited from the coming of age of those born during the
baby boom of the
Restoration period. The steady rise of
prices caused by the increase of the money supply encouraged
company promotion and investment of capital. The mileage of
railways in France increased from 3,000 to 16,000 kilometres during
the 1850s, and this growth of railways allowed mines and factories
to operate at higher rates of productivity. The 55 smaller rail
lines of France were merged into 6 major lines, while new iron
steamships replaced wooden ships.
Between 1859 and 1869, a French company
built the Suez
Canal
, opening a new chapter in global transportation and
trade.
Algeria
Algeria
had been under French rule since 1830.
Compared to previous administrations, Napoleon was far more
sympathetic to the native Algerians, who appealed to his romantic
sentiments. Because of this he halted European migration inland,
restricting them to the coastal zone. Moreover, he freed the
Algerian rebel leader
Abd al Qadir (who
had been promised freedom on surrender but was imprisoned by the
previous administration) and gave him a stipend of 150,000 francs.
He also allowed Muslims to serve in the military and civil service
on theoretically equal terms and allowed them to migrate to France.
In addition, he gave the option of citizenship; however, for
Muslims to take this option they had to accept all of the French
civil code, including parts governing inheritance and marriage
which might conflict with Muslim tradition, and they had to reject
the competence of religious courts. This was interpreted by some
Muslims as requiring them to give up parts of their religion to
obtain citizenship and was resented.
One of the most influential decisions Louis Napoleon made in
Algeria was to change its system of land tenure. While ostensibly
well-intentioned, in effect this move destroyed the traditional
system of land management and deprived many Algerians of land.
While Napoleon did renounce state claims to tribal lands, he also
set in to effect a process of dismantling tribal land ownership in
favor of individual land ownership over the course of three
generations, though this process was accelerated by later
administrations. This process was corrupted by French officials
sympathetic to French in Algeria who took much of the land they
surveyed into public domain; in addition many tribal leaders,
chosen for loyalty to the French rather than influence in their
tribe, immediately sold communal land for cash.
Foreign policy
In his speech at Bordeaux in 1852, Napoleon III famously proclaimed
that "The Empire means peace" ("
L'Empire, c'est la paix",
literally 'The Empire, it is peace'), reassuring foreign
governments that the new Emperor Napoleon would not attack other
European powers in order to extend the French Empire. He was,
however, thoroughly determined to follow a strong foreign policy to
extend France's power and glory, and warned that he would not stand
by and allow another European power to threaten its neighbour. He
was also a partisan of a "policy of nationalities" (literally
"politique de nationalités") re-casting the map of Europe, sweeping
away small principalities to create unified nation-states, even
when this seemed to have little relevance to France's material
interests. In this he remained influenced by the themes of his
uncle's policy, as related in the
Mémorial de Sainte
Hélène, such as Italian unification and a united Europe. These
two factors led Napoleon to a certain adventurism in foreign
policy, in the opinion of some contemporaries, although this was
tempered by pragmatism.
The Crimean War
Napoleon's challenge to Russia
's claims to
influence in the Ottoman Empire led
to France's successful participation in the Crimean War (March 1854–March 1856).
During
this war Napoleon established a French alliance with Britain
, which continued after the war's close. The
defeat of Russia and the alliance with Britain gave France
increased authority in Europe. This was the first war between
European powers since the close of the Napoleonic Wars and the
Congress of Vienna, marking a
breakdown of the alliance system that had maintained peace for
nearly half a century.
The war also effectively ended the Concert of Europe and the Quadruple alliance, or "Waterloo
Coalition" that the other four powers
had established. The Paris Peace Conference of 1856
represented a high-water mark for the regime in foreign affairs,
when Napoleon had followed through with his ideas set out in
Les Idées Napoleoniennes.
Asia
In 1857, Napoleon III provided his assistance in negotiations to
end the
Anglo-Persian War, leading
to the March 1857
Treaty of
Paris.
In East Asia, Napoleon took the first steps to establishing a
French colonial influence in
Indochina.
He
approved the launching of a naval expedition under Charles Rigault de Genouilly in
1858 to punish the Vietnamese
for their mistreatment of French Catholic
missionaries and force the court to accept a French presence in the
country. An important factor in his decision was the belief
that France risked becoming a second-rate power by not expanding
its influence in East Asia. Also, the idea that France had a
civilizing mission was spreading.
This eventually led to a full-out invasion in 1861.
By 1862 the war was
over and Vietnam conceded three provinces in the south, called by
the French Cochin-China, opened three
ports to French trade, allowed free passage of French warships to
Cambodia
(which led to a French protectorate over Cambodia
in 1863), allowed freedom of action for French missionaries and
gave France a large indemnity for the cost of the war.
France
did not intervene, however, in the Christian-supported Vietnamese
rebellion in Bac Bo
, despite the
urging of missionaries, or in the subsequent slaughter of thousands
of Christians after the rebellion.
In
China
, France took part in the Second Opium War along with the United
Kingdom
, and in 1860 French troops entered Beijing. China was forced to concede more trading
rights, allow freedom of navigation of the Yangtze
, give full civil rights and freedom of religion to
Christians, and give France and Britain a huge indemnity.
This combined with the intervention in Vietnam set the stage for
further French influence in China leading up to a sphere of
influence over parts of southern China.
In 1866,
French naval troops attacked Korea
in response
to the execution of French missionaries there. Though the
campaign against
Korea was primarily the work of the ranking French diplomat in
China and not formally authorized by the French government, its
failure nevertheless resulted in the decline of French influence in
the region. In 1867, a
military
mission to Japan played a key role in modernizing the troops of
the
Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu, and even participated
on his side against Imperial troops during the
Boshin war.
Italy
As President of the Republic, Louis-Napoléon sent French troops to
help restore Pope
Pius IX as ruler of the
Papal States in 1849 after his rule had been overthrown by the
revolutionaries led by
Giuseppe
Mazzini and
Giuseppe
Garibaldi who had proclaimed the
Roman Republic (although as a
Carbonaro he had been involved in
plotting a similar revolt in the Papal States during his youth in
Italy). This won him support in France from Catholics (although
many remained supporters of the Bourbon monarchy at heart). Yet at
the same time he had sent an emissary to negotiate with the
revolutionary Italian nationalist
Mazzini.
The
Catholic Encyclopedia
observes: "In this way the difficulties of the future emperor
reveal themselves from the beginning; he wished to spare the
religious susceptibilities of French Catholics" and yet to support
"the national susceptibilities of the Italian revolutionists -- a
double aim which explains many an inconsistency" in his
policy.
Napoleon remained attached to the ideal of Italian nationalism
which he had embraced in his youth, and wished particularly to end
Austrian rule in Lombardy and Venice (he always nursed a dislike
for Austria as the incarnation of
reactionary, legitimate monarchy and the great
barrier to the reconstruction of Europe on nationalist lines, again
traceable back to his Carbonaro days). As Emperor, Napoleon dreamed
of doing this, and thus satisfying his own inclinations and winning
over liberal and left-wing opinion in France (which was
passionately in favour of Italian unification) while at the same
time supporting the Pope in Rome and thus maintaining conservative
and Catholic support in France. These contradictory desires were
evident in his policy in Italy.
In
April-July 1859 Napoleon made a secret deal at Plombières-les-Bains
with Cavour, Prime Minister of
Piedmont, for France to assist in expelling
Austria from the Italian peninsula
and bringing about a united
Italy, or at least a united northern Italy, in exchange for
Piedmont ceding to France Savoy and the
Nice
region (which was destined to become the so-called
French
Riviera
). He went to
war with Austria in 1859 and won victories at Magenta
and Solferino
, which resulted in the ceding of Lombardy to Piedmont by Austria (and in return
received Savoy and Nice from Piedmont as promised in 1860).
After this had been done, however, Napoleon decided to end French
involvement in the war. This early withdrawal, however, failed to
prevent central Italy, including most of the Papal states, being
incorporated into the new Italian state. This led Catholics in
France to turn against Napoleon. Napoleon tried to redress the
damage by maintaining French troops in the city of Rome itself,
which prevented the Italian government seizing it from the Pope, a
policy which Napoleon's devoutly Catholic wife Eugenie fervently
supported. However, Napoleon on the whole failed to win back
Catholic support at home (and made moves to appeal instead to the
anti-Catholic left in his domestic policy in the 1860s, most
notably by appointing the
anti-clerical Victor
Duruy Minister for Education, who further secularised the
schooling system). Nonetheless, French troops remained in Rome to
protect the Pope until the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in
1870.
Grand Scheme for the Americas
Napoleon III envisioned a "Grand Scheme for the Americas," which
would consist of three general points. The first involved
recognition of the
Confederate States of America
and a military alliance with them. The second involved
reintroducing monarchical rule to
Latin
America, in the form of
Maximillian I in
Mexico, and increasing French trade
throughout Latin America.
The third and final point involved control
over Mexico with the creation of a large buffer state from the Rio Grande
to the Californian Baja.
Mexico
Another example of Napoleon's adventurism in foreign policy was the
French intervention in
Mexico (January 1862–March 1867).
Napoleon, using as a
pretext the Mexican
Republic
's refusal to pay its foreign debts, planned to
establish a French sphere of influence in North America by creating a French-backed
monarchy in Mexico
, a project
that was supported by Mexican conservatives who resented the Mexican
Republic's laicism. The United States
was unable to prevent this contravention of the
Monroe Doctrine because of the
American Civil War; Napoleon
hoped that the Confederates would be
victorious in that conflict, believing they would accept the new
regime in Mexico.
With the support of Mexican conservatives and French troops, in
1863 Napoleon installed
Maximilian I of Mexico, a
Habsburg prince, as emperor. However,
ruling President
Benito Juarez and his
Republican forces retreated to the countryside and fought against
the French troops and the Mexican monarchists.
The combined Mexican monarchist and French forces won victories up
until 1865, but then the tide began to turn against them, in part
because the American Civil War had ended. The U.S. government was
now able to give practical support to the Republicans, supplying
them with arms and establishing a naval blockade to prevent French
reinforcements arriving from Europe. With the threat of an American
military intervention, Napoleon withdrew French troops from Mexico
in 1866, which left Maximilian and the Mexican monarchists doomed
to defeat in 1867. Despite Napoleon's pleas that he abdicate and
leave Mexico, Maximilian refused to abandon the Mexican
conservatives who had supported him, and remained alongside them
until the bitter end, when he was captured by the Republicans and
then shot on 19 June 1867. The complete failure of the Mexican
intervention was a humiliation for Napoleon, and he was widely
blamed across Europe for Maximilian's death. However, letters have
since shown that Napoleon III and
Leopold of Belgium both warned
Maximilian not to depend on European support.
Empress Eugénie has also been
largely blamed for the fiasco, the implication being that she tried
to meddle in affairs of state in order to get over her husband's
affairs of the heart.
Empress Carlota of Mexico visited
Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie at Les
Tuileries
to request financial and military aid to rescue the
agonizing empire, but her petitions were rejected. Charlotte
in turn insulted the Emperor and his wife by mocking their humble
origins. She subsequently declined into
mental illness.
United States of America
In the
beginning of the 1860s, the objectives of the Emperor in foreign
policy had been met: France scored several military victories in
Europe and abroad, the defeat at Waterloo
had been exorcised, and France was once again a
significant continental military power.
During the
American Civil War,
Napoleon III positioned France to lead the pro-
Confederate European powers.
For a time, Napoleon III inched steadily toward officially
recognizing the Confederacy, especially after the crash of the
cotton industry and his exercise in regime-changing in Mexico. Some
historians have also suggested that he was driven by a desire to
keep the American states divided. Through 1862, Napoleon III
entertained Confederate diplomats, raising hopes that he would
unilaterally recognize the Confederacy. The Emperor, however, could
do little without the support of the United Kingdom, and never
officially recognized the Confederacy.
Prussia
A far more dangerous threat to Napoleon, however, was looming.
France
saw its dominance on the continent of Europe eroded by Prussia's crushing victory over Austria
in the
Austro-Prussian War
in June–August 1866. Due in part to his
Carbonaro past, Napoleon was unable to
ally himself with Austria, despite the obvious threat that a
victorious Prussia would pose to France. Napoleon felt secure in
the presumption that the war with Austria would be drawn out, or
would result in Austrian victory, when he agreed not to intervene
in 1864. Yet, having decided not to prevent the Prussian rise to
power by allying against her, Napoleon also failed to take the
opportunity to demand Prussian consent to French territorial
expansion in return for France's neutrality.
Napoleon only
requested that Prussia agree to French annexation of Belgium
and Luxembourg
after Prussia had already defeated Austria, by
which time France's neutrality was no longer needed by
Prussia. This extraordinary foreign policy failure saw
France gain nothing while allowing Prussia's strength to increase
greatly. In part the reason for the Emperor's blunder must be laid
on his deteriorating health during this period—he had begun to
suffer from a
bladder stone that
caused him great pain, even preventing him from riding a
horse.
Napoleon's later attempt in 1867 to re-balance the scales by
purchasing Luxembourg from its ruler,
William III of the
Netherlands, was thwarted by a Prussian threat of war. The
Luxembourg Crisis ended with
France renouncing any claim to Luxembourg in the
Treaty of London .
Demise
Napoleon III paid the price for his failure to help defend Austria
from Prussia in 1870 when, goaded by the diplomacy of the Prussian
Prime Minister (and chancellor of the North German Confederation,
and soon of the new German Empire)
Otto von Bismarck, he began the
Franco-Prussian War.
This war proved
disastrous for France, and was instrumental in giving birth to the
German
Empire
, which would take France's place as the major land
power in continental Western Europe until the end of World War I. In battle against
Prussia in July 1870 the Emperor was captured at the Battle of
Sedan
(2 September) and was deposed by the forces of the
Third Republic in Paris two
days later.
Napoleon spent the last few years of his life in exile in England,
with Eugenie and their only son.
The family lived at Camden Place Chislehurst
(then in Kent
), where he
died on 9 January 1873. He was haunted to the end by bitter
regrets and by painful memories of the battle at which he lost
everything; Napoleon's last words, addressed to Dr. Henri Conneau
standing by his deathbed, reportedly were, "Were you at Sedan?"
("
Etiez-vous à Sedan?")
The Emperor died during a multistage process to break up a
bladder stone. The surgeon
Sir Henry Thompson, sounded
the emperor and detected a bladder stone.
Lithotripsy (a technique to fragment the stone
so that it could be passed) was performed on 2 January and 6
January under
chloroform anaesthesia
delivered by
Joseph Thomas
Clover. The cause of death was reportedly
kidney failure and
septicemia. Clover and Thompson signed the
post-mortem report with four other physicians; however, it has long
been suspected that the operation was botched due to the arrogance
of
Thompson,
resulting in the Emperor's untimely death.
Napoleon was originally buried at St. Mary's, the Catholic Church
in Chislehurst. However, after his son died in 1879 fighting in the
British Army against the Zulus in South Africa, the bereaved
Eugenie decided to build a monastery. The building would house
monks driven out of France by the anti-clerical laws of the Third
Republic, and would provide a suitable resting place for her
husband and son.
Thus in 1888 the body of Napoleon III and
that of his son were moved to the Imperial Crypt at St Michael's
Abbey
, Farnborough
, Hampshire,
England. Eugenie, who died many years later, in 1920, now
rests there with them. It was reported in 2007 that the French
Government is seeking the return of his remains to be buried in
France, but that this is opposed by the monks of the abbey.
Personal life
Louis Napoleon has a reputation as a womanizer, yet he referred to
his behavior in the following manner: "It is usually the man who
attacks. As for me, I defend myself, and I often capitulate." He
had many mistresses. During his reign, it was the task of Count
Felix Bacciochi, his social secretary, to arrange for trysts and to
procure women for the emperor's favors. His affairs were not
trivial sideshows: they distracted him from governing, affected his
relationship with the empress, and diminished him in the views of
the other European courts. Among his numerous love affairs and
mistresses were:

- Mathilde Bonaparte, his
cousin and fiancee;
- Maria Anna Schiess (1812-1880), Allensbach (Lake of Constance,
Germany), mother of his son Bonaventur Karrer (1839-1921);
- Alexandrine Éléonore Vergeot, laundress at
the prison at Ham
, mother of
his sons Alexandre Louis Eugène and Louis Ernest
Alexandre.
- Elisa Rachel Felix, the "most
famous actress in Europe";
- Harriet Howard, (1823-1865)
wealthy and a major financial backer;
- Virginia Oldoini, Countess de
Castiglioni, (1837-1899) sent by Camillo
Cavour to influence his politics;
- Marie-Anne Waleska, a
possible mistress, who was the wife of Count Alexandre Joseph Count
Colonna-Walewski, his relative and foreign minister;
- Justine Marie Le Boeuf, also known as Marguerite Bellanger, actress and
acrobatic dancer. Bellanger was falsely rumoured to be the
illegitimate daughter of a hangman, and was
the most universally loathed of the mistresses, though perhaps his
favourite;
- Countess Louise de
Mercy-Argenteau, (1837-1890), likely a platonic relationship, author of The Last Love
of an Emperor, her reminiscences of her association with the
emperor.
His wife, Eugenie, resisted his advances prior to marriage. She was
coached by her mother and her friend,
Prosper Mérimée. "What is the road
to your heart?" Napoleon demanded to know. "Through the chapel,
Sire," she purportedly answered. Yet, after marriage, it took not
long for him to stray as Eugenie found sex with him "disgusting".
It is doubtful that she allowed further approaches by her husband
once she had given him an heir.
By his late forties, Napoleon started to suffer from numerous
medical ailments, including
kidney
disease,
bladder stones, chronic bladder
and
prostate infections,
arthritis,
gout,
obesity, and the effects of chronic smoking. In 1856
Dr. Robert Ferguson, a consultant called from London, diagnosed a
"nervous exhaustion" that had a "debilitating impact upon sexual
... performance" and reported this also to the
British government.
Legacy
An
important legacy of Napoleon III's reign was the rebuilding of
Paris
. Part of the design decisions were taken in
order to reduce the ability of future revolutionaries to challenge
the government by capitalizing on the small, medieval streets of
Paris to form barricades. However, this should not overshadow the
fact that the main reason for the complete transformation of Paris
was Napoleon III's desire to modernize Paris based on what he had
seen of the modernizations of London during his exile there in the
1840s. With his characteristic social approach to politics,
Napoleon III desired to improve health standards and living
conditions in Paris with the following goals: build a modern sewage
system to improve health, develop new housing with larger
apartments for the masses, create green parks all across the city
to try to keep working classes away from the pubs on Sunday, etc.
Large sections of the city were thus flattened down and the old
winding streets were replaced with large thoroughfares and broad
avenues.
The rebuilding of Paris was directed by
Baron Haussmann (1809–1891; Prefect
of the Seine
département 1853–1870). It was
this rebuilding that turned Paris into the city of broad tree-lined
boulevards and parks so beloved of tourists today.
With
Prosper Mérimée,
Napoleon III continued to seek the preservation for numerous
medieval buildings in France, which had been left disregarded since
the French revolution (a project Mérimée had begun during the July
Monarchy).
With Viollet-le-Duc acting as chief architect,
many buildings were saved, including some of the most famous in
France: Notre Dame
Cathedral
, Mont Saint-Michel
, Carcassonne
, Vézelay Abbey
, Pierrefonds, Roquetaillade
castle, and others.
Napoleon III also directed the building of the French railway
network, which greatly contributed to the development of the coal
mining and steel industry in France, and thereby radically changing
the nature of the French economy, which entered the modern age of
large-scale capitalism.
The French economy, the second largest in
the world at the time (behind the United Kingdom
), experienced a very strong growth during the reign
of Napoleon III. Names such as steel tycoon
Eugène Schneider or banking mogul
James de Rothschild are
symbols of the period. Two of France's largest banks,
Société Générale and
Crédit Lyonnais, still in
existence today, were founded during that period. The French stock
market also expanded prodigiously, with many coal mining and steel
companies issuing stocks.
Although largely forgotten by later Republican generations, which
only remembered the non-democratic nature of the regime, the
economic successes of the Second Empire are today recognized as
impressive by historians.
The emperor himself, who had spent several
years in exile in Victorian Lancashire
, was largely influenced by the ideas of the
Industrial Revolution in
England, and he took particular care of the economic development of
the country. He is recognized as the first ruler of France
to have taken great care of the economy; previous rulers
considering it secondary.
His military adventurism is sometimes considered a fatal blow to
the
Concert of Europe, which based
itself on stability and balance of powers, whereas Napoleon III
attempted to rearrange the world map to France's favour even when
it involved radical and potentially revolutionary changes in
politics.
A
12-pound cannon designed by
France
is commonly referred to as a Napoleon
cannon or 12-pounder Napoleon in his
honor.
Napoleon III, to this day, lacks the favorable historical
reputation that Napoleon I enjoyed.
Victor
Hugo portrayed him as "Napoleon the Small" (
Napoléon le Petit), a mere
mediocrity, in contrast with Napoleon I "The Great", presented as a
military and administrative genius. In France, such arch-opposition
from the age's central literary figure, whose attacks on Napoleon
III were obsessive and powerful, made it impossible for a very long
time to assess his reign objectively.
Karl
Marx, in
The Eighteenth
Brumaire of Louis Napoleon, famously mocked Napoleon III
by saying that historical facts and personages often appear twice:
"The first time as tragedy, the second time as farce." Napoleon III
has often been seen as an authoritarian but ineffectual leader who
brought France into dubious, and ultimately disastrous, foreign
military adventures.
Historians have also emphasized his attention to the fate of
working classes and poor people. His book
Extinction du
paupérisme ("Extinction of pauperism"), which he wrote while
imprisoned at the Fort of Ham in 1844, contributed greatly to his
popularity among the working classes and thus his election in 1848.
Throughout his reign the emperor worked to alleviate the sufferings
of the poor, on occasion breaching the nineteenth-century economic
orthodoxy of complete
laissez-faire
and using state resources or interfering in the market. Among other
things, the Emperor granted the right to strike to French workers
in 1864, despite intense opposition from corporate lobbies.
The
Emperor also ordered the creation of three large parks in Paris
(Parc
Monceau
, Parc
Montsouris
, and
Parc des
Buttes Chaumont
) with the clear intention of offering them for poor
working families as an alternative to the pub (bistrot) on
Sundays, much as Victoria Park
in London
was also
built with the same social motives in mind.
Paternity
Speculation about his
paternity was a
favorite topic of his detractors, as his parents were estranged and
his mother Hortense was known to have multiple lovers. However, the
parents met briefly between 23 June and 6 July 1807, eight months
prior to his birth, and there is no reason to assume that Louis was
not his father. Additionally, Article 312 of the Napoleonic Code
stated (and still states) that the father of any child born within
wedlock is the mother's husband. The meeting eight months prior to
his birth meant that there was no "impossibility" of conception,
and that the Article 312 designated Louis as the father of the
future Napoleon III.
Ancestry
Bibliography
- Les Idees Napoleoniennes - an outline of Napoleon
III's opinion of the optimal course for France, written before he
became Emperor.
- History of Julius Caesar, a historical work he wrote
during his reign. He drew an analogy between the politics of
Julius Caesar and his own, as well as
those of his uncle.
- Napoleon III wrote a number of articles on military matters
(artillery), scientific issues (electromagnetism, pro and con of beet
versus cane sugar), historical topics (The Stuart kings of England), and on the
feasibility of the Nicaragua canal.
His pamphlet On the Extinction of Pauperism helped his
political advancement.
See also
References
- Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1912
- Immortal Steven R. Ward, p.80
- Maximilian and Carlota by Gene Smith, ISBN 0245524185,
ISBN 978-0245524189
- Sykes WS (1960). Essays on the First Hundred Years of
Anaesthesia, Vol. 2, Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh. ISBN 0
443 02866 4, p. 8.
- Wordpress.com
- Napoleon III, Georges Roux
Sources
- Thompson, J.M. Louis Napoleon and the Second Empire.
Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1965.
Further reading
- Among the leading comprehensive histories of the Second Empire include:
- De la Gorce, Histoire du second empire, (four volumes,
Paris, 1885-98), and
- Taxile Delord, Histoire du second empire, (six
volumes, Paris, 1869-76).
- Bernhard Simson, Ueber die Beziehungen Napoleond III. zu
Preussen und Deutschland, (Freiburg, 1882)
- Adolf Ebeling, Napoleon III. und sein Hof, (Cologne,
1891-94)
- Thirra, Napoléon III avant l'empire, (Paris,
1895)
- E. Ollivier, L'Empire libéral,
(Paris, 1895-1909)
- A. L. Imbert de Saint-Amand, Napoleon III at the Height of
his Power, (New York, 1900)
- T. W. Evans, Memoirs of the Second French Empire, (New
York, 1905)
- Fenton Bresler, Napoleon III: A Life, (London,
1999)
- David Harvey, Paris: Capital of
Modernity, (New York: Routledge, 2003)
-
Marie-Clotilde-Elisabeth Louise de Riquet, comtesse de
Mercy-Argenteau, The Last Love of an Emperor:
reminiscences of the Comtesse Louise de Mercy-Argenteau, née
Princesse de Caraman-Chimay, describing her association with the
Emperor Napoleon III and the social and political part she played
at the close of the Second
Empire (Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, Page & Co.,
1926)
Movie portrayals
External links