Old equilibrium:
Napoleon Bonaparte was born on August 15th 1769 in Corsica, the son of a minor nobleman. He joined the French military in 1785, and was mainly in Corsica during the beginnings of the French revolution.
At the time of his birth, the monarchy in France was almost unquestioned, having been established for several centuries, and bolstered by the strong and lengthy rule of King Louis the XIV, the "sun king" who had ruled France for 72 years.
Louis XIV:
While Louis XIV was long dead, and his successors were not as powerful as he was, you have to remember that neither the Seven years war (Which caused tension between American colonists and the British parliament, and weakened France), nor the American Revolution had taken place yet. Monarchical power was still on top.
Breaking of the equilibrium:
Here the storming of the Bastile is depicted:
Once the commotion of the "reign of terror" was over and the establishment of the National Convention was completed,
Napoleon's fortunes improved. He was promoted to Commander of the Interior and given command of the Army of Italy. He was given the task of invading and conquering Italy.
In 1801 Napoléon, who was by this point a high ranking general and well liked by the people for his successful military exploits in Italy and Egypt, was approached a member of the directory (The governing council that ruled France) asking for his support in a coup to overthrow the government. He accepted the offer.
The coup was successful, and from 1801 to 1803 Napoléon was one of the three consuls of France.
Here Napoleon is depicted in the coup de etat:
New equilibrium:
In 1804, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor of France.
It is very interesting how this action mimicked Julius Caesar's becoming an emperor; consider: a triumvirate was present with both, (Napoleon being one of three Consuls) Napoleon is a great military leader, (like Julius Caesar) and the symbolic presence of the golden olive wreath. (The physical sign that they are the same kind of man)


Here is the sketch drawn at the coronation and final painting by Jacque-Louis David. As you can see, the pictures tell very different stories. In the sketch, the Pope is sitting looking sullen, and Napoleon looks proud and arrogant. In the painting however, the Pope has his hand raised in blessing, and Napoleon simply looks majestic. Napoleon knew the value of propaganda, and had Jacque-Louis David paint the picture the way He wanted it instead of the way it happened.
Napoleon was excellent at portraying his efforts as a new era, in tune with the spirit of fraternity, brotherhood, and patriotism.
*
This is not the end of Napoleon's tale; however, this is merely the end my study on how Napoleon changed the way rulers governed in Europe.
Napolean at Austerlitz:
The battle of Waterloo:

The Russians marching into Paris:
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napolean_bonapart
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleonic_Wars#Political_effects
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_revolution
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XIV_of_France
All pictures used in this blog posting are public domain as specified by US copyright law.













