Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
A people united by a shared sense of kinship might be defeated, but
it was harder to turn them into imperial subjects because cooperation
with a conquering power became much riskier. Of course, nationalism also had a dark side. Particularism became intolerable, and often
it took compulsion to teach members of once distinct local communities to think nationally. In this sense, nation building could be even
more oppressive than empire building. Imperial rulers were invariably authoritarian and often brutal, but they had to tolerate, if not
respect, local identities because they played a central role in imperial
administration and extraction. Nation-states, however, gave ethnic
and religious minorities the choice of assimilation, marginalization,
persecution, or emigration.
The French nationalism that underwrote Napoleon’s imperial
project refl ected these liberating but coercive realities. Much like the
Roman proconsuls who used military triumphs as a springboard to
the imperial throne, Napoleon did not create his imperial state from
scratch. Instead, he inherited the tools of empire from the Bourbon
monarchs and their revolutionary successors. The architects of the
French Revolution may have executed Louis XVI for treason in
1793, but they retained the centralizing instruments of his enlightened absolutism. Revolutionary changes made the royal guard into a
Napoleonic
Italy 241
national guard and the royal army into a national one. Yet although
the members of the national assembly abolished feudal privilege,
seized Church lands, and affi rmed the natural rights of all men to
liberty, property, and security, they shared the Bourbons’ conviction
that they could use state power to transform all levels of society. Their
ambitious agenda included drafting a new calendar, inventing new
children’s names, and creating a “cult of reason” to break the power
of the Catholic Church. While they fell far short of their egalitarian
ambitions, they bequeathed Napoleon a strong centralized state.
In seeking a break with the past, the revolutionaries initially disavowed the centralized despotism of empire as a sin of the ancien
régime. In 1790, the Constituent Assembly responsible for drafting
a new constitution proudly declared: “The French nation renounces
any intention of engaging in a war of conquest and will never employ
its forces against the liberty of any people.”13 Nevertheless, the republican Girondins who controlled the assembly from 1791 to 1792 soon
overcame their anti-imperial scruples once they acquired the means
to build an empire. This began when they called upon the newly
enfranchised French citizenry to defend the revolution from royalist
conspiracies. Led by Jacques-Pierre Brissot, the Girondins forced the
king to declare war on Austria and Prussia to rally popular support
for the new regime. In convincing peasants and artisans to volunteer
for the National Guard, Brissot harnessed the power of nationalism
to the revolution.
The even more radical National Convention, which replaced the
National Assembly in the summer of 1792, went a step further and
declared France’s intention to export the revolution by offering
“fraternity and assistance to all peoples who seek to recover their liberty.”14 Suitably provoked, the Austrians and Prussians played their
role by invading and, after some initial successes, losing to the better led and better-motivated French national forces. This allowed the
radical regime to occupy the left bank of the Rhine and Belgium (the
Austrian Netherlands), thereby inciting the British, Dutch, Spanish,
Portuguese, and northern Italian states to join the Austrians and
Prussians in the anti-revolutionary First Coalition.
The threat of a hostile united Europe exacerbated simmering
domestic disagreements over the shape and character of the new
French nation that led the revolutionaries to turn on themselves.
In 1793, the execution of the king, military reverses at the hands
242 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
of the First Coalition, and economic trouble in Paris weakened the
Girondins to the point where an extremist faction of Jacobins, known
as the Montagnards, took control of the National Convention. Led by
Maximilien Robespierre, their Committee of Public Safety suspended
the constitution and coordinated the defense of France. For a little
more than a year, this group of twelve deputies ruled as dictators and
unleashed the infamous Reign of Terror against the real and imagined enemies of the revolution.
One of the committee’s fi rst actions was to introduce widespread
conscription to fi ll out the fl agging revolutionary armies. Surrounded
by foreign enemies and facing a shortfall of three hundred thousand
troops, the Convention ordered each French department (province)
to produce a set quota of men. Theoretically, this
levée en masse
was
a temporary requisition of manpower for the defense of the nation,
but the conscripts’ required service gradually stretched from months
to years.
The defi ant peasantry of Brittany and the Vendée refused to play
their roles as revolutionary Frenchmen and allied with the Catholic
clergy and royalist nobles in a localist counterrevolutionary revolt.
The Committee of Public Safety responded with a brutal, near genocidal campaign against this “Christian army.” The revolutionary
forces destroyed crops, burned towns, and sometimes massacred resistant communities. Showing no sympathy for his fellow “citizens,”
General François-Joseph Westermann assured his superiors in Paris:
The Vendée no longer exists. I’ve just buried it in the marshes and forests of Savenay. Following the orders I have received, I have crushed
children beneath the hooves of our horses, and massacred women so
that they don’t spawn any more brigands. You can’t reproach me with
having taken any prisoners, the roads are littered with corpses.15
Westermann’s ruthless treatment of the Vendée previewed the
counterinsurgency measures that Napoleonic generals would use
against rebels in Spain and the Kingdom of Naples. But these scorchedearth tactics weren’t particularly effective in either western France or
the wider empire. The fi ghting in the Vendée was so intractable that
Napoleon refused a posting to the region on the assumption his military career would suffer in fi ghting a largely unwinnable war.
Abroad, the Convention’s promise to bring liberty and fraternal assistance to the subject peoples of Europe was as hollow as its
Napoleonic
Italy 243
declarations of national solidarity with the common people of the
Vendée. In July 1794, mass mobilization, high revolutionary morale,
and better generalship enabled the French army to turn back an invasion by the First Coalition and push the boundaries of the revolution
to the Rhine, Alps, and Pyrenees. These successes were not enough to
defuse popular anger over the Committee of Public Safety’s excesses,
which included the arrest and execution of hundreds of thousands of
enemies of the revolution. Two days after the great French victory at
Fleurus, the more moderate members of the Convention ended the
Reign of Terror by sending Robespierre and his most radical allies to
the guillotine. By 1795, the result was a new constitution and a more
moderate government under a fi ve-man council known as the Directory. The Directory brought an end to the worst domestic abuses of
the revolution, but its members had no intention of giving up the
Convention’s foreign conquests. In annexing borderlands deemed
within France’s “natural frontiers,” the Directory implicitly acknowledged that the revolutionary regime had acquired an empire.
Ultimately, the promised returns of imperial rule proved as seductively irresistible to the French revolutionaries and republicans as
they had been to their Bourbon predecessors. It took enormous fi nancial resources to build a powerful centralized state, and the Directory insisted that the newly conquered territories had to reimburse
France for the expense of their “liberation.” Their continental French
Empire consisted of annexed territories known as
départements réu-
nis
(reunited departments) and puppet “sister republics.” The former
category included most of the Kingdom of Piedmont, the left bank of
the Rhine, Geneva, and the lands comprising modern Belgium and
Luxembourg. French administrators swept away the ancien régime’s
borders in these lands and subdivided their conquests into French
departments. The Dutch United Provinces and what was left of the
Swiss Confederation became the sister Batavian and Helvetic republics. Apart from Piedmont, which the French annexed, most of the
Italian peninsula met a similar fate.
Napoleon carried out this imperial engineering as nothing more
than a French general, but just as Julius Caesar used his victories in
Gaul as a stepping-stone to power, Napoleon similarly made his reputation as the conqueror of northern Italy. Although he was the son of
a noble Italian family that settled in Corsica when it was under Venetian control, he was very much a member of the French military caste.
244 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Christened Napoleone Buonaparte, he became Napoleon Bonaparte
after entering the École Militaire in Paris and earning a commission
in the French military. Like many of his peers, the young offi cer, who
spoke French with an Italian accent, found that the fl ight of senior
royalists after the revolution created considerable opportunities for
promotion in the nationalist army. It also helped that he became the
protégé of Paul Barras, one of the fi ve members of the Directory.
In 1795, Napoleon reached the rank of general after distinguishing
himself fi ghting royalist counterrevolutionaries, and one year later
the Directory chose him to lead the invasion of Italy. The Directory
designed the campaign as a feint to draw the First Coalition forces
away from Germany, but Napoleon had other ideas. Demonstrating
his superior generalship, he infl icted heavy casualties on the Austrians and drove them out of Italy entirely within the year. By October
1797, he was well on his way to Vienna when the Habsburgs dissolved the First Coalition by negotiating a peace treaty with France
at Campo Formio.
As the supreme commander of French forces in Italy, Napoleon
consequently found himself in control of most of the peninsula. Not
unlike Clive and the Bengali nabobs, he was generally free to do as
he pleased. Ignoring local appeals for an independent Italian republic,
he grouped Bologna, Ferrara, Modena, and Reggio together to create the Cispadane Republic. In 1797, he folded this puppet state into
the Cisalpine Republic along with the ex-Austrian Duchy of Milan
and the Lombard Republic, in addition to transforming Genoa into
the Ligurian Republic. Napoleon left Italy in 1798, but tensions with
the Papal States and the Kingdom of Naples drew his successors
southward, and their victories produced the Roman and Parthenopean
republics.
These sister republics were little more than French client states.
Napoleon assigned them restricted constitutions based on the Constitution of the Year III, which had brought the Directory to power
in France. He had no intention of allowing them to challenge French
interests and required his Italian allies to pay staggering amounts of
tribute in the form of cash and requisitioned food and military supplies. Not surprisingly, this rapacious behavior soon provoked popular revolts against the French liberators.
The Italian experience of subjecthood under the empire of the
Directory was fairly typical. The Dutch Batavian Republic had to pay
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Italy 245
one hundred million guilders to secure French diplomatic recognition,
in addition to supporting a garrison of twenty-fi ve thousand French
troops. This was imperial extraction. Seeking to make this new empire
pay, the Directory stripped conquered territories of useful machinery
and destroyed what remained to ensure that it did not compete with
French industry. As part of their plan to turn Paris into a new Rome,
they similarly requisitioned great works of art and manuscripts from
the museums, national archives, and stately homes of their sister
republics. Predictably, the French revolutionary armies were even
less restrained. Revolutionary generals may have cast France as the
defender of western civilization, but they had more in common with
the Ostrogothic plunderers of ancient Rome when they looted much
of northern Italy. Chauvinistic rank-and-fi le French soldiers placed
even less weight on the importance of solidarity with liberated peoples and followed the lead of their offi cers in living off the land.
Typically, the Directory’s imperial accomplishments brought little security at home. Imperial tribute was not enough to offset the
expense of nearly constant warfare, and the resulting economic instability undercut the regime’s popular support. Additionally, the temporary truce in the Vendée collapsed when British meddling stirred
up a new round of unrest. When the elections of 1797 returned a
substantial number of conservatives to local assemblies and brought