Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
the nearly continuous warfare placed enormous burdens on their
resources and manpower. State spending rose from seven hundred
million francs to one billion between 1806 and 1812, and 80 percent
of these funds went directly to the military.19 Similarly, although auxiliary troops from the wider empire rounded out the French forces,
Napoleon needed mass conscription to force Frenchmen to take part
in his imperial enterprise. The French people fi rst experienced full
military mobilization under the emergency
levée en masse
of 1793,
and the Directory enacted permanent draft laws fi ve years later. But
as with the other state institutions inherited from the republican era,
Napoleon expanded and centralized the military conscription system.
From 1799 to 1813, his recruiters demanded roughly 2.8 million men,
which amounted to approximately two-fi fths of all eligible males or
7 percent of the population of preimperial France.20
Napoleonic
Italy 251
Common Frenchmen may have reveled vicariously in France’s
new imperial glory, but only fi fty-two thousand of them volunteered
for Napoleon’s armies before 1812. To meet the emperor’s insatiable
demand for soldiers, subprefects drew up comprehensive manpower
lists for every locality. For a time, the wealthy could hire poorer men
to take their place, but in the fi nal years of the war the authorities
conscripted rich and poor alike. In 1809, Napoleon needed a rushed
levy of 174,000 men to repel an Austrian invasion during the War of
the Fifth Coalition. As he grew more desperate, military recruiters
turned French orphanages upside down in their dragnet for boys over
the age of twelve. Many conscripts did not go willingly, and approximately 10 percent of all men called dodged the draft. In some areas
the evasion rate was as high as 40 percent. In response, the
gendar-
merie
tracked down resisters in mass manhunts, and the provincial
authorities punished the parents of missing men with fi nes and billeted
gendarmes
in their homes. By 1811, the French authorities had
swept up more than one hundred thousand fl eeing conscripts.21
Thus, even more than taxation, conscription brought unprecedented levels of state intrusion into the daily lives of common people.
Napoleonic offi cials imposed special taxes on localities that missed
their quotas, and the brigades of
gendarmes
that hunted draft evaders
were widely despised for their lack of respect for individual rights and
privacy. It is not surprising that popular hostility toward conscription sparked another outbreak of resistance in the regions of western
and southern France that had rejected revolutionary centralization in
the 1790s. In the Vendée, columns of troops burned defi ant villages,
and special tribunes sentenced more than four hundred resisters to
death.
These brutal tactics exposed the harsh realities and limits of
Napoleonic rule. Faced with the distraction of a multifront war and
the need to maintain the appearance of control, Napoleon quietly and
pragmatically allowed communities in the Vendée to default on their
tax and conscription obligations in the later years of his reign. He
actually had greater authority in the settled areas of the inner empire
than he did in some parts of France itself. The ability of people living in the Vendée and other relatively remote regions to resist his
attempt to turn them into obedient French citizens demonstrated that
localism was still a potent force. This rendered Napoleon’s centralizing project incomplete.
252 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
Nevertheless, the people of the Vendée’s nominal French citizenship
spared them from the full tribute demands that Napoleon imposed on
the common peoples of the wider empire. On paper, the Napoleonic
regime was relatively unique in the larger history of empire because
Napoleon and his offi cials pretended to make no distinction between
the populations of old France and conquered territories, which meant
that all of the peoples of the empire shared the same rights and obligations. This was in sharp contrast to Spanish and British imperial
policy in Peru and Bengal, where the boundaries of subjecthood were
pronounced and inherently discriminatory. In fact, however, only
the most useful notable and urban middle classes were eligible for
ralliement
and imperial citizenship. Even the patriots and wouldbe nationalists such as Ermolao Federigo who accepted Napoleon’s
modernizing rhetoric eventually learned that he always kept French
interests paramount.
From an administrative standpoint, the Napoleonic empire was
remarkably homogenous. Although Napoleon manipulated political
boundaries to create new departments and satellite states, he used
essentially the same institutions and laws to govern the French
metropole and his conquered territories. This was particularly true in
the imperial inner core, comprising the settled and economically integrated regions of eastern France, western Germany, northern Italy,
and the Low Countries. These territories contained the prosperous
and tribute-rich urban centers and fertile river valleys most easily
absorbed into the Napoleonic state system.
By contrast, the outer empire consisted of the mountainous and
densely forested regions of metropolitan France, central Europe, and
Italy, which stoutly resisted Napoleonic centralization. It took French
soldiers,
gendarmes
, and policemen to force communities in these
areas to acknowledge his authority, and the endemic banditry in the
outer empire demonstrated the real limits of French imperial power.
More signifi cant, the resumption of warfare after 1805 led Napoleon
to incorporate even more alien and inassimilable peoples in Spain,
southern Italy, the Balkans, and eastern Europe into the empire. This
included the unwise and ill-fated annexation of the former Austrian
territories of Trieste, Croatia, and Dalmatia as the Illyrian Provinces.
His hold on these regions was tenuous at best, and the expense of
ruling them strained French resources during the fi nal years of the
Napoleonic empire.
Napoleonic
Italy 253
In the inner empire, it usually took a period of transitional military
rule to soften up the
départements réunis
and prepare them for integration into France. One of the fi rst and most important steps was
to organize a
gendarmerie
to extend French authority as deeply as
possible into the countryside and the lower social orders. These forces
used a heavy hand to break up the guilds, corporate feudal bodies, and
local particularism that might hinder French attempts to tax and conscript. This is why Napoleon immediately imposed the Code Napoleon
in every annexed territory. Aiming to deal directly with the subject
population, his reforms established equality before the law but also
ended collective peasant rights, abolished monastic charitable institutions, and appropriated local sources of revenue. Napoleonic offi cials
similarly introduced the revolutionary practice of confi scating and
reselling Church lands to raise revenue. Collectively, these policies
were a radical shock to the society and culture of the
départements
réunis
.
The weight of French imperial rule was slightly lighter in the territories that Napoleon allowed to retain a measure of autonomy as
satellite republics and kingdoms. These were largely expedient artifi cial entities that reduced the strain of direct imperial administration
in regions that were less suited, at least in the short term, for incorporation into France. During the years when Napoleon maintained the
façade of the consulate he tended to call these puppet states republics,
but after he assumed the imperial throne in 1805 most became kingdoms. Some territories had the unique experience of falling into all
three categories. The Netherlands, for example, went from being the
Batavian Republic to the Kingdom of Holland in 1806 and then was
divided up and annexed as
départements réunis
four years later. In
the German-speaking lands, Napoleon reconfi gured the Holy Roman
Empire to create the Confederation of the Rhine and the Kingdom
of Westphalia. Further east, he undid the work of the Russians,
Prussians, and Austrians by reconstituting Poland as the Duchy of
Warsaw. In Iberia, Spain shifted from being a French ally to a puppet
state after Napoleon deposed the inept Bourbon monarchy in 1808.
In terms of governance, a well-developed road network and message system allowed the emperor to keep the satellite states on a short
leash. The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs handled their diplomatic relations, and Bonaparte family members became the kings
of Naples, Holland, Westphalia, and eventually Spain. Napoleon
254 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
kept the crown of the Kingdom of Italy for himself. Alternatively,
cooperative foreign rulers retained a measure of their authority if
they proved suffi ciently useful. King Max Joseph of Bavaria kept
his throne by enthusiastically adopting the Code Napoleon without
French pressure, and Frederick Augustus of Saxony spared the French
the costs of governing Poland by becoming the Duchy of Warsaw’s
nominal sovereign. Administratively, these satellite rulers still had
to follow Napoleon’s agenda. “Old Frenchmen” controlled their key
ministries, and most adopted Napoleonic constitutions that abolished
feudal privilege and instituted the primary elements of the French
legal reforms.
In both the annexed
départements réunis
and the satellite kingdoms
Napoleon sought to build a solid foundation for permanent imperial
rule by fashioning a new social order through
ralliement
and
amal-
game
. As in metropolitan France, he aimed to produce useful allies
who derived their status and privilege from their active participation
in the French imperial project. Napoleonic prefects may have aspired
to rule the annexed
départements réunis
directly, but most lacked the
linguistic and cultural expertise to communicate with their subjects.
Recognizing that they needed local assistance to govern effectively,
they courted ancien régime elites, urban notables, and professionals
by offering political stability, respect for private property, and lucrative employment in the civil service, courts, and military. Napoleonic
offi cials were also willing to work with cooperative local clergymen
even though many revolutionary Frenchmen still believed that the
Catholic Church promoted primitive superstition as a bastion of the
ancien régime.
Napoleon actually had little use for the foreign Jacobins and
republicans who had rallied to the French revolutionary cause in
the 1790s. These radicals lacked suffi cient infl uence with the general
population and still entertained potentially subversive aspirations for
national self-determination. When faced with reconciling their commitment to egalitarianism with their need for local allies the French
watered down their reformist agenda and dismissed the radicals who
embraced the ideals of the revolution in an effort to rally property
owners to their cause.
The appeal of
ralliement
varied from territory to territory. In
the Rhineland, the French regime won considerable support from
urban notables, wealthy landowners, and former radicals by reducing
Napoleonic
Italy 255
banditry. Ignoring political ideology, French offi cials won over men
of talent with jobs and social honors. It also helped that they gave
wealthy elites an opportunity to buy confi scated Church property
at reasonable prices. An even smaller handful of men, such as the
onetime Genoese revolutionary Gian Carlo Serra, who enlisted in
the Napoleonic imperial enterprise as a supporter of the Ligurian
Republic in the 1790s, advanced through the civil service ranks. Serra
even became the French resident in the Duchy of Warsaw in 1807.
Napoleon also found it easy to win allies among populations that had
suffered under the ancien régime. Poles served as loyal auxiliaries in
most of his wars because they needed French protection from Prussia
and Russia to realize their dream of an independent homeland. Jews,
southern German Protestants, and Freemasons also gained a measure of security under the Napoleonic regime’s emphasis on equality
before the law.
More often, however, the inherent risks of
ralliement
outweighed
its potential rewards. As in all empires, an alliance with an alien conquering power required imperial auxiliaries to cooperate in extracting wealth from their own communities. The men who rallied to the
Napoleonic regime had to help the French enforce conscription, collect taxes, and uphold a series of administrative directives that interfered directly with the daily lives of common people. In doing so
they earned popular disdain and risked violent retribution when the
French empire began to waver. Moreover, relatively few men could
match Serra’s rapid rise in the imperial civil service because most