NAPOLEONIC EUROPE (1799-1815)
Third Coalition (1804-1807)
On May 1804, Napoleon made
himself Emperor of France, and, functionally though not in name, Emperor of the
Italian Republic and the Confederation of Switzerland. With the Holy Roman
Empire clearly on its way into the French sphere of influence, Holy Roman
Emperor Francis II joined in the name-game and proclaimed himself Emperor of
Austria soon after Napoleon's coronation. In 1805, Austria allied with Britain.
When the Russian Czar, Alexander I, joined this group in April, the Third
Coalition was born. (Prussia, under Frederick William III, stayed out of the
coalition.
By 1805, Napoleon was
preparing to attack England. He had forces massed on the French coast of the
English Channel, and was preparing them for an amphibious assault. The Channel
was heavily defended by Nelson's fleet, but England held no sizeable English
army to stop Napoleon if his forces got through. Britain breathed a sigh of
relief when word came through that a combined Russian and Austrian army was
marching on France. Napoleon diverted his army from the invasion of England to
handle this new threat, though he continued to put naval pressure on England.
On October 21, 1805, the British fleet decimated Napoleon's fleet at the battle
of Trafalgar, solidifying its stranglehold on the sea. Two months later, on
December 2, 1805, Napoleon solidified his own hold on Europe by smashing the
Russo-Austrian offensive in Moravia, at Austerlitz. The Russians retreated to
Poland and the Austrians signed the Treaty of Pressburg, which gave Napoleon
even more Austrian territory in Italy.
In 1806, Napoleon finally
dissolved the tottering Holy Roman Empire, replacing it with the Confederation
of the Rhine, with himself as its "protector". Prussia, which had
stayed out of the Third Coalition, became concerned with Napoleon's expansion
of power in Germany. Frederick William III foolishly went to war without any
allies. He was soundly defeated at the battles of Jena and Auerstadt in October
1806 and forced to retreat east to Konigsberg. Along with the Confederation of
the Rhine, Napoleon now controlled western Prussia, including Berlin.
Next, Napoleon pursued the
Russians, overrunning them at Friedland on June 14, 1807. Alexander I was
afraid of retreating into Russia lest a rebellion break out when fighting
started on Russian soil. Instead, he negotiated the Treaty of Tilsit with
Napoleon in July 1807, allying himself with Napoleon, and horrifying the other
rulers in Europe. The Third Coalition was dead.
Commentary
To add to the prestige of
the ceremony, and to add a mark of validation and authority to his imperial
status Napoleon invited the Pope to his coronation ceremony, held in the
Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris. In this action, Napoleon hearkened back to
the Pope's crowning of Charlemagne,
the great Frankish emperor, in 800 AD. The Pope came to Napoeloen because he
did not want to make an enemy, since Napoleon's military power in Italy was
steadily increasing, threatening the Papal States and Rome. Although the Pope
was present at the ceremony, Napoleon did not allow the Pope to crown him, for
to do so might imply a tinge of allegiance or subservience to the Pope. Instead,
Napoleon, ever the self-made man, placed the crown of empire on his own head,
and then crowned Josephine empress.
Napoleon's planned invasion
of Britain in 1805 could have been a disaster for the British. If he could get
his forces past the British naval forces and on to the island, which barely had
a land army, French control of Britain would be virtually insured. Intervention
by Russia and Austria, even though it led to the defeat of both countries,
therefore may have saved Britain, preparing the way for Napoleon's later
downfall.
The Battle of Trafalgar,
during which Admiral Nelson lost his life, established Britain's naval
supremacy for the rest of the Napoleonic era, and even for the rest of the 19th
century. Napoleon, however, still seemed unbeatable on land. His control of
Europe was rapidly growing, and if he was not stopped soon, control of the
resources of all of Europe would eventually allow him to build a Navy large
enough to beat the more skillful British at sea.
Alexander I was an interesting
historical character. While Britain remained Napoleon's archenemy, we could
well consider Alexander as Napoleon's "foil". Like Napoleon,
Alexander controlled a vast territory, and was one of the most powerful forces
in Europe. Alexander also considered himself an "enlightened despot".
Although a czar in the Russian tradition, he had been educated by a very
liberal Swiss tutor, and had a very progressive, modern outlook. He wanted to
rationalize and modernize the Russian state, and he surrounded himself with
educated advisors for that purpose. He saw himself as Napoleon's rival in
Europe, and he was fairly original as monarchs go, advocating an idea of
"collective security" for all of Europe, by which all of the powers
would work together to make sure no one nation grew too powerful, so it could
dominate all the other nations. Thus, he wanted the other nation to ally
against whoever was most powerful, at this time France. But his opposition to
France was not only based on rational calculations of "collective
security", for Alexander was genuinely jealous of Napoleon's power and
influence. Furthermore, his anti- Napoleonic stand was sweetened by a British
offer to pay Alexander 1.25 million pounds for every 100,000 soldiers he raised
to oppose Napoleon. Finally, Alexander wanted what Russian rulers always want:
Poland. Poland would serve as a "buffer" between Russia and invasion
from Western Europe, and it would allow the czar to extend his influence
westward, into central Europe, and thereby gaining power in European affairs.
Why did Alexander ever
agree to ally with Napoleon in the Treaty of Tilsit? Napoleon, always crafty,
managed to appeal to Alexander's ego. He said that he and Alexander were alike,
and that while Napoleon's destiny was an empire in Europe, Alexander would be
the emperor of the East, ruling Turkey, India, and the like. Together, said
Napoleon, nothing could stop them. Napoleon also claimed that Alexander's
problems were caused by the "real enemy", Britain. Given his dire
straits, Alexander allowed himself to believe Napoleon and signed the treaty.
REFERENCE
Bergeron, Louis, et al. France Under Napoleon. Princeton University Press: 1981.
Chapman, Tim. The
Congress of Vienna : Origins, Processes and Results. Routledge: 1998.
Durant, William James, et al. The Age of Napoleon: A History of
European Civilization from 1789 to 1815. Simon
& Schuster: 1975
James, Cyril Lionel Robert. The Black Jacobins: Toussaint
L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution. 2nd ed. Vintage Books: 1989.
Rothenberg, Gunther E. Art of Warfare in the Age of
Napoleon. Indiana University
Press: 1981.
Tone, John Lawrence. The Fatal Knot: The Guerilla War in
Navarre and the Defeat of Napoleon in Spain. University of North Carolina Press:
1994.
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