[The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2)

CHAPTER VII
15/55

At the close a few senators called out, "Let us fight": but the spirit of the Dorias flickered away with these protests; and the degenerate scions of mighty sires submitted to the insults of an aide-de-camp and the dictation of his master.
The fate of this ancient republic was decided by Bonaparte at the Castle of Montebello, near Milan, where he had already drawn up her future constitution.

After brief conferences with the Genoese envoys, he signed with them the secret convention which placed their republic--soon to be renamed the Ligurian Republic--under the protection of France and substituted for the close patrician rule a moderate democracy.

The fact is significant.

His military instincts had now weaned him from the stiff Jacobinism of his youth; and, in conjunction with Faypoult and the envoys, he arranged that the legislative powers should be intrusted to two popularly elected chambers of 300 and 150 members, while the executive functions were to be discharged by twelve senators, presided over by a Doge; these officers were to be appointed by the chambers: for the rest, the principles of religious liberty and civic equality were recognized, and local self-government was amply provided for.

Cynics may, of course, object that this excellent constitution was but a means of insuring French supremacy and of peacefully installing Bonaparte's regiments in a very important city; but the close of his intervention may be pronounced as creditable to his judgment as its results were salutary to Genoa.


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