[A Short History of France by Mary Platt Parmele]@TWC D-Link book
A Short History of France

CHAPTER XVI
9/14

It was the critical moment at hand which turned Bonaparte's heart to steel.
Only a few days after this tragedy at Vincennes a proposition was made in the Tribunate to bestow upon the first consul the title of hereditary Emperor of the French! This new Charlemagne did not go to the pope to be crowned, as that other had done in the year 800; but at his bidding the pope came to him.

And when on the 2d of December, 1804, the crown of France was placed upon his head, the great drama commenced in 1789 had ended.
Rivers of blood had flowed to free her from despotism, and France was held by a power more despotic than that of Richelieu or of Louis XIV.
At war with all of Europe, Napoleon swiftly unfolded his great plan not only to conquer, but to demolish--not one state, but all.

He was going to create an empire out of a federation of European kingdoms all held in his own hand, and to tear in pieces the old map of Europe, precisely as he had the map of Italy.

He was going to break down the old historic divisions and landmarks, and create new, as he had created a kingdom of Italy out of Italian republics.

So, while he was fighting a combined Europe, Bavaria, Wurtemberg, and Saxony had become kingdoms, and the West German States, seventeen in number, were all merged in a Confederation of the Rhine, "the Rheinbund," under a French Protectorate.
Then Austria felt the weight of his hand.


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