READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE : A.D. 1453-1900
CHAPTER LXVII.
THE WAR OF LIBERATION AND THE FALL OF NAPOLEON
NAPOLEON’S
twenty-ninth bulletin from Molodetschno, which
arrived in Paris only two days before himself, had at length communicated the
real state of the grand army and filled the
Parisians with consternation. He was welcomed by the Legislative Body with its
usual servile adulation; and in a few days the misfortunes of the Russian
campaign seemed to be forgotten. Napoleon immediately began to prepare for the
great struggle which awaited him. The conspiracy of Malet had
shown that his dynasty depended only on his own life. To obviate this danger,
he determined on the establishment of a Regency. A law was passed for that
purpose, and the Emperor, by letters patent of March 30th, appointed the
Empress Maria Louisa Regent. The Arch-Chancellor Cambacérès was named First Counsellor of the Regency, the Duke of Cadore (Champagny)
Secretary. In order to strengthen his Government by conciliating the clergy,
who, since his misfortunes, had displayed strong symptoms of opposition,
Napoleon reconciled himself with Pope Pius VII who was still residing at
Fontainebleau, and concluded with him a new Concordat. But his principal cares
were directed to the raising of an army. As the conscription of 1812 was far
from sufficing for that purpose, a Decree was issued requiring 100,000 men from
the National Guard, another 100,000 from the conscriptions of the last four
years, and the same number from the conscription of 1814. The latter was raised
to 150,000, and thus the army was reinforced by a total of 350,000 men. But
this was not all. Appeals were made to the patriotism and to the fears of the
nation. The cry of 1793 against the Coalition was again raised, the country was
proclaimed to be in danger, and under the influence of the excitement thus
produced, the Senate voted, April 3rd—Prussia having then declared
herself—another 18,000 men. Among these was to be a guard of honor of 10,000
young men selected from the foremost families of France. Thus the French army
was again put upon a most formidable footing; but it was very deficient in
cavalry, especially light horse—a circumstance which deprived Napoleon’s
victories in 1813 of all adequate results.
One of the first
consequences of the Russian campaign was the abandonment of Napoleon by his
German allies, for which the Prussian general Yorck had
given the signal. Instead of joining Marshal Macdonald, the commander of his
division, at Tilsit, Yorck had concluded
with the Russian General Diebitsch a capitulation
at Tauroggen, December 20th, 1812, by which the
Prussian corps was to separate itself from the French army and remain neutral. Yorck, in concluding this convention, believed himself to
be acting in conformity with the secret wishes of Frederick William III, and
though that Sovereign and his Minister Hardenberg deemed it proper, or politic,
to censure the act, and even to supersede Yorck by
General Kleist, yet his act ultimately obtained a formal approval (March 11th).
The general feeling of the Prussians, and especially of some of their leading
men, inclined for an alliance with Russia. Many distinguished Prussians had
actually entered Alexander’s service. The Baron von Stein had been in constant
attendance upon him since May, 1812; while Clausewitz and several other
Prussian staff-officers had taken service in the Russian army. When, by the
progress of the Russian arms, Stein was enabled to visit Konigsberg, he
assembled the States of Prussia, and with the help of Dohna and
Clausewitz organized a militia of 30,000 men.
Hardenberg,
however, at first deemed it prudent to deceive Napoleon by renewed professions
of friendship. In order to obviate the impression which Torek’s defection was likely to produce in France,
Prince Hatzfeldt was dispatched to Paris in
January, 1813, with assurances of steadfast alliance on the part of Prussia.
Yet, at the same time, Frederick William was negotiating with Russia, and, for
the purpose of better concealment, at Stockholm. Soon after, General Krusemark was sent ambassador to Paris, to prepare
matters gradually for a rupture. He was instructed to demand 93,000,000 francs
as an excess of supplies furnished to the French armies under the Convention of
February, 1812. Towards the end of January the King of Prussia suddenly left
Potsdam, where he was in danger of a coup de main on the part of the French,
and proceeded to Breslau; taking with him, however, the French ambassador. But
after this step his intentions could not much longer be concealed, especially
as he now began to be surrounded by such men as Bleacher, Gneisenau, and Prussia Scharnhorst. On February 3rd he
issued a proclamation calling to arms all Prussians from the age of seventeen
to forty-four, and he soon after authorized the formation of volunteer corps.
By engagements with France, the regular army, as we have seen, could not be
carried beyond 42,000 men; but so large a portion of the Prussian youth had
been quietly exercised in the use of arms, that the King could at any time
dispose of 150,000 men. A treaty of alliance with Russia was signed by
Hardenberg at Breslau, February 27th, and on the following day by Kutusov at Kalisch. By this treaty Russia engaged
to provide 150,000 men for the ensuing war, and Prussia at least 80,000,
exclusive of garrisons. By a separate and secret article, the Emperor of Russia
undertook that Frederick William should be reinstated in all the dominions
which he had possessed before the war of 1806, with the exception of the
Electorate of Hanover. Alexander himself arrived at Breslau March 15th, and on
the following day the Russian alliance was notified to the French ambassador,
who immediately took his departure. On March 27th Krusemark delivered
to the French Foreign Minister the Prussian declaration of war.
As a complement to
the alliance of February 27th, an agreement was concluded between Russia and
Prussia, March 19th, as to the method of conducting the war. All German Princes
who did not aid in the war of liberation were to be declared deposed from their
thrones. The dissolution of the Confederation of the Rhine had been proclaimed
by Field-Marshal Kutusov at Kalisch,
March 25th. The Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin had renounced it before the
appearance of this proclamation (March 14th), and the Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz followed
soon after (March 30th).
Austria, like
Prussia, was preparing to throw off the French alliance covertly and by degrees,
although it seems certain that the Cabinet of Vienna had already determined, in
the middle of December, on joining Russia. Prince Schwarzenberg had
conducted the war on the part of Austria without any vigor. At the invitation
of Alexander, he had concluded at Warsaw an armistice with the Russians,
December 21st, and towards the end of January, 1813, he retired towards Cracow
and the frontiers of Galicia, taking with him Poniatowski and the Polish army, and abandoning Warsaw to the Russians by capitulation.
Austria assumed for the present the attitude of an armed neutrality, and
offered her mediation; in which policy she was joined by Saxony. The allies had
hoped to draw the King of Saxony to their cause, and that his example would
decide the other Confederates of the Rhine. But Frederick Augustus III turned a
deaf ear to their overtures; retired to Plauen, then to Ratisbon, in the
dominions of his brother-in-law, King Maximilian Joseph; and finally, towards
the end of April, at the invitation of the Emperor Francis, to Prague; whither
he was accompanied by his family and troops. By the Convention of Vienna, he
agreed to cede the Duchy of Warsaw, if that point should be made an
indispensable condition of peace; Austria undertaking that he should receive a
suitable indemnification so far as circumstances should permit.
Policy of Great
Britain.
Great Britain,
besides the part she was taking in the Peninsular war, was also engaged at this
time in a war with the United States of North America, arising out of maritime
questions connected with the Continental System. This war, however, which
lasted from June, 1812, to the Peace of Ghent, December 24th, 1814, had little
or no effect on the general affairs of Europe. But, although the two wars
alluded to were enough to occupy the attention, and employ the resources, of
Great Britain, she, nevertheless, took an active part in the affairs of the
Continent.
We have seen that,
by the treaty between Sweden and Russia, of April 5th, 1812, the former Power
had engaged to take part in the war against Napoleon, after she should have
been put in possession of Norway. The English Government, when their accession
to this Convention was requested, appeared disposed to support it with
subsidies; but, probably from a suspicion that Bernadotte was the secret friend
of Napoleon, they required that Sweden should first take an active part in the
war, by sending an army into Germany. So long as Prussia remained the ally of
France, this step was impracticable; but, after the catastrophe of the French
army, the objection vanished. In the spring of 1813, negotiations were renewed
with Sweden, and on the 3rd of March, a treaty was concluded at Stockholm,
between that Power and Great Britain. The English Government was desirous that
Denmark should be made a party to the arrangements, which included the cession
of Norway to Sweden, and negotiations were opened, through Russia, with the
Danish Government. Sweden declared that she should be content with the
Norwegian Duchy of Drontheim, as the possession
of that province would release her armies from the danger of being turned by
the Danes, and she offered in exchange her possessions in Pomerania. These
proposals were, however, rejected, and Sweden then reverted to her demand of
all Norway. By the treaty mentioned, Great Britain agreed to cooperate in that
purpose. Sweden engaged to employ on the Continent an army of at least 30,000
men, under the command of the Crown Prince, and Great Britain undertook to
furnish a million sterling for their equipment and maintenance. She also ceded
to Sweden the French island of Guadaloupe, which
she had conquered. Prussia also concluded a treaty with Sweden, April 22nd,
1813, by which she engaged to add a corps of 27,000 men to the army commanded
by the Crown Prince, and Charles XIII. also entered into an alliance with the
provisional Spanish Government, March 19th. But, in spite of these treaties, it
was not till the following August that Sweden declared war against France.
Napoleon no sooner
ascertained the intention of Charles XIII to enter the Coalition, than he
threatened to send 40,000 men to the aid of Denmark. The Crown Prince answered
this threat by his celebrated letter of March 23rd, 1813, in the composition of
which Madame de Stael is supposed to have been concerned. Bernadotte formed a
counter-scheme to overthrow Napoleon, by means of the French themselves, by
recalling from banishment General Moreau, who was then residing at Morrisville,
in New Jersey. It was thought that many of the French would join the hero
of Hohenlinden, including the prisoners set at
liberty by Russia and England. Moreau was sent for, and arrived at Helsingborg,
August 6th, but, unfortunately, only to meet his death shortly after.
The Emperor of
Russia had also succeeded in conciliating the Poles to his cause, chiefly by
means of his friend and confidant, the Polish Prince, George Adam Czartorynski. A Russian party had been organized by Czartorynski in Warsaw, which looked forward to the
re-erection of the Kingdom of Poland, not by means of Napoleon, but through the
powerful and beneficent Emperor of Russia. Alexander appears not to have given
any direct sanction to this scheme; but he assured the Poles of his friendship,
and promised that his troops should treat them as friends and brothers.
Napoleon started
from St. Cloud, to take the command of his armies in Germany, April 15th, 1813.
Meanwhile, Murat had conducted the retreat of the French from Russia by
Konigsberg and Dantzic as far as Posen, when he told
his officers that it was no longer possible to serve a madman; that there was
not a Sovereign in Europe who any longer trusted Napoleon’s word or his
treaties; that for his own part he could have made peace with England; that he
was as much the King of Naples as Francis was Emperor of Austria. It was in
vain that Davoust, the Prince of Neufchatel and the
Viceroy Eugene remonstrated; Murat set off by post, January 16th, for his
Neapolitan dominions in the disguise of a German traveler, thus abandoning the
trust which Napoleon had confided to him. After his departure, Eugene had the
courage to place himself at the head of the remnant of the grand army, about
12,000 men. The retreat from Posen to Leipsic reflects on Eugene the
greatest honor. He arrived at Leipsic, by way of Berlin and Wittenberg,
March 9th, and having been joined on his march by many scattered bands, he then
counted 50,000 men under his standards. Thus when all seemed lost he was mainly
instrumental in restoring the balance of fortune, and gained time for Napoleon
to reappear upon the scene. Besides the force under Eugene, there were also
upwards of 60,000 French distributed in Prussian and Polish fortresses.
Meanwhile the
Russians had entered Prussia, and were everywhere received by the inhabitants
as deliverers. Some of their light troops having pushed on as far as Hamburg,
the inhabitants rose against the French garrison, which had been much reduced
by the departure of General Lauriston, and constrained General Carra St. Cyr to cross the Elbe; when the Russian
troops were admitted into the town, March 18th, and the port was thrown open to
the English. Wittgenstein, leaving Berlin with the Russian van, March 29th, met
and defeated Eugene at Mockern, April 5th, who
thereupon retreated to Magdeburg, and ultimately took up a position on the
Saale, while Wittgenstein fixed his quarters at Dessau. The main body of the
Russians, under Alexander in person and Kutusov,
was at this time at Kalisch. The Prussian army had also been placed under
the command-in-chief of Kutusov. The allied army
began to move, April 7th. Win-zingerode and
Blucher traversing Lusatia, arrived before Dresden, when Davoust retired with his forces, after blowing up a great part of the bridge. The
allies entered the old town of Dresden, April 26th. Kutusov having
died on the 28th, the command-in-chief was conferred on Wittgenstein.
Napoleon arrived
at Erfurt, April 25th, and assumed the command of his forces. A campaign was
now to open on a scale never before seen in Europe. The line of operations
embraced the whole Continent, from the Baltic to the Adriatic, besides the
incidental war in the Spanish Peninsula. The French left rested on Lübeck and
Hamburg; their right on Verona and Venice. This line may be divided into three
portions: the first being comprised between Hamburg and the Erzgebirge, at the
southern extremity of Saxony; the second between the Erzgebirge and Tyrol, and
the third between Tyrol and the Adriatic. The first, or northernmost of these
divisions, was to be the main scene of action, and was occupied by the grand
French army, estimated at 250,000 men. A Bavarian corps on the Inn, and the
French reserves at Wurzburg, held the second portion of the line; making a
total force in Germany of about 350,000 men. In Italy, an army of 40,000 men
was posted on the Tagliamento. Napoleon formed a
junction with the army of Eugene on the 29th, between Naumburg and Merseburg on
the Saale. Some Prussian corps were driven back at Weissenfels,
and the French army took the road to Dresden. In order to intercept this march,
the Russians and Prussians, under the Emperor Alexander and King Frederick
William III in person, had concentrated themselves at Leipsic, whence they
marched out to meet the French on the plains of Lutzen,
famous for the last battle and death of Gustavus Adolphus. Napoleon was
ignorant of their position, and came upon them almost by surprise. His forces
were far superior in number, consisting of 115,000 men, while those of the
allies were under 70,000. The allies were defeated after an obstinate battle
at Lutzen or Gross Gorschen,
May 2nd, which, however, was anything but decisive ; in fact, both sides
claimed the victory. The allies retreated, as they asserted, only on account of
their numerical inferiority; they lost no guns nor prisoners, and retired in
good order, unpursued by the enemy. This result was chiefly owing to
Napoleon's deficiency in cavalry, while the allies were very strong in that
arm. In this battle, General Scharnhorst was mortally wounded.
The allies
retreating in two columns, crossed the Elbe, May 7th, the Russians
at Dresden, the Prussians at Meissen, and again formed a junction at Bautzen.
Here they took up a strong position, and having received large reinforcements,
determined to await another battle. The French entered Dresden, May 8th, where
Napoleon halted awhile to refresh his army, and to conduct some negotiations
with Saxony and Russia.
The allies had
profited by Napoleon’s delay of ten days at Dresden to strengthen their
position at Bautzen with field- works. Their left, under Wittgenstein, rested
on the mountains of Bohemia; their right, commanded by Blucher, was covered by
the Spree and the little town of Bautzen. Their whole army, which Alexander commanded
in person, numbered 96,000 men, of which 68,000 were Russians. The French army
consisted of about 148,000 men. Napoleon attacked the allies, May 20th and
21st. On the first day the French carried the town of Bautzen; on the next day
Napoleon broke the allied center, and compelled them to retreat. A movement of
Ney's contributed much to the victory. He had been detached with a strong
corps, apparently against Berlin, but suddenly retraced his steps, and fell
upon the right of the allies. Covered by their numerous cavalry, the allies
retired in good order towards Lauban and
Gorlitz, leaving to Napoleon the field of battle, strewn with 50,000 bodies.
The French attacked the Russian rear-guard at Reichenbach, May 22nd, but
were terribly maltreated and lost several guns. A few days after, Wittgenstein
was superseded in the chief command by Barclay de Tolly. The allies,
instead of proceeding to Breslau, struck to the right towards Schweidnitz, and formed an intrenched camp
at Pulzen, May 29th. Napoleon, on the other
hand, pushed on to Breslau, which he entered June 1st; an advance which somewhat
endangered his base of operations. In the north of Germany, the French and
Danes under Davoust recovered Hamburg, May 30th, and
took a terrible vengeance for their expulsion, by driving out 48,000 of the
inhabitants, and razing 8,000 houses. In conformity with the orders of
Napoleon, a regular reign of terror was now inaugurated, combined with
systematic pillage, including that of the bank. Liibeck,
which was entered by the French June 3rd, was treated in the same manner.
After the battle
of Bautzen, Napoleon renewed the attempt oat negotiation, and an
armistice was concluded at the village of Poischwitz or Pleistwitz,
near Jauer, June 4th. The armistice was to last till July 20th, with six
days' notice of its termination. Napoleon now returned to Dresden and employed
the interval in preparing the plan of the ensuing campaign, which was
calculated on the no longer doubtful accession of Austria to the allies.
England took an active part in organizing the Fifth Coalition. Lord Cathcart, the English Ambassador to the Court of St.
Petersburg, and Sir Charles Stuart, brother of Lord Castlereagh, accredited to
the Court of Berlin, both which Ministers followed the movements of the allied
armies, concluded treaties with Eussia and
Prussia at Eeichenbach. By that with Prussia,
signed June 14th, Great Britain agreed to pay a subsidy of £666,666 sterling
for the maintenance of 80,000 men during the remaining six months of the year.
If the allied arms should prove successful, the King of Prussia was to be
reinstated in the dominions which he had possessed before the war of 1806.
Frederick William III. on his side engaged to cede the bishopric of Hildesheim
and some other territories to Hanover. By the Treaty with Russia, June 15th, the
These negotiations
were to be kept secret; but Napoleon learned them all, and in a violent
scene with Count Metternich, whom the Cabinet of Vienna had sent
to Dresden to propose a peace Congress, he accused that Minister of receiving
bribes from England. It was, however, agreed that a Congress should assemble at
Prague, July 5th, under Austrian mediation, and the armistice was prolonged to
August 10th. None of the parties, however, were in earnest in this matter; they
were only seeking to gain time. The Congress did not assemble till July 26th,
when only a fortnight remained unexpired of the term agreed upon for the
armistice. Meanwhile Russia, Austria, and Prussia had concluded an eventual
treaty of alliance at Trachenberg, afterwards
converted into a definitive one by the Treaty of Toplitz,
September 9th, had arranged a plan of campaign, and appointed Prince Schwarzenberg commander-in-chief. During this period Napoleon, on his
side, concluded a treaty of alliance with Denmark, July 10th.
Many symptoms
seemed to betoken Napoleon's approaching fall. Discontent prevailed in France,
where the Legitimists were again active; Jourdan had been completely
defeated by Wellington at Vittoria ; the King of Naples was
treacherously negotiating with Austria and England. Nevertheless, though
Napoleon was aware of Murat's conduct, he was again summoned to take the
command of the French cavalry. That force had now been increased to 40,000 men,
and Napoleon relied only on Murat for the command of large bodies of horse. The
allied armies, since the junction of
Battles of Gross Beeren and Katzbach Napoleon opened
the campaign by despatching Oudinot with 80,000 men against Bernadotte
in Brandenberg. On August 23rd, Oudinot,
who had been rather too slow in his movements, engaged Billow's Prussian corps at Gross Beeren;
when, towards the end of the action, the Swedes came up, and the French were
entirely defeated with the loss of 26 guns, 1,500 prisoners, and a great deal
of baggage. Napoleon himself marched against Bliicher in
Silesia, imagining that he could dispose of that General before attacking the
main body of the allies. As the French had violated the armistice by levying
contributions in neutral districts, Blücher had
also advanced before the term agreed upon had expired, had occupied Breslau August 14th,
and driven the French over the& Bober. According
to a preconcerted plan,Blücher retreated
on the approach of Napoleon with his guards; and as the main body of the allies
had begun to debouch from Bohemia into Saxony by the left bank of the Elbe,
Napoleon was compelled to hasten back to the defence of Dresden. No sooner was he gone than Blücher attacked
the French under Macdonald on the Katzbach,
August 26th, and gained a decisive victory, capturing 18,000 prisoners, 103
guns, 2 eagles, and a great quantity of baggage wagons.
The advance of the
allied army upon Dresden is said to
In
the north, Ney, who had assumed the command of
Battle of Leipsic , 1813 On the 15th of
October Napoleon had assembled the greater part of his army at Leipsic,
fixing his headquarters at Reudnitz, a mile or two from the city. He had now determined to
risk all on a grand battle. His army consisted of about 170,000 men; that of
the allies, upwards of 300,000 strong, formed a sort of half-circle round him.
From these enormous masses, the Germans have called the battle of Leipsic the Volherschlacht, or battle of the nations. The Emperors
Alexander and Francis, and the King of Prussia, were present with their armies;
of which Prince Schwartzenberg had the
command in chief. Two or three distinct battles which took place October 16th,
formed a prelude to the grand battle of the 18th. The French had, on the whole,
the superiority in these affairs; but Blücher inflicted
a severe defeat at Mockern on the corps
of Marmont and Dombrowsky.
On the evening of the 16th Napoleon despatched General Meerfeld to the Emperor of Austria, with proposals for
a truce and separate negotiations, which however were not accepted. On the 17th
both sides rested on their arms, but the combat was renewed on the following
day. At an early period of the action Napoleon was deserted by the Saxon
troops, as well as by those of Wurtemberg.
Nevertheless, the French succeeded in maintaining themselves throughout the
whole of the 18th against far superior numbers; but their losses had been so
great that they were compelled to commence a retreat in the night. Napoleon,
after giving the necessary commands for that purpose, set off for Erfurt. The
confusion of the retreat was augmented by the carelessness of Berthier,
who had neglected to throw bridges over the little river Elster. Of the two which existed one broke down ; and the
whole army had, consequently, but a single route. On the morning of the 19th,
Macdonald, Regnier, Poniatowski,
and Lauriston kept the enemy at bay till the greater part of the
French army had passed the bridge, when the French themselves destroyed it,
Battle of Hanau The French army was saved from total destruction through
Napoleon having taken the precaution to send forward Bertrand to
occupy Weissenfels. It still counted 100,000
men, but in a state of disorganization. Napoleon remained two days at
Erfurt, endeavouring in vain to rally his
troops. The retreat was then resumed towards the Rhine, almost as disastrously
as the retreat from Moscow, with the exception of the frost. Wrede,
unmindful of the well-known maxim, attempted, with inferior forces, to arrest
the French at Hanau, but was defeated with great loss, October 30th and 31st.
The French reached and crossed the Rhine without further molestation. Schwarzenberg wished
to pursue them over that river; but the allied Sovereigns adopted a policy
of moderation. By their celebrated Declaration of Frankfurt, December 1st, they announced their wish to see
France great, powerful, and happy, because she was one of the corner stones of
the European system ; and they expressed their willingness that she should
enjoy an extent of territory unknown under her kings. Proposals for a peace had
been previously made to Napoleon through St. Aignan,
who had been captured at Gotha, on the basis of the independence of Spain,
Italy, Germany, and Holland: on the other hand, France was to retain
possession of Belgium and the left bank of the Rhine. Napoleon had at first
given an evasive answer to these proposals ; and when at last, on the 2nd of
December, by the advice of Coulaincourt (Duke
of Vicenza), who had superseded Maret (Duke of Bassano), as Minister for Foreign
Affairs, he announced his acceptance of them, and agreed to the opening of
More than 100,000
French troops still remained in the fortresses of Germany and Poland. All these
gradually surrendered, but mostly after a vigorous resistance. Gouvion St. Cyr, whom Napoleon left in Dresden with
35,000 men, capitulated November 11th, on condition of a free and unmolested
retreat. The Allied Sovereigns, however, refused to ratify the capitulation, on
the ground that the besieging general was
not authorized to make it, and St. Cyr was allowed the option either to
surrender as prisoner of war, or to return to Dresden and attempt the defence of that city. The latter alternative being
impossible, St. Cyr was obliged to surrender. Stettin, Dantzic, Zamosc, Modlin, and Torgau surrendered before the end of the year. Some places
held out till the spring of the following year, especially the citadels of
Erfurt and Wurzburg ; whilst Davoust maintained
himself in Hamburg till after the Peace of Paris (May 30th).
Peace of Kiel, 1814 The fall of
Napoleon's empire in Germany was the immediate consequence of his defeat.
Holland, with the exception of a few places, was occupied by the
divisions of Bülow and Winzingerode, assisted by English troops who had landed on
the coast. The Dutch were anxious to throw off the yoke of their oppressors;
the cry of Orange-boven (up with Orange) was
everywhere raised, and on December 1st the son of the former Stadholder was
proclaimed Sovereign Prince of the Netherlands, with the title of William I. Towards the
end of October, Jerome Bonaparte abandoned his kingdom of Westphalia, and in
November the Elector of Hesse returned to his capital. Hanover, Oldenburg, and
Brunswick were occupied by their respective Sovereigns before the end of 1813.
The Princes of the Confederation of the Ehine,
with the exception of the captive King of Saxony, and one or two minor princes,
deserted Napoleon, and entered into treaties with the Allies. The Danes, having
been driven out of Holstein by Bernadotte, concluded an armistice December
18th, and, finally, the Peace of Kiel, January
14th, 1814, by which Frederick VI ceded Norway to Sweden; reserving, however,
Greenland, the Faroe Isles, and Iceland, which were
In
Italy the war had also proved unfavourable to
the
In order to
complete the picture of Napoleon's situation at the commencement of
1814, we must bring up to that date the
affairs of the Spanish Peninsula. After his disastrous retreat from Moscow,
Napoleon found himself compelled to withdraw some of his best troops from
Spain; Marshal Soult was also recalled, and his place supplied by Jourdan.
Wellington had employed himself in his winter-quarters at Ciudad Rodrigo, in
putting his forces on a good footing, and preparing for a grand campaign. In
the spring of 1813 he counted under his standards 80,000 men, more than half of
whom were English. In May he assumed the offensive by marching on Salamanca,
when the French retired on Vittoria. The decisive victory gained by Lord
Wellington over Jourdan in the neighbourhood of
that city, June 21st, may be said to have decided the fate of the Peninsula. As
the direct road to France was held by the Spaniards, the routed army was
compelled to retreat on Pamplona. Joseph Bonaparte, who was present at the battle,
saved himself with difficulty, and retired into France, abandoning all further
hope of the Spanish crown. In the imperials of his carriages which were
captured, were found some of the finest pictures taken from the royal palaces
of Spain. The failure of an expedition to Catalonia under the command of Sir
John Murray, undertaken with the view of diverting Marshal Suchet from joining the French Army of the centre, prevented
Wellington from deriving all the benefit which he might have
expected from his victory. Before he could enter France it was necessary to
reduce the important places of Pamplona and St. Sebastian. The former was
blockaded by General Hill, the latter by General Graham, after the failure of
an assault, July 26th, which cost 2,000 men. Towards the end of July, Soult,
who had entered Spain with a reinforcement of 20,000 men, and superseded Jourdan in
the command of the French army, was compelled, after some bloody engagements,
to re-enter France before the end of August. St. Sebastian surrendered
September 9th, Pamplona, October 29th. The left wing of Wellington's army
crossed the Bidasoa on the 7th. Soult had
taken up a strong position on the Nivelle, which
was attacked by Wellington, November 7th; on the 10th, St. Jean de Luz, the key
of the position, was taken by storm, and Soult compelled to retire behind
the Nive and the Adour. From this position,
also, the French were driven after several days of hard fighting (December
8th-13th), and Soult then established a fortified camp at Bayonne. This town
was invested by the Anglo-Portuguese army, and for some time hostilities seemed
suspended. Thus, while the enemy threatened the Northern frontier of France,
the South was actually invaded, and the despot, who a year or two before seemed
to behold all Europe at his feet, began to tremble for his own dominions.
Napoleon
perceived soon after his return to Paris that it
The
Emperor of the French had employed himself after his
An Extraordinary
Diet, assembled at Zurich, had proclaimed the neutrality of
Switzerland, November 18th, 1813; cordon of troops was ordered to
the frontiers, and deputies were sent both to the Allied Sovereigns and to
Napoleon to engage them to respect Swiss neutrality. The French Emperor
readily consented, and ordered his troops to evacuate Switzerland. But the
Allies resolved not to recognize a neutrality which would essentially interfere
with their operations, and which would be respected by Napoleon only so long
as it suited his convenience. The grand army of Bohemia under Prince Schwarzenberg was
directed to penetrate through Switzerland into Alsace and Franche-Comte, and to
march upon Paris, having first secured the important position of Langres. Another portion of it was to occupy the roads from
Italy. The army of Silesia under Blucher was to pass the Rhine, above and below
Mainz, and also to direct its march upon the capital, masking the fortresses on
the road. Part of the army of the North under the Prince Royal of Sweden
(Bernadotte) was also to act on the offensive in France; but a large part of
it was employed to occupy Holland and Belgium. The Swedish army and the Duke of
Brunswick's corps did not arrive in France till after the fall of Paris. Schwarzenberg established
his headquarters at Langres, January 18th, where
the three allied Monarchs arrived a few days later. The army of Silesia having,
after some fighting, crossed the Rhine and Saar, advanced by the 25th of
January to Metz and Nancy, and was in communication with the grand army of
Prince Schwarzenberg. Napoleon, who was assembling his forces at
Chalons-sur-Marne, seems not to have expected that the Allies would so speedily
pass the Rhine. He left Paris to join his army, January 25th, 1814, after
appointing his brother Joseph to the command of the National Guard.
The campaign which
Napoleon now entered on is reckoned one of the ablest he ever
conducted. He manoeuvred with wonderful skill between Schwarzenberg and Blücher, arresting first
the one then the other. But the transient successes which he achieved were
perhaps of more detriment than service to him, as they hindered him from
entering sincerely into the negotiations which had been opened at Chatillon,
February 5th, for a peace on the basis proposed at Frankfurt. To this Congress
Great Britain had sent Lords Castlereagh,
Battles of Montereau and Laon, 1814.
Napoleon attacked Blücher in his position
at Brienne January 29th, but was totally defeated February 1st. This
engagement is sometimes also called the battle of La Rothière.
It was now resolved that the two armies of the allies should advance separately
on Paris; that of Blücher along the Marne,
that of Schwarzenberg along the Seine. But Napoleon, again turning
upon Blücher, inflicted on him several defeats
at Champaubert, Montmiral, Eloges,
etc. (Feb. 10th-14th), and compelled him to fall back in order to join the
advancing army of the North under Bülow.
Napoleon then marched against the army of Schwarzenberg, which had advanced
to Fontainebleau, and which he defeated at Montereau,
February 18th. Schwarzenberg then retreated to Troyes and Bar-sur-Aube.
The fate of Europe seemed again to hang on a mere thread; the Austrians even
made proposals for an armistice, which, however, had no
result. Bliicher having been joined by the
Army of the North, advanced and defeated Napoleon in an obstinate battle
at Laon, which lasted March 9th and 10th. In consequence of this victory,
the two allied armies again advanced. Napoleon, The decisive leaving Marmont and Mortier to observe Blücher, marched with about 40,000 men against the grand army, which he attacked
at Arcis-sur-Aube, March 20th, 21st. His failure
proved decisive to his fortunes. He shortly after formed the resolution of
marching on St. Dizier, in the rear of the
Allies, threatening the line of communication of the grand army, collecting the
garrisons, making a levy en masse in Alsace and
Lorraine, and saving Paris by carrying the war into Germany. The Allies,
having discovered his plan from an intercepted letter, determined not to
follow him, but to advance on Paris by forced marches; at the same time despatching Winzingerode with
8,000 men after Napoleon, to induce him to believe that he was followed by the
whole army. Blücher now formed a junction
with Schwarzenberg, after defeating Marmont and
Mortier at La Fere Champenoise, March 25th. On the 29th the Allies
had reached Clichy and Villepinte while Marmont and
Mortier had retired on Paris after their defeat,
and occupied the heights of Montmartre and Belleville. The Regent, Maria
Louisa and her son, the King of Rome, now left Paris for Blois, agreeably to
the directions of Napoleon two months before; while Joseph Bonaparte called out
the National Guard, and prepared to defend the capital. On the 30th an
obstinate conflict took place on the heights of Montmartre, Belleville,
and Romainville, which was terminated by Marmont proposing an armistice; not, however, before
Montmartre had been carried by Blücher. On the
following day, March 31st, at two o'clock in the morning was signed the
Capitulation of Paris. Marmont and Mortier,
with their troops, were to leave the city; the arsenals, magazines, etc., were
to be left in the state in which they were; the National Guard was to be
retained or dismissed, according to the decision of the Allies, to whose
magnanimity Paris was recommended.
At eleven o'clock the Emperor of Russia and King of Prussia entered Paris at the head of 36,000 men, amidst the acclamations of the people. Many cries arose for the Bourbons, and the proscribed white cockade was everywhere displayed. In the afternoon a proclamation was published, signed by the Emperor Alexander, in which the Allied Sovereigns announced that they would no longer treat with Napoleon Bonaparte, or any of his family; that they would respect the integrity of France as it had existed under its ancient Kings; that they would recognize and guarantee any constitution that the French nation might establish; and, consequently, they invited the Senate to appoint a Provisional Government to prepare such a constitution, and to conduct the administration. On the following day, April 1st, the Senate, which during ten years had worshipped Napoleon as their idol, pronounced his deposition and that of his family. But it went no further. The Council General of the Department of the Seine took the initiative in proclaiming the restoration of the Bourbons in the person of Louis XVIII. Meanwhile, Napoleon, who, imagining
himself pursued by the allied army, had retired as far as Doulevant in the Haute Marne, returned suddenly upon
St. Dizier, and defeated Winzingerode's advanced guard. On the following day, the
27th, he invested Vitry. Here he learned the
march of the Allies on Paris, and was taken by surprise. Instead of advancing
on the capital, he retired through St. Dizier and Vassy, and again reached Doulevant March
28th, where he had been five days before. On the 29th of March Napoleon was
informed that Lyons had surrendered to the Allies, who had penetrated through
Switzerland. He now advanced upon Troyes; whence, in contradiction to his
former orders, he sent directions that Paris should be defended to the last
extremity. He then proceeded by way of Sens to Fontainebleau,
and endeavoured to open negotiations with
Prince Schwarzenberg, by whom they were rejected. He had still a
considerable army at Fontainebleau; but on the 4th of April he was deserted
by Marmont and his corps, who submitted to
the authority of the Provisional Government. It was not, however, till the
10th of April that Napoleon signed an unconditional resignation of the Crowns
of France and Italy, both for himself and his heirs, after the Emperor
Alexander and the French Provisional Government had assured to him a pension of
2,000,000 francs and an asylum in the Isle of Elba; of which he was to have the
sovereignty, and to retain
Further resistance
would indeed have been insane. Not Defeat of only were Paris and the northern
and eastern provinces of France in possession of the Allies, but
Wellington also was advancing in the south, and was everywhere received by the
people as a deliverer. Wellington during the winter season had remained
inactive before Bayonne till the middle of February, when he resumed the
offensive, and after a few days' fighting drove the French from their position
at that place. Soult retired to Orthez, where he
was defeated, February 27th. Bayonne, St. Jean Pied de Port, Navarreins, were successively invested by the English.
Soult, retreating by way of Tarbes, had concentrated his army at Toulouse. An
English division, under Beresford, advanced to the Garonne, and entered
Bordeaux March 12th, accompanied by the Duke d'Angouleme,
nephew of Louis XVI., who had joined the English army some weeks before.
Bordeaux now declared for the Bourbons and proclaimed Louis XVIII., although
the Congress at Chatillon was still treating with Napoleon as
Sovereign of France. Soult was attacked at Toulouse by Wellington, April 10th,
and after an obstinate defence, which caused the
assailants great loss, was compelled on the 12th to abandon his position.
Neither the French nor the English general appears to have been aware that
Napoleon had abdicated. After the defeat of Soult, the inhabitants of Toulouse
immediately hoisted the Bourbon colours. So late
as the night of April 14th, the garrison of Bayonne made a sortie which cost
many lives on both sides ; and it was not till the 18th that an armistice was
signed between Wellington and Soult.
Napoleon lingered
more than a week at Fontainebleau, as ^ceedTt if
loth to quit the scene of his former glory.2 At last, on the Elba66 3 20th of
April, after taking an affecting, though somewhat theatrical, leave of his
Guard, so long the companions of his varying fortunes, he set off for Frejus, and embarking on board a British frigate, landed at
Porto Ferrajo, in Elba, May 4th. At his own
request, a commissary of each of the five great Powers accompanied him on his
journey. The populations of
Martens, N. Bee.
t. i. p. 696.
He is said to have
taken a dose of poison, which, however, failed of its intended eflect.
the French towns
through which he passed displayed the greatest hatred towards him, and even
threatened his life; whilst he, on his part, showed the most abject fear, sometimes
bursting into tears, and, to conceal himself, frequently changing his garments
for those of his conductors. [VII] [382] His brother
Joseph had fled into Switzerland. His Empress, Maria Louisa, after a short stay
at Rambouillet, proceeded to Yienna, and again became an Austrian Princess. The
Count d'Artois, brother of Louis XYIII., who had
returned to Paris with the title and authority of Lieutenant-General of the
Kingdom, signed with the Allies a Convention, April 23rd, [VIII] [383]with the view
of affording France the benefits of peace before a regular treaty could be
prepared. The Allies agreed to evacuate the French territory, according to the
ancient limits of it on January 1st, 1792. Thus vanished with the stroke of a
pen the fruits of twenty years of bloodshed and conquest! France also
surrendered by this treaty about fifty fortresses which she continued to occupy
in Germany, Holland, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, etc. Restoration Louis
XYIII., who had resided several years at Hartwell, xviiiiS in
Buckinghamshire, entered Paris May 3rd. [IX] [384] In this ceremony
the chief object of attraction was the Duchess of Angouleme, daughter of Louis
XYI. and Marie Antoinette, who sat in the same carriage with her uncle. Louis
XYIII. had published the day before at St. Ouen a
declaration announcing his resolution to adopt a liberal constitution, though
he rejected one proposed by the Senate, April 6th. The principal features of
the new constitution were to be: a representative government, divided into two
chambers; taxation by consent of the deputies; public and individual liberty;
freedom of the press and of worship; inviolability of property; sales of
national property not to be questioned; responsible ministers ; irremovable
judges ; guarantee of the public debt; maintenance of the Legion of Honour; admissibility of every Frenchman to all
employments; no individual to be molested regarding his opinions and his votes.
This proclamation is said to have been exacted from Louis by the Emperor of
Russia. Louis wished to reseat himself unpledged and as an
absolute Sovereign
on the throne of his ancestors, as if all that had happened since 1789 had been
a mere dream ; but Alexander, who is said to have corrected the proclamation
with his own hand, threatened that Louis should not be admitted into his
capital till he had signed it. Talleyrand, who was chiefly instrumental in
bridging over the chasm between the abdication of Napoleon and the restoration
of the Bourbons, and who with the versatility which characterized him became
again Minister for Foreign Affairs under the new Government, is said purposely
to have delayed the conclusion of a treaty of peace till the project of the new
constitution should have been arranged. Fearing that Louis, after the departure
of the Emperor Alexander, might be inclined to neglect his engagements, a
commission for drawing up a constitution was appointed May 18th, and on the
30th of the same month was signed the Peace of Paris. A separate treaty was
concluded The first ■with each of the
four Allied Powers, but all of the same pS^isi tenour, except an additional article reserved by each
Power.1 The Allies must be allowed to have displayed in this treaty great
forbearance and moderation, when it is considered what terrible losses and
humiliations Napoleon had inflicted on three of their number. France was not
only suffered to retain the limits of 1792, but some additions were even made
to them by annexing certain districts of the Ardennes, the Moselle, the
Lower Rhine, the Ain, as well as part of Savoy, and by confirming her
possession of Avignon, the Yenaissin and
other places, comprising in the whole 150 square miles, with a population of
near half a million souls. Holland was to be
placed under the sovereignty of the House of Orange, and to receive an
accession of territory. The States of Germany were to be independent, and
united by a confederation ; the revival of the German Empire being thus
tacitly negatived. The independence of Switzerland was recognized. Italy,
except the portion to be restored to Austria, was to be composed of Sovereign
States. Great Britain was to possess Malta and its dependencies; while, on the
other hand, she engaged to restore to France all the colonies possessed by that
country on the 1st of January, 1792, except Tobago, St. Lucia, and the Isle of
France; also that part of St. Domingo which had originally belonged to Spain,
and which was now to be re- stored to that country. Sweden also was to cede
back Guadalupe to France, and Portugal, French Guiana. The 32nd Article of the
treaty provided for the assembly of a General Congress at Vienna within two
months, to regulate the arrangements which were to complete the present treaty.
Subsidiary The
Peace of Paris was followed by some subsidiary treaties.
Treaties. Ferainana VII. acceded to the peace July 20th. By a
Convention of June 3rd, between Austria and Bavaria, Maximilian Joseph
restored to Austria Tyrol with the Vorarlberg, the Principality of Salzburg,
the district of the Inn and the Hausriick.
During the visit of the Emperor Alexander and the King of Prussia to London in
June, it was agreed that the Article of the Peace of Paris, stipulating the
aggrandizement of Holland, should be carried out by the annexation of Belgium
to that country, an arrangement which was accepted by the Sovereign of the
Netherlands, July 21st, 1814. [X] [385] Great
Britain, by a treaty concluded at London, August 13th, 1814,2 restored to that
Sovereign all the colonies of which Holland had been in possession on January
1st, 1803, except the Cape of Good Hope, Demerara,
Essequibo, and Berbice. Part of these were intended to compensate Sweden
for relinquishing Guadalupe; but the Swedish Government preferring a payment in
money, Great Britain purchased their claims for a million sterling. Great
Britain also paid to the Sovereign of the Netherlands, in consideration of his
colonies, a further sum of two millions sterling to be employed in restoring
the Belgian fortresses. These had been dismantled by the Emperor Joseph II.,
and the country consequently left without defence.
Italian It
remains to mention the affairs of Italy. Napoleon, on
affairs. the news
of Murat's defection, had directed Eugene Beau- harnais to
evacuate that country; an order with which the Viceroy neglected to comply,
partly because he could not obtain honourable terms
for the different garrisons, partly because he hoped that the Lombards would
elect him for their King. On February 8th he delivered battle to Bellegarde at Valleggio, on the Mincio, which,
though he gained the advantage, led to no results. Murat soon discovered how
vain were his hopes of obtaining Italy as the reward of his defection. The
Emperor Francis postponed the ratification of the treaty; Lord Bentinck
received no power to conclude. General
Nugent, who, with
an Austrian corps, had been placed under Murat's command, took possession of
Modena, not in the name of the King of Naples, but of the House of Este. Murat
received, indeed, the ratified treaty from Vienna, March 8th, but considerably
altered to his disadvantage, the only addition to his dominions being a small
portion of the States of the Church; while Lord Bentinck, after the landing of
a body of Anglo- Sicilian troops at Leghorn, openly gave out that they were
designed to support the rights of the Bourbons to Naples. But as the Emperor of
Russia seemed disposed to offer Murat his alliance, it was agreed that Lord
Bentinck should evacuate Tuscany and march upon Genoa. With the aid of an
English fleet, under Admiral Pellew, that city
was reduced to capitulate, April 18th, and two days after the French garrison
marched out with its arms and baggage, and took the road to Savona. On the 26th
Lord Bentinck, without the sanction of his Government, published a proclamation
re-establishing the Genoese Constitution such as it existed in 1797, with such
modifications as public opinion might require. Pope Pius VH., who had been
disarmed by Napoleon, entered Rome in a sort of triumph, May 24th, and Murat
found himself compelled to acquiesce in the restoration of the Papal authority
in the Roman States. Soon afterwards he was obliged to relinquish Tuscany to
Ferdinand III.
After the
abdication of Napoleon, Eugene Beauharnais was convention also compelled to lay
down his arms. On April 16th he of Mantua, signed an armistice with Bellegarde at Schiarino-Rizzino, near Mantua, and the French troops in
Lombardy marched homewards. Eugene, supported by a majority of the Senate,
still hoped to be elected King of Italy, and to persuade the allied Powers to
recognize him in that capacity. But a strong Austrian party existed in Milan,
which, taking advantage of the popular hatred of the French, excited an
insurrection against the senators of Eugene's party, who were driven from the
city, April 20th. By the Convention of Mantua, April 23rd, [XI] [386] Eugene
agreed to evacuate all the fortresses of the Kingdom of Italy. General Bellegarde entered
Milan April 28th, occupied the other Lombard cities, and proclaimed, May 23rd,
that he took possession of the Kingdom of Italy in the name of his Sovereign
Francis. Eugene now betook
himself to
his fatber-in-law, the King of Bavaria. The fate
of Piedmont was determined at the same time. A proclamation of Prince Schwarzenberg,
dated at Paris, April 25th, announced to the Piedmontese that
Austrian troops would take possession of the country in the name of the Eang of Sardinia; and on the 27th the
plenipotentiaries of Prince Camille Borghese, governor-general of the
departments beyond the Alps, signed at Turin a Convention1 for an armistice,
and for the evacuation of those departments by the French troops.
Louis After a quarter of a century
disturbed by revolution and
grants'a war' France and Europe seemed to be returning to peace and Charter.
order. On June 8th, 1814, Louis XVIII. gave a Charter to the French nation. The
Charter was signed by Louis as given "in the 19th year of his reign,"
thus ignoring the Republic, the Consulate, and the Empire. Its main features
were that the Legislature should consist of a Chamber of Peers and a Chamber of
Deputies ; the peers to be nominated by the crown, the deputies to be chosen by
the people. The qualifications for a deputy were, to have completed forty years
of age, and to pay annually 1,000 francs in direct taxes. The qualifications
for an elector were to have completed thirty years of age, and to contribute
annually to the direct taxation 300 francs. The King only was to have the right
of proposing laws. The Chambers, however, were entitled to suggest them ; but
if such suggestions were disregarded, they could not be renewed during the same
session. All forms of Christian worship were to be tolerated, but Roman Catholicism
remained the religion of the State. The Con- In order to settle the general
affairs of Europe, it had been Vienna^ determined to assemble a Congress at
Vienna, which was 1814-15.' formally opened November 1st. Nothing, not even the
Crusades, had ever displayed the unity of Europe in so forcible a light as this
Congress. The Peace of Westphalia offers the nearest parallel, but one far
inferior in the number and greatness of the Powers concerned, the importance of
the interests at stake, and the extent of the settlement effected. Of the great
Powers, some were represented by their Sovereigns in person, others by their
most eminent statesmen, while no Christian State of any importance was without
its representative. The Emperors of Austria and Russia, the Kings of
Prussia, Denmark,
Bavaria, and Wiirtemberg, the Elector of Hesse,
the Grand Duke of Baden, the Dukes of Saxe-Weimar, Brunswick, Coburg, and
many other German Princes, were personally present. The other European States
were represented by their Ambassadors and Ministers, among whom we may mention
Lord Castlereagh and the Duke of Wellington, for England; Prince Talleyrand and
the Duke of Dalberg, for France ; Don Labrador, for Spain ; Count Palmella and
Don Lobo de Silveyra, for Portugal;
Cardinal Gonsalvi,for the Pope. [12] [387]
The wars of
Napoleon had disturbed the whole European Distnbu-
system, and the problem before the Congress was to re- territory, arrange its
scattered members. It is needless to say that in an Assembly composed of
representatives of those nations which had suffered from Napoleon's
aggressions, but little regard was had to the claims of nationalities, ancient
rights, historical traditions, moral fitness, or conformity of religion. Thus,
for instance, the Republics of Venice and Genoa, without any alleged
delinquencies, were abolished, and handed over to foreign and hostile masters ;
Venice to Austria, Genoa to Sardinia, in spite of the traditional hatred
between the Ligurians and the Piedmontese,
and the deprecations of the Genoese. In like manner, Catholic Belgium was
annexed to Calvinistic Holland, the Catholic Electorates of the Rhine to
Reformed Prussia, and Catholic Poland to Greek Russia. Such arrangements were
necessarily sources of weakness, discontent, and sedition, and, where
possible, of revolution.
Austria, which had
previously held only the isolated Milanese, now seized all Lombardy and the
Venetian territories, except the Ionian Isles, which were erected into a
Republic under the protection of Great Britain. Thus Austria secured several
entrances into Italy, and by occupying Ferrara and Comacchio,
got a footing south of the Po. But she was preparing future troubles for
herself, by extending her dominion
over an
unsympathetic people, which, under French rule, had imbibed ideas repugnant to
her system. She extended her influence in Central Italy through members of the
reigning family. Tuscany and Modena were assigned to collateral branches of the
House of Austria, the first to the Archduke Ferdinand, the second to the
Archduke Francis d'Este, also a Prince of the
House of Hapsburg-Lorraine. Parma, Piacenza, and Guastalla were
given to Napoleon's consort, Maria Louisa, who retained the title of
"Empress." Lucca, erected into a duchy, was assigned to the ex-Queen
of Etruria. With regard to the rest of Italy, the Pope recovered all his
possessions except Benevento, Ponte Corvo, and
the Yenaissin. But he refused to sign the Treaty
of Yienna, on account of the Austrian garrisons
in Ferrara and Comacchio. The lung of Sardinia,
Victor Emanuel, retained Piedmont and Savoy, with the addition of Genoa, the
English Government having ignored Lord Bentinck's proclamation. Joachim Murat,
agreeably to treaties, was left for the present in possession of Naples, though
somewhat curtailed. Germany, which from its geographical position and the
genius of its people, must ever form one of the most important elements in the
European system, became completely changed from its condition in the former
century. The Holy Roman Empire had vanished, and with it the Golden Bull, the Electoral
Capitulations, and the Electors themselves; though the Sovereign of Hesse
retained that empty title. There was no longer a common tribunal, and the
constitution of the Diet Re-settle- was entirely altered. The re-establishment
of the German Germany. Empire was discussed. Several of the German princes and
cities were for its revival; but the scheme was not approved by the Allies, nor
by the Emperor of Austria. A Federative Constitution was established for
Germany, with a Diet to be held at Frankfurt, of which the Austrian Emperor was
to be President. The greater and smaller German States, to the number of
thirty-eight, including the four still remaining free towns of Frankfurt,
Bremen, Liibeck and Hamburg, and the Kings
of Denmark and the Netherlands, the former by virtue of his Duchy of Holstein,
the latter for Luxembourg, were to be members of the Confederation. This new
Constitution had all the defects of the Empire without the prestige of its
traditions, and especially it had the same want of centralization.
The Kingdom of
Westphalia had fallen of itself, and the former Sovereigns who claimed its
various parts had recovered their possessions. At this Congress the King of
England assumed the title of " King," instead of " Elector
" of Hanover. Oldenburg, Mecklenburg, Saxe-Weimar, as well as Luxembourg
annexed to the Netherlands, were made Grand Duchies. With the view of coercing
France on the north, Belgium and the Dutch provinces were erected into the
Kingdom of the Netherlands, in favour of the Prince
of Orange with the title of William I.; though warning voices already
proclaimed the danger of uniting countries so different in language, customs,
and religion. Bavaria received for her restorations to Austria her former
Palatine possessions, with Wiirzburg, Aschaffen- burg, and what is called Rhenish Bavaria.
The restoration The ques- of the Prussian Kingdom occasioned long and
violent debates, p^nd ar principally
from the circumstance of the erection of the Saxony. Duchy of Warsaw and the
Emperor of Russia's promise to restore the Kingdom of Poland in favour of the Grand Duke Constantine, his brother. The
Duchy of Warsaw, about half as big again as Ireland, and containing nearly five
million inhabitants, was for Russia one of the greatest acquisitions from the
war. Russia thus thrust herself into the middle of Europe. Prussia demanded, in
compensation, the whole of Saxony, and was supported by Russia; while she was
opposed by Austria, France, and England. A new European war seemed on the point
of breaking out, which was averted by concessions on both sides. The Emperor
Alexander abandoned his project of a Polish kingdom, gave the Duchy of Posen
to Prussia, and to Austria the salt works of Wieliczka and the Part of Galicia which she had lost in the last war. The city of Cracow,
with a territory of 19 J square geographical miles, was recognized as an
independent republic. Besides the Duchy of Posen, Prussia was further
compensated with about a third part of Saxony and the Rhenish provinces.
These provinces, as well as the Austrian possessions in Alta Italia, served
further to coerce France. These acquisitions made Prussia twice as great as she
was under Frederick II., and rendered her, together with Protestantism,
predominant in Germany. Austria and Bavaria were now the only Catholic states;
for though the reigning house of Saxony was Catholic, its subjects were
Protestant. Yet on the whole, the German Catholics were somewhat superior in
numbers.
England, which
wanted no Continental aggrandizement, was chiefly the gainer by the possession
of posts which assured her maritime ascendency, as Malta, Heligoland, and
the Cape. Sweden obtained Norway, and by way of compensation, Denmark received
Swedish Pomerania, which she ceded to Prussia in exchange for Lauenburg.
Switzerland was declared neutral. With Spain, which had regained its king, and
Portugal, nothing was done. The same was the case with Turkey, not being a
Christian Power, and having done, or suffered, nothing in the war. On the
whole, Russia was the greatest gainer by this new adjustment of European boundaries
; as, besides the Duchy of Warsaw, she obtained Finland in the north, and
Bessarabia and part of Moldavia in the south. At the same time, by a treaty
with Persia, she had gained several eastern provinces; and thus she now became
one of the most formidable Powers in Europe.
Napoleon While the
Congress was thus restoring Europe to order, an
France event
occurred which threatened to upset all their labours and
to replunge the Continent into confusion. Napoleon, escaping from
Elba with 900 of his veterans, landed near Cannes, March 1st, 1815. The news of
this event fell like a thunderbolt among the statesmen assembled at Vienna. It
had the effect of silencing all minor disputes and uniting the four Powers
against the common enemy. On March 13th they published a declaration of
outlawry against him; and soon after they renewed the alliance of Chaumont, by
a fresh treaty, signed at Vienna March 25th.1 By Article 8 Louis XVIII. was to
be invited to accede to it. But as before the ratification of it, April 25th,
Napoleon seemed to have firmly reseated himself upon the throne, the British
Government handed in a declaration purporting that Article 8 was not to be taken
as obliging the King of England to prosecute the war for the sake of imposing
any particular government upon France; and the Austrian, Prussian, and Russian
ministers acceded to this declaration.2 Great Britain concluded an additional
Convention, April 30th,3 agreeing to furnish a subsidy of five millions, to be
equally divided between Austria, Russia, and Prussia. Most of the European
States successively acceded to the alliance. The amount of the contingents
which they engaged
to provide considerably exceeded a million men.
Meanwhile, as
Napoleon marched towards Paris he was He enters everywhere joined by the
soldiery. At Lyons, where he Pans" arrived March 12th, he published
several decrees, by one of which he proclaimed a general amnesty, excepting however
thirteen persons. Among these were Talleyrand, Marmont,
the Duke d'Alberg, and Bourrienne,
his former secretary. By another decree he promised to convoke a Champ de Mai,
or assembly of the people, to settle the constitution on the most liberal basis
; and to inspire the French with the belief that his restoration was concerted with Austria, it was added that the Empress
and her son were to return to Paris, to be crowned in the presence of this
Assembly. Marshal Ney, who less than a year before had been one of the first to
welcome Louis XVIII. at Compiegne on his return to France, volunteered his
services to march against and capture Napoleon; but a few words from his old
commander turned his heart, and he joined at Auxerre Napoleon's
standards. This act of Ney's caused the royalists to abandon all reliance on
the army, Napoleon reached Paris in twenty forced marches, without shedding a
drop of blood. The battalions despatched against
him served only to augment his escort. Louis XVIII. found himself compelled to
fly from Paris, March 20th. He had declared in the Chamber his fidelity to the
Charter, and the ministry had made magnificent promises ; but it was now too
late. On the evening of the same day Napoleon entered Paris, and was again
installed at the Tuileries amid the exulting congratulations of his former
followers and admirers. By the bulk of the citizens, however, he was not so
well received. They feared his warlike projects, though he abounded in
promises, and declared that he had renounced all thoughts of extending his
empire. But he re-established all the theatrical magnificence of his Court.
Louis proceeded to Lille and afterwards to Ghent, where he remained during the
whole of what is called the Hundred Days, the term of Napoleon's second empire.
The Duke of Bourbon failed in an attempt to excite an insurrection in La
Vendee. He even fell into the power of the ex-Emperor, who had murdered his son
; but Napoleon recoiled from a second political crime of that description, and
gave orders that the Duke should be furnished with a passport for England. The
Duchess of Angouleme, relying on the loyalty
displayed by the city of Bordeaux, in the previous year, also made a spirited
attempt to maintain the Bourbon cause in the south of France; but the
population of Bour- deaux declined to
second her on this occasion, and the Princess also found herself compelled to
seek a refuge in England.
Napoleon's
ministers.
Napoleon, though
his enterprise had been crowned with such sudden and complete success, found
himself in a situation of no ordinary difficulty. The treasury was empty, the
army weak and disorganized, the patriot party, if by such a term we may
designate the opponents of the Bourbons, mistrustful and exacting. Napoleon
named as his ministers, Cambacérès for the department
of Justice, Carnot for the Interior, Fouche for the Police, Coulaincourt (Duke of Vicenza) for Foreign
Affairs. Fouche had announced to the Bourbons his intended defection,
but said that it was only with a view to ruin Napoleon. On April 22nd Napoleon
promulgated what he called " an additional Act" to the constitutions
of the Empire. It was a good deal modelled on the Charter of Louis
XYIII., but far outstripped it in the liberality of its concessions.
The Champ de Mai.
Failure of Murat in Italy.
It was, however,
on the fortune of war that his hold of power must depend. If he could maintain
himself against the attacks of the Allies, there was little danger of his being
hurled from the throne by his French subjects. The Champ de Mai, held June 1st,
was celebrated with enthusiasm, and served to rally the people in Napoleon's
cause. His disposable army at this time numbered 200,000 men, besides the
troops in garrison and a reserve of 150,000 recruits. In accordance with his
usual tactics he resolved to take the offensive and to strike a blow before the
Allies should be fully prepared. Hostilities had been already resumed in Italy.
No sooner did Murat hear of the enthusiasm with which Napoleon had been
received in France than he entered the Papal States with two armies, and
marched to encounter the Austrians in Northern Italy. He still harboured the dream of being King of all Italy, and
called upon the Italians to drive out the foreigners and found a united
kingdom. He occupied Tuscany, Bologna, and Modena, and arrived upon the banks
of the Po without having experienced any serious resistance. But on May 3rd he
was attacked by the Austrians, under Bianchi, at Tolentino, and after a
combat of two days was completely defeated. The Austrians now pressed on to
Naples.
Before Murat could
arrive there his wife had concluded a Convention with Commodore Campbell, the
commander of the English fleet, by which the safety of Naples was secured, but
on condition of the surrender of all the Neapolitan ships of war. By the
Convention of Casa Lanzi between the
Austrian Generals and the English Minister on
one part, and the Commander-in-Chief of the Neapolitan army on the other, May
20th, the Kingdom of Naples, with all its ports, fortresses, and arsenals, was
to be delivered up to the Allies, in order to be restored to King Ferdinand
IV; agreeably to a treaty between that Sovereign and the Emperor of Austria,
concluded at Vienna, April 29th. Murat fled
to the Isle of Ischia and subsequently to France; but Napoleon forbade him
to appear at Paris. His wife obtained
permission to reside in the Austrian dominions. Ferdinand IV after ten years'
residence in Sicily, returned to Naples, June 17th.
According to the plan of campaign agreed upon by the Allies, the English and Prussians were to enter France from the Netherlands, whilst the Austrians were to invade it from the Rhine. The English and Prussian armies, under Wellington and Blucher, comprising 220,000 men, already stood upon the Belgian frontiers; and Napoleon determined to attack them before the Austrians could come up. All the troops he could spare for that purpose were 130,000 men, while to oppose the Austrians he could despatch only 30,000 men. Napoleon left Paris for Belgium, June 12th. At this time the Russian army, which equalled in number those of Wellington and Bliicher, was only about eight days' march from the scene of action. Wellington's army, composed of English, Hanoverians, Brunswickers and Notherlanders, ex- tended from the sea to the Dyle. Blucher's army, divided into four corps of from 25,000 to 30,000 men, stretched along the Meuse, from the Dyle to the frontiers of Luxembourg. Napoleon resorted to his old strategy of attacking one army after the other, and endeavouring to separate Wellington and Blucher. On June 15th the French crossed the Sambre, defeated Ziethen, took Charleroi, and compelled the advanced guard of the Prussians to retire to Ligny and St. Amand. Blucher now ordered his second corps to advance to Sombreuf, five or six miles north of Fleurus; while Wellington, on hearing what had occurred, ordered his troops to advance on the following morning (16th) to Nivelles and Quatre Bras. He had arranged to send 20,000 men to the aid of Blucher, but being himself attacked by Marshal Ney at Quatre Bras, he was unable to perform this promise, though he succeeded in re- pulsing Ney and in maintaining his position. In this action the Duke of Brunswick was slain. Bliicher, attacked by Napoleon in person with superior forces at Ligny, was defeated with great loss, and compelled to retreat to Wavre, in order to put himself in communication with his fourth corps under Bulow, which had not come up on the 16th. Wellington, hearing of this retrograde movement on the morning of the 17th, also retired through Gemappes to Waterloo, in order to maintain his communication with the Prussians. Napoleon despatched Grouchy with between 30,000 and 40,000 men to attack the Prussians at Wavre, with orders, after defeating them, to turn against Wellington's army. Napoleon himself attacked Wellington on the 18th. The British army was posted on the heights of Mont St. Jean, with the strong positions in front of Hougomont and La Haye Sainte. The French, after a desperate struggle, succeeded in carrying the latter position; and also in making a lodgment in Hougomont, after that post had been two or three times lost and won. But an attack executed by the guard and the élite of the French army on the British lines towards the close of the day was repulsed, and the French thrown into utter confusion. Grouchy, engaging at Wavre, a Prussian corps, which he mistook for their whole army, was too long detained to make his appearance on the 18th. But Bulow's Prussian corps came up towards the close of the day, and beginning to operate on the right flank of the French, completed their defeat. Blucher appeared soon after with the main body of the Prussians, and he and Wellington, meeting at La Belle Alliance, which had been the centre of the French position, saluted each other as victors. The retreat of the French soon became a perfect rout. They are said to have lost 60,000 men during the three days' struggle in killed, wounded, and prisoners. Their pursuit was abandoned to the Prussians, who were comparatively fresh. Napoleon, re- linquishing to Soult the command of the defeated army, hastened back to Paris, where he arrived June 21st. His carriage filled with gold and precious stones, his Imperial mantle, and his portfolio, formed part of the booty of the victors. The Chamber of Deputies had displayed symptoms of resistance to Napoleon's despotism ; who, at the instigation of his brother Lucien and other partisans, determined to dissolve it, and assume a dictatorial authority. But Lafayette, now a member of the Chamber, who during the last quarter of a century had taken no part in public affairs, having gotten intelligence of this scheme, proposed and carried a resolution that the Chamber should declare itself in permanence, and that every attempt to dissolve it should be considered an act of high treason. Yet, with his usual inconstancy, he immediately afterwards assisted Fouché to shut it up! Lucien Bonaparte and some of the Ministers made an unsuccessful attempt to induce the deputies to invest Napoleon with a temporary dictatorship; Lafayette and the majority insisted on his immediate abdication. Napoleon was not in a situation to resist. On the 22nd of June he gave in his abdication, but at the same time proclaimed his son Emperor of the French, with the title of Napoleon II. His abdication was received, the reservation in favour of his son ignored, and a Provisional Executive Commission was appointed by the Chamber. Fouché (Duke of Otranto), the executioner of the Lyonese, was elected president of the Commission. That intriguer, in sending Lafayette to the Allies, directed him to treat in favour of any body but the Bourbons, and at the same moment wrote to Louis XVIII, and did all he could for his restoration. While still at the head of the Provisional Government, Fouché, who had been one of the judges of Louis XVI, became the minister of police of his successor. Talleyrand introduced him to the King at St. Denis. Chateaubriand remarked that it was Vice supported by Crime. These two men alone were thought to understand the conjuncture. Napoleon lingered in Paris till June 29th in the hope of some favourable occurrence, when, as the Allies were within sight of the capital, he took his departure for Malmaison. The Provisional Commission despatched Sebastiani, Laforet, Lafayette, Pontecoulant, Benjamin Constant, and d'Argenson to the Allied Sovereigns at Heidelberg, to treat on the basis of the national independence and the inviolability of the French soil; but the Sovereigns replied, that no negotiations could be entered into till Bonaparte should be replaced in the custody of the Allies, and thus disabled from again disturbing the repose of Europe. Wellington and Blucher also refused an armistice proposed by Davoust. The remains of the routed army, as well as Grouchy's corps, had found their way to Paris; and at the beginning of July, 90,000 troops of the line and 12,000 federals, the whole under the command of Davoust, were preparing to defend the capital. But their resistance against the overwhelming masses of the Allies would have been unavailing, and, to save Paris from the horrors of a siege, Davoust signed, with Wellington and Blcuer, a military convention, or capitulation, at St. Cloud, July 3rd; by which the French army was to evacuate Paris within three days, and to retire beyond the Loire. On the 6th the Allies entered the capital. The Prussians displayed great animosity against the French. The English commander had much difficulty in restraining Bliicher from blowing up the bridge of Jena, a monument of Prussian disgrace. Louis XVIII re-entered Paris, July 8th, and thus put an end to the interregnum of the Hundred Days. Napoleon, after staying some time in the Isle of Aix, with the design of taking a passage to America, but dreading the risks of the voyage, and preferring to throw himself on the generosity of the English to running the risk of being captured by them, delivered himself up, on the 15th of July, to Captain Maitland, commander of the Bellerophon, an English ship of the line which happened to be stationed off Rochefort. Captain Maitland gave him no promises, except to convey him in safety to England. Napoleon had, on the previous day, written an inflated letter to the Prince Regent, invoking the hospitality of the British nation, and comparing himself to Themistocles when he sought an asylum from Admetus. The fallen Emperor was conveyed to Plymouth, but was not allowed to land. On the 7th of August he was transferred to the Northumberland, the flagship of Admiral Sir G. Cockburn, to be conveyed, agreeably to the decision of the Allies, to the Island of St. Helena. In that remote spot, where not even hope could solace him with the prospect of a change of fortune, he lingered out the remainder of his extraordinary and checkered career, till disease terminated at once his life and his repining, May 5th, 1821. Thus the curtain drops on the first acts of the great French revolutionary drama—the Republic, the Consulate, and the Empire. Perhaps no other nation has experienced political and social changes so violent and rapid as those which took place in France between 1789 and 1815. At the former period absolute royalty, feudal customs and abuses, stately and aristocratic manners, the development of centuries, are still in full vigour. Suddenly the scene shifts. The king, the personification of the State, vanishes before the apparition of the State itself—the French nation. Another shift, and the nation itself gives place to a Parisian mob, directed by bloodthirsty demagogues. Democratic tyranny, supported by blood and terror, falls in turn through disgust at its excesses, and the anarchy it has produced is succeeded by a military despotism. A Corsican adventurer of great military and administrative talent, collects the scattered forces of France to hurl them at Europe, gleams for a brief time like a meteor, threatening the nations with change, then suddenly collapses. The same violent changes are observed in the lives of the leading characters who appear upon the stage. Assassins of the republic, like Fouché,—renegade churchmen, like Talleyrand,— become Ministers of State under every sudden change of Government. In the course of a few months, marshals and senators fight for and support Napoleon, abandon, insult, and depose him, receive honours, emoluments, and peerages from the Bourbons, whom they abandon in turn, submit again to Napoleon, and again desert him. Truly one of the most grotesque, and at the same time most repulsive images of human nature ever presented by the mirror of history! Gervinus has remarked that the vicissitudes of the period are exhibited, as it were in a masquerade, in the manners and dress of the people. The plain attire, the familiar address of the citoyen, supersede the elegant toilette, the polite and dignified manners which characterized the ancient regime; while this intermediate state of equality and fraternity as quickly gives place to the brutal manners and vulgar dress, the red cap and the carmagnole of the sans-culottes. But soon the fantastic costume of the 'jetmesse dore'e betrays a disgust of past excesses. Bonaparte picks the crown out of the gutter, with his own hand puts it on his own head, then surrounds himself with a court of more than regal splendour, which apes at the same time the tastes of imperial Rome, in adulation of the wouldbe.
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