CHAPTER IV.
FRANCE AND HER TRIBUTARIES
(1801-3).
In 1798 it
had been the aim of the Coalition to destroy those revolutionary creations of
the Directory: the Ligurian, Cisalpine, Batavian, and Helvetian Republics. The
result of the campaign of 1800 was to affirm their existence and their
independence. More than this; under the terms of the Treaty of Lunéville,
Bonaparte intervened in Germany on the question of the indemnities to be paid
to the dispossessed Princes of the left bank of the Rhine; and he proposed, by
enforcing his own doctrine of “secularisation”, to bring about the
aggrandisement of certain lay Princes and so create allies in the heart of
Germany. It was only under the rule of Bonaparte that the political effects of
the Revolution acquired any degree of durability in the tributary States. He had
himself lost no time, after the events of Brumaire, in making important
modifications in the constitutions of the Cisalpine Republic, Holland, and
Switzerland. After the Peace of Amiens he was able to undertake the
reorganisation of these countries.
At the
outbreak of the revolutionary wars, the educated classes in Italy had welcomed
the French as deliverers, in the hope of obtaining from them what as yet the
Italians lacked: liberty and a fatherland. The French Revolution, while it
ushered in the civil reforms which had been so ardently longed for by the
majority of the people, had laid down, as a first principle, the independence
of nations, and had aimed at giving them their freedom and at uniting them in
appropriate groups by the ties of patriotism. It was this feature of the great
movement of political emancipation in France which struck enlightened Italians,
and caused all inhabitants of the peninsula to hail that movement with
enthusiasm. This enthusiasm did not, however, survive the wars of the Republic.
The Italians believed that it was the sole object of the French to free them
and to ensure their liberty. The French, indeed, were willing to free the
Italians and to share with them the gains of the Revolution; but the protection
thus given was primarily intended to attach them to the Republic. The war, too,
was costly; and by whom should the cost be defrayed if not by those who
benefited by it? Before long, however, the necessities of the conqueror brought
with them the desire of gain; and, by degrees, the wars of liberation were
turned into wars of conquest. The Convention had treated the nations which
submitted to it with a certain degree of generosity; the Directory, in its
dealings with them, displayed only greed and cruelty. Generals and administrators
rivalled each other in the art of making war at a profit. Bonaparte, during his
first Italian campaign, showed a special aptitude in this direction. Not only
did he levy enormous contributions upon the towns, sequestrate the estates and
goods of the clergy, and quarter his soldiers upon the inhabitants, but he sent
to Paris “everything which could be carried off and which might be useful”.
Moreover his officers, agents, and commissioners, not content with enforcing
requisitions on behalf of the army or the Directory, pillaged so shamelessly on
their own account that Bonaparte was occasionally compelled to intervene.
During the
second Italian campaign the people were subjected to the same exactions; and
risings took place everywhere after the arrival of the French. Bonaparte,
however, flattered himself that he would be able to win over the Italians by
fair speeches and promises of good government. One of the chief mistakes of the
Directory had been the persecution of religion. The First Consul, on the other
hand, as soon as he entered Italy, declared himself its defender. In all his
proclamations this advice was repeated: “Let your priests say mass; power lies
with the people; if they wish for religion, respect their wishes”. This respect
for religion went a long way towards smoothing down Italian opposition. An
entirely new section of adherents were gained over, the middle classes and the
people. To reconcile the Liberals with the new régime,
Bonaparte boasted the benefits of the Revolution, civil equality and the
suppression of abuses and privileges. He led the patriots to believe that, by
means of the institutions which were to be given to Italy, he was preparing the
way for national unity, which had already been brought about in France by the creation
of a unity of principles and of legislation, of thought and sentiment, the tie
which never fails to bind together all human communities. He thus led all
parties to cherish the illusion that the new polity, half national republic,
half protectorate, would eventually lead them to the full possession of their
independence.
It was
certainly no part of Bonaparte’s scheme to promote Italian unity. At Campo Formio, in spite of the wishes of the Directory, who had
planned the creation of a strong republic in North Italy, he himself had been
the foremost to mutilate that great scheme by the surrender of Venice, and,
later, by the annexation of Piedmont. To enable him to become master of Italy,
it was necessary that the country should be split up. In his private
conversations with Frenchmen he declared that the Italian people, enervated by
centuries of bondage, was unfitted for liberty and independence. To Italians he
held out the splendid prospect of a united Italy; but he was well aware that
the bulk of the nation, keenly interested in local and municipal matters and at
heart indifferent to forms of government, would sooner or later be gained to
France by the dispensing of equal justice and by a wise and careful
administration. It was with these views that he organised Piedmont, Liguria,
and the Cisalpine Republic.
The future
of Piedmont had been provisionally settled by a decree of April 21, 1801, which
made of it a French military province. By a decree of September 21, 1802, the
administration was made civil instead of military; and the country was divided
into six departments. This incorporation with France had been long foreseen;
and the people accepted it willingly. Forced, after the Austro-Russian
invasion, to submit to the excesses of a reaction which had not even restored
their reigning family; invaded once more by the French, whom they had hailed as
liberators; and governed subsequently by commissioners who were hampered by
incessant financial difficulties, the Piedmontese desired nothing so much as peace,
even at the expense of their nominal independence. During a year and a half
they had become accustomed to the French administration, and had found it to be
just and careful of the general good; the change made by Bonaparte did not
affect them; it was merely a substitution of the permanent for the provisional.
For the rest, they were by no means badly off under French rule. Agriculture,
which had suffered much from the wars, was generally resumed; manufactures and
commerce prospered; the people, who could now pursue their callings in peace,
became reconciled to a régime which, if it did
not give them liberty, at any rate ensured them security and a certain degree
of comfort.
While
Bonaparte was incorporating Piedmont with the French Republic, the government
of the Ligurian Republic underwent important changes at his hands. The existing
constitution of the latter country was a copy of the French constitution of the
year III: it provided for government by a Directory with two elective Chambers.
This constitution Bonaparte abolished; and, in concert with Salicetti,
the French representative at Genoa, he created a new form of government,
composed of a Senate and a Doge, who was to be his nominee. The change was made
without opposition; and the new authorities took office on June 29, 1802. From
that time forward, the Republic of Genoa was a docile instrument in Bonaparte’s
hands, and continued to lend him useful support in his struggle with Great
Britain until its incorporation with the French Empire in 1805.
In the
Cisalpine, Bonaparte had no difficulty in reestablishing his authority; for Austrian ill-usage had caused the French to be remembered
with regret. Not less intent than the French had been on absorbing the riches
of the country, the Austrians had made themselves especially odious by the mean
vengeance which they wreaked on those who had borne office under the Republic.
Far-seeing men had not been wanting in Austria to warn the Government against
these excesses, but their warnings were in vain. Patriots had been publicly
flogged, and many had been thrown into prison. All the high functionaries of
the Cisalpine Republic had been compelled to expiate their crime by forced
labour on the government works at Cattaro. The gains
of the Revolution had been nullified by a stroke of the pen ; and the former régime. aggravated by the abuses peculiar to
Austrian rule, had been reestablished.
In its
beginnings, however, French rule proved harsh enough. Before it obtained a
regular polity, the Cisalpine had to submit to a Provisional Government which
literally sucked the country dry. Bonaparte had indeed promised to reorganise
the Republic in accordance with the principles which had triumphed in France
in Brumaire: religion, equality, and good order. A year, however, was to pass
before the promise was fulfilled; and during that time the Cisalpine was
governed, first by a French agent, General Petiet, a former war minister of the
Directory; then by a commission of nine, which was reduced subsequently to a
triumvirate composed of three Milanese advocates, Sommariva,
Visconti, and Ruga. In addition to this executive,
there was a Legislative Assembly or Consulta, the members of which, limited in
number, had been selected by Bonaparte. This Assemble was powerless; and the
country lay at the mercy of the Triumvirate, two of whom, Sommariva and Ruga, governed with the sole object of enriching
themselves at the expense of the State. The condition of the Cisalpine was for
some time pitiable: compelled, according to the principle laid down by
Bonaparte, to support the army of occupation, the Republic had under this head
to make a monthly payment of 100.000 francs into the French Treasury. To this
heavy charge were added innumerable and neverending requisitions in kind. The country districts had been ravaged; and a succession
of bad harvests added to the general misery.
It was high
time for Bonaparte to intervene, if he were not to lose the fruits of his
conquest. After the signature of the Treaty of Lunéville, he announced to the
inhabitants of the Cisalpine that he was about to organise their Republic on a
permanent basis. Bonaparte had no intention of leaving to the Lombards the task of framing their own constitution. It was
at Paris that the Constitution of the Cisalpine was drawn up. on the model of
the French Consular Constitution. In September, 1801, when the draft was ready,
Bonaparte summoned four of the most considerable citizens of the Republic, Marescalchi, Melzi, Aldini, and Serbelloni, submitted the result of his labours to them,
and asked for their criticisms. But, subject to some slight modifications made
at their suggestion, the Constitution remained essentially such as he himself
had evolved it. The complete instrument was referred in secret to the Consulta
at Milan, which adopted it without amendment.
As the
foundation of the whole system, Bonaparte created a body of electors, divided
into three colleges, the proprietors (possidenti),
the learned classes (dotti), the trading classes (commercianti). These electors, 700 in number, appointed
various bodies: a Commission of Censorship (Censura)
of 21 members, whose duty it was to safeguard the constitution, and which
resembled the French Senate; a Consulta of 8 members, whose business it was to
draw up new laws, and who corresponded to the French Council of State; a
Legislative Council of 10 members, whose task, like that of the French
Tribunate, was to discuss proposed legislation; and lastly a Legislative Body
of 75 members, condemned, like its French prototype, to silence, whose only
function was to countersign such laws as were passed. But the powers of these
various bodies were still further curtailed to the advantage of the executive.
The executive authority was concentrated entirely in the hands of a President and
a Vice-President, the powers of the latter being even more shadowy than were
those of a Second Consul. These two magistrates were appointed for ten years.
In
organising the Cisalpine Republic after this fashion, Bonaparte set before
himself a double object. He strove, on the one hand, to set up a stable
government which might reassure threatened interests and satisfy to a certain
extent the national aspirations; on the other hand, to establish French rule in
the north of Italy on a durable footing. Bonaparte attained the first end by
the grant of a Constitution, and the second by reserving to himself the
nomination of all the functionaries of the Republic. As usual, he was astute
enough to make it appear that, in so doing, he was only carrying out the wishes
of the people. Prompted by his agents, certain of the citizens came to Paris to
beg him to choose their officials and so render a service to their country.
Bonaparte replied that it was not possible for him to perform the task unaided;
and he proposed to do so in concert with the most influential members of the
Republic. It was arranged that this new Commission, the members of which had
been chosen by Bonaparte, should meet at Lyons, in order, as he said, that its
deliberations might be free from local influences. Four hundred and fifty-four
deputies, all favourable to France, went to Lyons at the beginning of 1802, and
in concert with Bonaparte distributed the offices of the Republic. When they
came to the choice of the chief magistrate—the President—a committee appointed
for the purpose nominated Count Melzi, the most prominent person in Lombardy
and a man who appeared to stand high in Bonaparte’s favour. Bonaparte, however,
strongly disapproved of their choice. What was his reason for doing so the Lombards failed to understand, until Talleyrand enlightened
them by enquiring why they did not nominate Bonaparte himself. The Italians
took the hint at once, and lost no time in offering to Bonaparte the first
place in their Republic. Bonaparte received the proposal as a matter of course.
He told the Lombards that he accepted, “because he
had found no one amongst them who had sufficient claims on popular esteem...
and who had rendered services to his country sufficiently important to make him
worthy of the chief magistracy”.
Not to have
a President of their own nationality was a rude disappointment to the Lombards; but Bonaparte, by way of consolation, announced
at the last sitting of the Commission, January 25, 1802, that from that time
forward the name “Italian” should be substituted for that of “Cisalpine”. These
words were received with unanimous applause. Did they not proclaim to the whole
of Italy that the Republic might be welcomed as the first step towards national
unity, towards that Italia virtuosa, magnanima ed
una, which their poet Alfieri had foretold? Melzi was at the same time
appointed Vice-President, with the task of governing in Bonaparte’s absence.
This first
experiment of an Italian Republic was, at least at the outset, fairly
successful. Melzi, a man of a gentle and conciliatory disposition, who
belonged to an old Lombard family, and earned great weight in the country,
succeeded by his personal influence in smoothing down to a great extent the
opposition of the privileged classes—the nobility and the clergy. The clergy in
particular, already reassured by Bonaparte, were completely won over. The
well-to-do classes, who had hitherto suffered severely from the depredations of
French agents and the incessant requisitions imposed by the army, were harassed
no longer. The support of the corps of occupation was arranged for on a
definite basis, so that the burden could not be increased by arbitrary demands.
From the
political point of view also, the situation seemed at first to promise fairly.
Melzi, it is true, did not share Bonaparte’s ideas; he was a Liberal, and would
have preferred a Constitution on the English model; but. he administered with
strict impartiality the Constitution which had been given to his country. He
received valuable assistance in his task from the officials whom Bonaparte had
chosen, particularly from Prina, the famous minister, a very able man. In less
than a year all the chief departments of state were organised; and the machine
of government was put into working condition. Order was reestablished in the finances; a national army was created; and military schools for the
instruction of officers were opened at Pavia and Modena. Public instruction,
which under the Austrians had fallen into neglect, made a fresh start; and the
universities of Bologna and Pavia were reopened.
But these
auspicious beginnings led no further. Melzi did not receive that support from
the people which might have given durability to his work. The nation, whose
moral and national unity he strove to bring about, was strongly particularist at heart. The local spirit of the towns
rebelled against the decisions of the central authority. The States to the
south of the Po were impatient of the supremacy of Milan, and, in the words of
the Vice-President, were “constantly hankering after federation”. Of devotion
to the common cause there was none; each man thought only of himself. At the
same time there was perpetual friction with the French. No one spoke well of
the administration. “Why”, it was asked, “do we need an army of occupation? Are
we not ourselves capable of keeping order in our own country?”. Strange to say,
as better order was established, discontent increased. “The feeling of
animosity against the French”, wrote Melzi, “is universal”.
To make head
against so many difficulties a man of energy was needed, a man capable of
combining all parties by the force of his own will. Melzi was not of this
stamp; he lacked the higher qualities of a statesman. As a great noble,
moreover, Melzi could not but feel an instinctive aversion to the Jacobin
leaders, men who sprang from the middle or lower classes, and many of whom
still sat on the various councils. Now these Jacobins were the representatives
of French ideas; and, if they were no favourites of Bonaparte, he knew how to
make use of them. On all occasions they found a ready listener in Murat, who
commanded the army of occupation; and he omitted no opportunity of keeping the
First Consul informed of what was happening in Lombardy. Naturally the tendency
of these reports was to give the impression at Paris that Melzi was an enemy of
France.
An event
happened which for the moment almost lent credibility to these accusations. A
captain in the Italian army, Ceroni, published under
a pseudonym a collection of sonnets in which he sang the former glories of
Italy, and contrasted them with her present humiliation, bewailing “the
fatherland prostrate beneath the heel of the stranger”. In Bonaparte’s eyes
such a book was treasonable; and he expressed surprise that Melzi should have allowed
it to be published. So harsh, indeed, was his reprimand, that the
Vice-President of the Italian Republic, disheartened already by the ill
success of his policy, sent in his resignation. Bonaparte declined to accept
it. He was already, in his own mind, tracing the future of Lombardy. On the
point of being proclaimed Emperor of the French, he dreamt of reviving in his
own favour the kingdom of Italy; until that dream could be realised, it was
necessary that Melzi should retain his office. The latter was compelled to
sacrifice his own wishes and remain as Vice-President till Bonaparte came to
Milan to assume the iron crown of Lombardy (May, 1805).
Compared
with the north, which prospered in spite of French domination, the condition of
the rest of Italy was deplorable in the extreme. The remaining States, unlike
the Cisalpine and Piedmont, had not only lost their political independence, but
were ill-governed and ill-administered into the bargain. In spite of the wealth
of the soil, agriculture was at its lowest ebb. Industry and commerce were
stifled under an antiquated system of laws. The commercial decline of Venice,
which had begun in the middle of the eighteenth century, was hastened under the
Austrian rule. Tuscany, which had been turned into the kingdom of Etruria, for
the benefit of the Duke of Parma, the son-in-law of the King of Spain, was in a
pitiable state: the King, feeble in mind and body, and affected by epilepsy,
was entirely dominated by his wife, the bigoted Marie-Louise, who in her turn
was dominated by the priesthood; the last vestiges of liberty had been
abolished, and the privileges of the clergy augmented to a corresponding
extent. At Rome the situation was no better. Pius VII, a man adorned with great
virtues in private life, possessed no aptitude for government; and his States,
administered as they had been in the Middle Ages, were reputed the most
wretched in Italy. At Naples, Ferdinand IV was equally careless in promoting
the prosperity of his kingdom; the policy on which he was wholly bent was one
of feigning blind submission to Bonaparte, while he secretly intrigued against
him with the Governments of Vienna, London, and St Petersburg.
Compared
with these peoples, so execrably governed, northern Italy seemed fortunate. Her
citizens, if they did not enjoy liberty, possessed at all events equality and
equitable laws. If Bonaparte did not give the country its independence, he
developed its wealth by undertaking great works of public utility. He made
roads, cut canals, improved the ports, and transformed the cities.
Consequently, among the Venetians, the Romans, and the Neapolitans there were
many who would have welcomed French rule or annexation to the Italian Republic.
Bonaparte, too, did not fail to encourage the belief that what he had effected
in Piedmont and Lombardy had been effected in the interest of the Italians. In
his official speeches he declared that the state of semi-subjection in which he
held their country was only a stage on the road to absolute freedom, and that the
day would come when he would restore to Italy the control of her own destinies.
This illusion of the Italians was not to last long. In 1804 the Empire was
established in France; and this involved for Italy the complete subjection of
the country.
1797-1801] Changes in the Batavian Republic.
If the Dutch
did not show the enthusiasm of the Italians for the doctrines of the French
Revolution, those doctrines had, nevertheless, made their way into Holland even
before the arrival of the armies of the Republic. The fragments of the old
republican party, whose chief men had taken refuge in France after the
revolution effected by the Stadholder William V in 1787, still existed in the
country. In imitation of what had been done in Paris, these republicans founded
clubs in most of the towns; after the French conquest, many of them became
leaders in the new polity and the first office-bearers in the Batavian
Republic. The first republican government was remarkable for its wisdom and
moderation, but it was incapable of grappling with its political and financial
difficulties. The ancient particularist tendencies of
the Dutch showed themselves in each province and even in each town; and the
military requisitions, which were often crushing, caused general discontent. An
attempt at centralisation made in 1796, in the shape of a National Convention,
whose members chose the executive, succeeded no better; and after two years the
plan was abandoned. For some time (1797-8) all political life in Holland was
paralysed by a series of coups d’état. Government by a Directory,
modelled on that of France, at last secured to the country three years of
comparative repose.
The Dutch
Directory consisted of an executive body of five members. The legislative
authority was shared between two Chambers: a Grand Council, which was
representative in character, and a Council of Ancients. This system worked
fairly well, and at any other time would probably have secured the well-being
of the country. At the head of the Republic were active men of moderate views,
capable of restoring to Holland her financial prosperity, which had been
compromised by a series of revolutions. Progress, however, in that direction
was once more blocked by the war of 1799 ; and on the morrow of Brune’s victories the Republic sank under the weight of its
debt. Augereau, who commanded the army of occupation, drained the provinces dry
by his incessant requisitions; and, as a last resource, the legislature was
compelled to vote for the year 1800 a forced loan of 3 per cent, on capital
values. Under these conditions the Government was quickly discredited.
This state
of things afforded Bonaparte abundant excuse for interference in Holland. Ever
since the revolution of Brumaire, his wish had been to change the system of government;
and Semonville, the representative of France at the
Hague, had written, “Batavia will accept whatever Constitution you give her”.
In 1801 Bonaparte considered that the moment for intervention had come; and he
drew up a Constitution which strengthened the executive, while it diminished
the authority of the legislature to a corresponding extent. He created a
Council of twelve members (Staatsbewind), with a
Secretary-General and four Secretaries of State. The legislative power rested
with a single Chamber of 35 members, chosen, in the first instance, by the
Government, and afterwards to be renewed, one-third at a time, by the electors.
This Chamber could only vote by a simple “aye” or “no” on the bills placed
before them.
Bonaparte
resolved to submit this Constitution to the two Chambers for ratification,
convinced that they would accept it eagerly. He was mistaken: the Chambers
declined to give it their sanction, and they were supported in their refusal by
two of the Directors. Bonaparte did not hesitate. On Sept. 26, 1801, Augereau
proclaimed the dissolution of the two Chambers; and, as the people made no
sign, the Moniteur was able to say that the
operation had been accomplished without the smallest disturbance. Bonaparte
declared that he would appeal to the nation; and he did in fact, a few days
later, submit his Constitution to the suffrages of the Dutch. Of 416,419
electors, 52,219 voted against the Constitution, and 16,771 for it; the rest
abstained. This abstention was treated by Bonaparte as acquiescence; and on
October 6, 1801, he declared that the Constitution had been accepted. In order
to reconcile the Batavians to the new arrangement, he agreed to reduce, from
25,000 to 10,000 men, the number of soldiers which Holland was to support till
the conclusion of peace with England. But, as a set-off to this reduction, he
exacted a contribution of 65,000,000 florins.
This
intervention of France in Holland took place only a few days before the
signature of the Preliminaries of London, and could not fail to be displeasing
to the British Government. Was it a prelude to the annexation of the country,
in spite of the engagements which Bonaparte had entered into at Lunéville? To
an enquiry made on this subject by the British Cabinet the First Consul replied
“that every State had a right to organise itself as it thought fit; that
Holland was free; and that, like the other Powers, she had her representative
at Paris. This reply could not deceive the British Government. They did not,
however, press the point, probably hoping that Bonaparte, tied down as he was
by the Treaty of Lunéville, and by Article 2 of the Convention of the Hague,
which bound him, on the conclusion of peace with England, to evacuate Holland,
would refrain from further intervention.
In Holland
the coup d’état of September 18, 1801, was received, not with the enthusiasm
described by Semonville in his despatches to Paris,
but with resigned indifference. The most that could be said was, that those of
the nation who longed for repose saw in it some hope of a period of
tranquillity. This hope became almost a certainty after the signature of the
Treaty of Amiens. Freedom of navigation encouraged the Dutch to look forward to
a renewal of their trade and to the end of the evils which had accumulated
during nine years of war. At the same time, the struggle which had hitherto
raged between the Orangists and the Patriots was
terminated by the action of the Prince of Orange, who, on behalf of himself and
his heirs, renounced all claims to the Stadholdership, and accepted in exchange
the grant of the secularised German bishopric of Fulda, and the abbeys of Corvey and Weingarten. All this seemed to promise a
brighter future.
These hopes,
however, were doomed to disappointment. The Government, composed of men of
undoubted honesty but lacking in ability and courage, was incapable of securing
the repose and prosperity of the country. The gravest question which it had to
deal with was the question of finance. There was a deficit of 50,000,000
florins; and the Council adopted most unpopular measures to make it good. They
imposed, for example, a tax of 4 per cent, on property and of 10 per cent, on
income for eight years. They showed, moreover, intolerance towards Jews and
Catholics, who, as under the former régime,
were excluded from political life; and this policy irritated the Liberals.
Other measures alienated the sympathies of the army; and a conspiracy, stirred
up by Generals Daendels and Dumonceau,
very nearly succeeded. It was only due to the interference of Bonaparte, who
managed to reduce the soldiery to order, that a fresh coup d'état did not take
place.
The rupture
of the Treaty of Amiens finally ruined the hopes of the Dutch. On June 25,
1803, Bonaparte imposed on them, in addition to the maintenance of the French
army of occupation, the duty of providing 16,000 men, of fitting out five
men-of-war and five frigates, and of building transports and boats sufficient
for the accommodation of more than 60,000 men. This was too much for a country
whose finances were exhausted. The Government, driven into a corner, attempted
. to evade its engagements, and to delay the outbreak of hostilities with Great
Britain. Bonaparte, who got wind of these measures, proposed in 1803 to bind
Holland more closely to France by placing, as he said, “a man of character” at
the head of affairs—he had already Schimmelpenninck in his eye—but the mass of
business on his hands forced him to defer the execution of this plan.
Secularisation in Germany. [1797-1814
In Germany
the effects of the French Revolution were not less important than in Italy. The
people had become familiar with the ideas of liberty, fraternity, and equality
through the teaching of their philosophers and poets, who at the end of the
eighteenth century were essentially humanitarian and cosmopolitan. But these
ideas would have had little chance of taking practical effect, had not the
blows dealt by the revolutionary armies, and still more by those of Napoleon,
shattered the political fabric which had so long kept Germany disunited and
strangled all efforts at reform. Even after the rearrangement of 1803 had
recast the map of Old Germany and given the States their more modern shape, the
process of reform would never have been completed had not the Holy Roman Empire
been dissolved, and had not, above all, the Napoleonic wars, by exciting the
patriotism of the Germans, aroused in them an ardent spirit of nationality.
Indirectly, then, the French Revolution and the events that followed produced
great results in Germany. But its immediate effects hardly made themselves felt
in that country except on the left bank of the Rhine. There the conditions of
life bore a strong resemblance to those existing in France. Landed estates had
been broken up; and the peasant proprietors enjoyed sufficient civil liberty to
give them a taste for more. The feudal system had been so much relaxed as to
suggest the idea of casting it off altogether. If we add to this the absence of
historical traditions, we can understand the ease with which French ideas were
acclimatised in the newly-conquered districts.
The
inhabitants of the Rhenish provinces welcomed the French, who freed them from
ecclesiastical and feudal burdens and gave them civil equality. The people were
by no means strongly imbued with the sentiment of German patriotism. The young
publicist, Gorres, a native of Coblenz, accepted
annexation with the words: “The Rhine was created by nature to serve as the
boundary of France.” It is true that, at the outset of the French conquest, the
people had much to put up with, and that the requisitions imposed upon them
caused great discontent: but from 1797 onward they had a regular and definite
government. The German districts on the left bank, divided into four
departments under a French Commissioner who resided at Mainz, were attached to
the great Republic and enjoyed the advantages of the connexion. Bonaparte
merely confirmed this arrangement, which lasted till 1814. During the whole of
this period the left bank of the Rhine, defended by the line of fortresses
which Napoleon had carefully constructed along the course of the river, enjoyed
absolute peace. The district was indeed traversed by the Imperial armies, but
remained untouched by war. The development of agriculture followed rapidly on
civil freedom. The sale of the national domains at low prices created a
multitude of peasant proprietors; and the various industries, freed from
oppressive restrictions, grew rapidly and found important outlets in France.
Napoleon encouraged the growth of the towns by the promotion of public works.
In the rural districts roads were constructed; fruit trees were planted, and
new breeds of horses, homed cattle, and merino sheep introduced. Liberty, it is
true, existed no more on the banks of the Rhine than it did in France, and the
press and all books sent from Germany were subject to a strict censorship; but,
as the administration was fair and honest, the people were not dissatisfied
with their lot. Till 1814 they remained attached to France.
The occupation
of the left bank of the Rhine by the French brought about an important
revolution in Germany. The Treaty of Lunéville provided that the dispossessed
princes should be indemnified, and that the policy of secularisation should be
put into force. When the Emperor Francis II announced this arrangement to the
Diet at Ratisbon, that body was roused from its torpor and began to display an
unwonted activity. On March 6, 1801, the three Colleges met to consider the
Imperial communication. The King-Elector of Brandenburg proposed the
ratification of the treaty, subject to certain reservations for the future, and
to the condition that the Estates of the Empire should take part in the
rearrangement of territory which must follow as a necessary consequence. This
proposal was adopted by a majority.
Though not
too well pleased to see the number of beneficiaries increased by the addition
of the Stadholder and the Grand Duke of Tuscany, the temporal Princes were, on
the whole, enchanted with the prospect of secularisation. They called to mind
the vast confiscations of church property which had followed on the
Reformation, and which the Treaties of Augsburg and Westphalia had confirmed.
The fortunes of Prussia, Saxony, and Electoral Hesse dated from that time; and
the rulers of Baden, Wurttemberg, and Bavaria looked forward to obtaining, by
the aid of Bonaparte, similar aggrandisement. On the other hand, the Princes of
the Church would not listen to the proposals for secularisation, and protested
loudly against them, averring that, if their claims were disregarded, the
Empire and the Catholic religion would alike perish.
Between two
extremes—the party which adopted the policy of wholesale secularisation and
that which repudiated it altogether, a third party sprang up, the party of
limited secularisation, headed by Austria and Saxony. These three views were
debated at great length; and, as no one was prepared to make concessions,
discussion only served to intensify the divergence. Not only had the principle
of redivision to be decided, but also the question of the amount of the
indemnities themselves. The rivalry was bitter; Austria and Prussia were
peculiarly jealous of each other. At one time it seemed that these two Powers
had come to an understanding with the object of settling all matters between
themselves in a friendly way. They fell out, however, over the electorate of
Cologne and the bishopric of Munster; and the discussions in the Diet grew more
and more violent. Eventually, Bonaparte, in concert with the Tsar Alexander,
resolved to intervene.
Bonaparte
had long been waiting for this opportunity to meddle in the affairs of Germany.
Master of the left bank of the Rhine, he called to mind the advice of Turenne,
If you would defend the left bank of the Rhine, cross to the right.
Accordingly, while deferring the project of creating, after Mazarin’s idea, a
League of the Rhine, he aimed at establishing on the right bank friendly Powers
who would mount guard for him. The Tsar, on his side, invoking the Treaty of Teschen (1779), declared that no rearrangement of German
territory could take place without his participation. Bonaparte, who was not
sorry to associate a great Power with the transformation which he contemplated
in Germany, gave a cordial welcome to the Russian overtures. Their acceptance
left him still master of the situation; and it was he, in the last resort, who
determined the apportionment of property in Germany.
The German
Princes knew well enough that the division of the spoil depended finally upon Bonaparte,
and they forthwith hastened to Paris. In 1802 the capital of France presented a
curious spectacle. An auction might have been going on for the sale of German
lands, with Bonaparte as auctioneer. He bound all the Princes who received
benefits by special and separate treaties, which placed them at his discretion.
The Tsar, whose vanity he had flattered by giving him the credit of a
successful mediation, and by satisfying him on all points in which the
interests of France and Russia were identical, gave his approbation to the
scheme, which was laid before the Diet on February 25, 1803. The question
before the deputies involved readjustments of territory so important as to
recast the whole map of Germany from one end to the other; the majority however
approved the scheme; and the Emperor, Francis II, having no alternative,
ratified their decision. The only objections which he put forward were in
relation to the balance of votes in the Diet. The Protestants in that body,
hitherto in a minority of 45 to 67, became, by virtue of the new arrangement, a
majority of 67 to 53. This change entailed the defeat of the Austrian and the
triumph of the Prussian party. In spite of this opposition, the new Imperial
Constitution came into force in 1803; and it was destined to last, in
essentials, until the complete destruction of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806.
By this
decision of the Diet the sixth part of Germany, with a population of four
millions, was redistributed amongst certain secular States, which gained more
strength by consolidation than the Empire had lost by curtailment. Austria,
which ceded the Breisgau and Ortenau to the Duke of
Modena, received the bishoprics of Brixen and Trent.
The Grand Duke of Tuscany, an ally of Austria, obtained the archbishopric of
Salzburg, with the surrounding territory. Bavaria was very favourably treated.
She received an area of 17,000 square kilometres with 900,000 inhabitants in
exchange for the 12,000 square kilometres with 700,000 inhabitants which she
surrendered on the left bank of the Rhine, and was rendered far more compact by
the addition of these new territories. Würtemberg got nine free cities and a
number of abbeys. Baden, which had lost nothing but a few petty lordships,
received the bishopric of Constance, the towns of Heidelberg and Mannheim, ten
abbeys, seven free cities, and gained 237,000 additional inhabitants. The
Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel was liberally indemnified at the expense of the
territory of Mainz. Hesse-Darmstadt, Nassau, and other of the minor lay Princes
each received a substantial increase of territory. But, of all the States, it
was again Prussia that came off best. In the place of the 2750 square
kilometres and the 125,000 subjects which she lost, she acquired 12,000 square
kilometres and 500,000 inhabitants in Westphalia, the very heart of Germany;
she was thus placed in a position to renew her designs on the hegemony of the
north.
The effect
of all these changes was to add materially to the concentration of Germany. The
petty Princes, especially the Princes of the Church, were nearly all
dispossessed. Of these latter, numerous as they had formerly been, only three
remained, viz. Dalberg, Elector of Mainz, who through Bonaparte’s influence was
translated to the see of Ratisbon, now raised to an archbishopric, the holder
of the see being made ex officio President of the Diet; the Grand Master of the
Teutonic Order; and the Grand Master of the Order of the Knights of St John.
The number of the electors was raised from 7 to 10; and that increase was
favourable to the Protestants, 6 being Protestant and 4 Catholic. The free
cities were reduced in number from 50 to 6, namely Hamburg, Lubeck, Bremen,
Frankfort, Augsburg, and Nurnberg. The upshot of it all was that the Germany of
the Middle Ages, with its ecclesiastical States, its orders of knighthood, and
the preponderance of the Habsburgs, vanished, never to return. The independent
nobility (Reichsadel) disappeared, to the advantage
of the Princes; and the most powerful among the latter were the chief gainers.
Another stage on the road towards a united Germany was accomplished; and, for
this reason, the Imperial Recess of 1803 was in its way a revolution as radical
as was the French Revolution of 1789.
1789-97 Influence of the Revolution in Switzerland
In
Switzerland, the effects of the French Revolution resembled those in Germany:
the ancient federation of 13 cantons with its subject and allied provinces,
together with the extraordinary inequalities which existed between the country
districts and the towns, disappeared once for all. In its place was created the
Helvetic Republic, one and indivisible, which, by abolishing ecclesiastical and
feudal burdens and the monopolies that clogged manufactures and commerce, and
by establishing civil equality and liberty of conscience, laid the foundation
of the democratic Switzerland of the nineteenth century. This work, it must be
admitted, was accomplished less by the will of the citizens than by the
conquering armies of the Revolution. The ideas of 1789 had indeed penetrated
into Switzerland, where they found a ready response. The peasants, who were in
subjection to the oligarchy of the towns, and the populations of the subject
provinces—Vaud, Aargau, Thurgau, St Gallen, Ticino—who bore with impatience the
yoke of their rulers, sympathised with the French revolutionaries. At Paris a
Helvetian Club was founded in 1790, with the object of propagating
revolutionary ideas in Switzerland: it flooded the towns and country districts
with tracts and pamphlets preaching war against the oligarchy. Some risings
took place in certain parts of Switzerland, at Schaffhausen and in Vaud, where,
at the instigation of Frederic-Cesar de La Harpe and
a knot of patriots, trees of liberty were planted and tricolour flags
displayed, to the refrain of “Ça ira”. But these movements were promptly put down. The
existing Governments in Switzerland were strongly reactionary; and even in the
small democratic cantons of Old Switzerland, Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden,
which had furnished many officers to France, Jacobinism was held in abhorrence.
Consequently, in no part of Europe were French émigrés more numerous,
relatively speaking, than in Switzerland; and they were generally welcomed.
This
hospitality accorded to the refugees prejudiced the French revolutionary
Government against Switzerland, and supplied it with an excuse for
intervention. The strategical importance of the country had not escaped the
Directory, which, after the coup d’état of Fructidor,
1797, had prepared a scheme of invasion. Returning from his first Italian
campaign, Bonaparte passed through Switzerland on his way to the Congress of
Rastatt, and satisfied himself that France, if she intervened in that country,
would receive the support of certain sections of the population. The resolution
of the Directory was taken forthwith: French agents, under the guise of
travellers, overran the country, inciting the inhabitants to rebellion and
promising the aid of France. Not long afterwards, French troops arrived in the
Bernese Jura (then the bishopric of Basel) and in Vaud; and a few months later
(March, 1798) the whole of Switzerland was under the rule of French generals,
who announced themselves as liberators and promised to respect persons and
property.
This
pretended respect for persons and property was a cruel irony. Of the countries
invaded by the revolutionary armies, none was worse treated than Switzerland.
“The Directory”, said Carnot, “has looked for the country where it could find
the greatest number of free men to sacrifice, and has thrown itself upon
Switzerland”. Merciless contributions were levied on all the cantons and towns.
The rich treasure lying at Bern found its way to Paris. Arsenals were pillaged,
old banners carried off. The Confederation was impotent and could not
interfere. As yet the cantons had not learned to make common cause. Each one
fought for itself; and Bern opposed a heroic resistance to the foreign
invaders. In the end, however, the country was subdued.
General Brune drew up a Constitution, under which the country was
divided into three republics—the Rhodanique or Latin
Switzerland, the Telliane or Old Switzerland, and the Helvetique or German Switzerland. This scheme, the
work of a man who knew nothing of Swiss affairs, turned out impracticable, and
at the end of seven days it was abandoned.
A new
Constitution drawn up by Peter Ochs of Basel, one of the chiefs of the Swiss
revolutionary party, was next established. It was copied from the French
Constitution of the year III, and divided Switzerland into 23 cantons
administered by prefects. The central legislative authority was divided between
two bodies, the Senate and the Grand Council. The executive authority was in
the hands of a Directory of five members chosen by the legislative bodies. A
supreme tribunal was also created. This Constitution, however, was never
accepted by the Swiss people as a whole. The mountain cantons, in particular,
opposed it so strenuously that it was necessary, in order to enforce
submission, to call in the French troops; and these unhappy districts were also
deluged with blood.
The new
Government, supported as it was by French arms, might have been accepted by the
country had it not proved altogether inefficient. Its ideas were ambitious; it
aimed at establishing a system of civil law, at organising public instruction,
which was very backward in most of the cantons, at developing agriculture,
manufactures, commerce, and art; but, having no funds at its disposal, it could effect nothing. The country, beneath the exactions of
the French troops, had been taxed to the uttermost; and yet it was called upon
every year to submit to fresh sacrifices of men and money. Aristocrats and
democrats, who had been overawed by the French bayonets, began to grow restless
when the Coalition defeated the French in Germany and Italy in 1799. But after
Massena’s victories at Zurich, which confirmed once more the French
protectorate in Switzerland, that country gave up the struggle.
For some
years the revolutionary Government of the Helvetic Republic had much difficulty
in maintaining its authority; and, attacked as it was by the aristocrats of the
towns and the democrats of the old cantons, its members perceived that a coup
d’état was the only means of establishing their power. They proposed to
accomplish at Bern in the beginning of 1800 what Bonaparte had recently
accomplished at Paris in Brumaire. The Federalists, on the other hand,
believing that they could count upon Bonaparte (who had confided to one of
them, the Bernese Jenner, his sympathies with the federal form of government),
began an active agitation in certain of the cantons.
Bonaparte
was not indifferent to what was passing in Switzerland; and, as in the case of
Holland, he was on the watch for an opportunity to intervene. He gave the
preference to neither of the two extreme parties which divided the country, but
inclined rather to an intermediate group which recognised at once the
advantages of the new regime and of certain institutions belonging to the past
which it considered indispensable. This party, known in Switzerland as the
Republican, stood midway between the patriots or Jacobins on the one side and
the reactionaries or Federalists on the other. It was moderate in its claims and
unionist in its objects. But the party was weak in numbers; its members were
men of distinction who had been trained in the school of the Republic, and they
formed, so to speak, a staff of officers without an army. Bonaparte
nevertheless approached them ; and on January 8, 1800, a coup d’état was
effected at Bern which placed these men in power.
This coup
d’état was chiefly aimed at the Jacobin members of the Directory, La Harpe, Secretan, and Oberlin, who
since the beginning of December, 1799, had been covertly preparing a coup
d’état of their own. The two Directors who belonged to the Moderate party, Dolder and Savary, proposed in
the Directory that it should dissolve itself. On the refusal of the majority to
do this, the Moderates placed the matter before the two Councils, which were
hostile to the Jacobin Directors. The two Councils dissolved the Directory, and
entrusted the executive power to Dolder and Savary. Soon afterwards, instead of nominating fresh
Directors, the Councils appointed an Executive Committee of seven members,
moderate and experienced men, who were to act as a Provisional Government till
another Constitution could be proclaimed.
This coup d’etat was speedily followed by another.
Bonaparte could not tolerate the existence in Switzerland of two Assemblies,
each with a Jacobin majority. He therefore encouraged the Executive Committee
to substitute for the two Councils a Legislative Body composed of 43 members,
of whom 35 were to be chosen from the Councils by the Executive Committee, while
the remaining 8 were to be co-opted by the 35. The Legislative Body thus
constituted was in its turn to appoint the executive in the shape of a Council
of seven members. The Grand Council, on this proposal being submitted to it,
discerned in it the hand of Bonaparte and voted it unanimously. The Senate,
after a show of resistance, also acquiesced (August 8, 1800).
The
Republican party formed the majority in the new Government, both in the
executive and in the legislative departments; and they thought themselves
strong enough to establish a Constitution framed in accordance with their own
ideas, that is to say, at once unionist and liberal. It was, however, no part
of Bonaparte’s plan to favour the creation of a centralised Switzerland which
would be less under his control than a federation. The new Government submitted
a scheme based on the French Consular Constitution. To this Bonaparte replied
by a counter-project, the Constitution of Malmaison; and this he imposed upon
the country in defiance of the Treaty of Lunéville, which had recognised
Switzerland as an independent State.
The
Constitution of Malmaison (May, 1801) divided Switzerland into 17 cantons, to
each of which was given autonomy in various matters, particularly in those
relating to finance and public instruction. Each canton was placed under the
authority of a prefect; and the administration was in each case adapted to
local needs. The central authority consisted of a Diet of 77 members and a
Senate of 25 members; and from the latter was chosen the First Magistrate of
the country, who bore the title of Chief Landammann of Switzerland. The
Landammann presided over a Council of Four, who formed the executive authority.
This
Constitution, in spite of its imperfections, was the best that the country
could hope for at the time. Taking into account recent events, it met the
requirements of nature and history better than the unionist Constitutions which
had preceded it; it may even be said that in certain respects it was superior
to the Act of Mediation which followed it (1803). Had it been loyally applied,
it would have restored peace to Switzerland and spared her many misfortunes;
but, as things turned out, it found favour nowhere. The Republicans complained
that it did not centralise sufficiently; the urban aristocrats could not forget
the fact that it transformed the provinces which had formerly been held in
subjection into autonomous cantons. The democrats of the smaller cantons
declared roundly that they would never accept a Constitution imposed by a
stranger. All parties therefore agreed in demanding its modification; and the
Republicans, who formed the majority in the Diet, appointed a committee to
reconstruct Bonaparte’s work. Nothing was better calculated to irritate the
First Consul than this piece of audacity; and his annoyance was aggravated when
the Diet declared that “the absolute integrity of Helvetian territory was a
fundamental article of the Constitution”. This declaration was an answer to the
proposal attributed to Bonaparte, of detaching Valais from the rest of
Switzerland, so as to ensure the control of the passes into Italy.
The reply of
the irate First Consul was not long delayed. On October 28, 1801, a third coup
d’état at Bern swept away the Government of the Moderates. The stroke was
secretly planned at Bern by Bonaparte’s agent Verninae, in collusion with the
Bernese aristocrats. These latter, finding that Bonaparte was annoyed with the
Republicans, made common cause with the Federalists of the small cantons in
order to upset the Government. They succeeded, thanks to the support of French
troops under General Montchoisy. The Diet was declared to be dissolved; the
Constitution of Malmaison was reestablished; and for
the office of Laudammann of Switzerland the choice
fell on Aloys Reding, an ardent Federalist of Schwyz,
who had organised the resistance of the smaller cantons to France in 1798.
Meanwhile, Valais was occupied by the troops of General Thureau.
When he
heard what had happened at Bern, Bonaparte feigned the liveliest indignation.
Montchoisy was disavowed and recalled; but Verninae, who had pulled the
strings, retained his post. In point of fact, the First Consul was very well
satisfied with this fresh revolution, which increased the confusion in
Switzerland. He received the new Landammann at Baris, and, according to his own
expression, talked to him “as the First Magistrate of the Gauls might have done at the time when Helvetia formed part of Gaul”. The Federals
demanded three things—the withdrawal of the French troops, the restitution to
the cantons of their subject lands, and the retention of Valais as part of
Switzerland. Bonaparte was unable to give a satisfactory reply on any of these
points, but lie left Reding in the belief that he was favourably disposed
towards the Federal party. Reding returned to Switzerland full of hope, but
subsequently, when he found that Bonaparte had put him off with fair words, he
turned to the other European Powers and sent agents on secret missions to
Berlin, London, Vienna, and St Petersburg, to beg those Governments to maintain
the independence and the neutrality of Switzerland.
Bonaparte,
on hearing of this proceeding, was deeply incensed, withdrew his support from
the Federals, and, shifting his position in the manner familiar to him, made a
show of sympathy with the Republicans. The latter, believing that the moment
had come for a fresh coup d’état, took advantage of the absence of many of the
Federals from Bern during the Easter recess, declared the Senate indefinitely
adjourned (April 17, 1802) and summoned an assembly of notables from all the
cantons to agree on the changes to be made in the Constitution of Malmaison.
Bonaparte allowed them to proceed, foreseeing that their action would but add
to the existing confusion, and so furnish him in the eyes of Europe with the
necessary pretext for forcible intervention. The convention was thereupon drawn
up: it was a compromise between the Malmaison scheme and the Constitution
designed by Ochs. On being submitted to the nation for approval, it was
rejected by 92,000 votes against 72,000; but the Republicans, following the
example of Bonaparte, declared that the 167,000 abstentions should count in its
favour.
This new
Constitution, imposed by force, gave rise to incessant troubles. In Vaud the
peasants, irritated by the revival of taxes and tithes, rose in revolt,
plundered the archives of castles and towns, and burnt their contents. To quell
the rising, the aid of French troops was required. This was the very moment
chosen by Bonaparte, with Machiavellian astuteness, to withdraw his soldiers
from Swiss territory. Bonaparte had not miscalculated; hardly had the last
French soldier quitted Swiss soil than risings took place in all directions.
Instigated by Aloys Reding, the smaller cantons, with
some of the others—Zurich being one—formed themselves into a federal State.
Before long, this federation, which included the partisans of the old régime, grew so strong that the Helvetian Government
was powerless to compel its dissolution by force of arms. General Andermatt,
who commanded the government troops, after an unsuccessful attack on Zurich,
was compelled to retire. The Federalists, under experienced leaders, made
themselves masters of Bern, and expelled the Government. They then defeated
their rivals at Morat, October 4, 1802, and marched
on Lausanne in order to overthrow the Government, which had taken refuge there.
At this point Bonaparte intervened. General Rapp, one of his aides-de-camp,
brought the following message to the Swiss: “As you cannot agree amongst
yourselves I have decided to step in as mediator”.
While he
appeared merely to offer mediation, Bonaparte in reality imposed it by force.
At the very moment when Rapp presented himself before the Helvetian Government,
General Ney was ordered to march into Switzerland with 30,000 men and “crush
all opposition”. He issued proclamations in which he stated that it was “at the
request of the nation, and particularly on the demand of the Senate and the
smaller cantons, that the First Consul intervened as mediator”. It was true;
but, at the moment when the French invaded the territory of Switzerland, the
Federalist Government despatched a protest to London, Vienna, and Berlin. The
Emperor Francis II vouchsafed no reply, though the action of Bonaparte was in
direct violation of the Treaty of Lunéville. The King of Prussia, Frederick
William III, also kept silence. The British Government alone protested against
the aggression, although infinitely less interested in Swiss affairs than were
the continental Powers. On October 10, 1802, Lord Hawkesbury despatched a note to
the French Government, reminding them that the principle of the neutrality of
Switzerland was closely bound up with the questions of peace and the balance of
power in Europe; that the Treaty of Lunéville, signed only a year before, had
solemnly recognised and guaranteed that principle ; and that, in spite of all
that was happening in Switzerland, he was unwilling to believe that it could be
intended to reduce a free people to slavery.
In answer to
this note, moderate in form but firm in tone, the First Consul, on October 23,
caused Talleyrand to forward a declaration to Otto, French minister in London,
which stated that, “if the British ministry made any public statement from
which it might be inferred that the First Consul had refrained from doing any particular
thing because he had been prevented, he would do it forthwith”. When Talleyrand
despatched this note, the relations between England and France were already
much strained. In Great Britain, public opinion was growing exasperated because
the Government had failed to obtain a treaty of commerce from France. Bonaparte
evaded their demands, and put off the proposal for a definite agreement by
vague promises. As nothing came of this, the English began to lose patience.
Bonaparte had his own grievances against the British Government. He resented
the hospitality offered to refugees who were his enemies, and to the French
Princes who conspired against him. He complained also of the attacks directed
against him in the English press.
But, more
than anything else, it was Bonaparte’s policy in Europe which embittered the
relations of the two peoples. He was well aware of this; and his vigorous abuse
of the English newspapers was due to the fact that they persisted in exposing
and condemning his unworthy treatment of the weaker States, the hypocrisy of
his high-handed proceedings glossed over by the falsehoods of the Moniteur, and the acts of violence of which he had
been guilty towards Portugal, Spain, Holland, and Switzerland. Bonaparte sought
to justify his long premeditated aggressions on the Continent by the refusal of
the British Government to satisfy his demands, which he sought to represent as
measures of precaution taken in view of a possible attack on the part of Great
Britain. Thus, in August, 1802, after Lord Hawkesbury had formally refused to
reply to Bonaparte’s menacing communications on the subject of the émigrés, the
exiled French Princes, and the measures to be taken against the English press,
the First Consul had retaliated by the definite annexation of Piedmont and the
Isle of Elba, by a refusal to evacuate Flushing and Utrecht, and, a little
later, by sending his forces under General Ney to occupy Switzerland.
All these
acts, following on Bonaparte’s usurpations in Italy, and on the steps which he
had taken to secure for himself the Presidency of the Cisalpine Republic, amply
justified the apprehensions of British statesmen, who saw no limits to his
aggressive career. They, too, sought protection against Bonaparte’s growing
ambition; and it was with this object that they persistently demanded a return
to the conditions which existed at the time of the Peace of Amiens. To this
Bonaparte retorted : “At the time of the Peace of Amiens we had 30,000 men in
Piedmont and 40,000 in the Cisalpine Republic; it follows that, if the English
desire the state of things which existed at that date, they cannot complain of
the state of things which exists today... As for Switzerland, we cannot do
without her”. Switzerland was clearly the weak point in Bonaparte’s argument;
the silence of the Treaty of Amiens on this subject could not be urged in his
favour, for his intervention as mediator was subsequent to the declaration of
peace.
Bonaparte
was well aware that the British Government was deeply interested in the
questions of Switzerland and Holland, and that these questions would in the end
form the pivot of the discussion. At the time of his intervention in
Switzerland, Otto wrote to Talleyrand: “The general opinion is that the
evacuation of Malta will depend on the result of the negotiations relating to
Switzerland.” Bonaparte declined in any circumstances to allow England to
connect the two questions. “As to Switzerland”, he wrote to Talleyrand, “we
cannot permit England to meddle there, for, if she did so, it would be only to
spread disorder; she would make it a second Jersey from which to encourage
agitation against France”; and he added, “I require, first and foremost, a
frontier to cover Franche Comté. I require (in
Switzerland) a firm government, friendly to France; this is my first aim, and,
if I cannot secure it, I shall know what to do in the interests of France”.
Such was the
position in October, 1802, when Bonaparte intervened in Switzerland. With so
much suspicion on the one side and so much menace on the other, a rupture
between the two Powers seemed only a question of days. Nevertheless both
nations were so deeply interested in the preservation of peace, and each was so
firmly convinced that the other desired peace and was prepared to make concessions
to secure it, that a few weeks later regular diplomatic relations were renewed,
Count Andreossy being sent as ambassador to London,
and Lord Whitworth to Paris.
In order to
arrive at a mutual understanding, it was arranged to avoid all burning questions
; but this was a difficult matter. At the opening of Parliament at the end of
November, 1802, King George, while expressing his desire for the preservation
of peace and the maintenance of good relations with all the Powers, added that
England could not cease to emphasise the interest which she took “in certain
States”. The States referred to were evidently Switzerland and Holland.
Sheridan, speaking in Parliament, exposed in plain language Bonaparte’s policy
of conquest. “Look at the map of Europe”, he exclaimed, “and you will see
nothing but France”. Great Britain was consequently compelled to take certain
measures of precaution; and, in spite of the pacific assurances of the King,
the ministry asked for and obtained, with a view to the protection of Ireland,
an addition of 66,000 men to the army and of 20,000 men to the navy.
Bonaparte
had no belief in the warlike intentions of England; and, as the reports which
he received from London spoke of the people as keenly desirous of peace, he
imagined that the British Cabinet would yield to threats. Not a day passed but
he abused the British Government. When in January, 1803, he received the Swiss
delegates at Paris, he declared to them that, if the Cabinet of St James made
representations on the subject of Switzerland, he would annex their country
outright. A few days later, in a sitting of the Legislative Body, he announced
that he was about to equip an army of 500,000 men against England, which he
spoke of as “ isolated and powerless.” Finally, on January 30, there appeared
in the Moniteur, with his approbation, the
report of Colonel Sebastiani, who had been sent on a
special mission to Egypt. This report described the army of occupation as an
ill-armed and undisciplined rabble, worn out by debauchery, and went on to say
that 6000 French soldiers would suffice for the reconquest of Egypt. It was by
utterances of this sort that Bonaparte believed that he could force England to
yield to his demands. The very opposite took place. Sebastiani’s report, added to the provocations already received, decided the British
Government to declare that their troops would not be withdrawn from Malta until
the conditions of March 1802 had been reestablished.
Bonaparte’s
anger knew no bounds. On February 18, 1803, in the course of a violent scene
with Lord Whitworth, he declaimed against British perfidy. When the British
ambassador referred to the aggressive nature of Bonaparte’s policy in Europe,
the First Consul answered, “Piedmont, Switzerland, Holland, are mere trifles”;
and he went on to use language so coarse that Lord Whitworth wrote to his
Government, that “he talked more like a captain of dragoons than the head of
one of the greatest States in Europe”. On March 8 the King replied to this
fresh provocation by asking Parliament for supplies. On the 10th the militia
was embodied, and an addition of 10,000 men to the navy was voted. This gave
Bonaparte the opportunity of making another scene with Lord Whitworth—the
historic scene of March 13, when, in the presence of all the other ambassadors
assembled at the Tuileries, Bonaparte addressed him with threatening words. “It
is you who are determined to make war against us; you want to drive me to it.
You will be the first to draw the sword; I shall be the last to sheathe it. Woe
to those who show no respect for treaties!”
In spite of
all this rodomontade, Bonaparte in his heart wished to maintain peace. He was
informed by Duroc from Berlin and by Colbert from St Petersburg that neither
the King of Prussia nor the Tsar approved his policy. The situation, however,
had become so strained by reason of this very conduct that peace was no longer
possible; or rather war could only have been avoided by his agreeing to the
fresh conditions laid down by Great Britain. These were—(1) that she should
retain Malta for ten years; (2) that Lampedusa should be ceded to her in
perpetuity; (3) that the French troops should evacuate Holland and Switzerland.
These terms Bonaparte could not bring himself to accept. Negotiations between
London and Paris did indeed continue for a few weeks longer. Among the men who
surrounded Bonaparte there was a peace party, whose leaders were Talleyrand,
Cambacérès, and Joseph Bonaparte; and they made every effort to avert a
rupture. The British Government, on its side, made what concessions it could,
even undertaking by a secret article to evacuate Malta when the French should
have withdrawn from Holland. But Bonaparte would not come to terms; and on May
12, 1803, Lord Whitworth left Paris.
Bonaparte
had foreseen that the war could not be confined to France and England, but
would involve the rest of the Continent. This, indeed, was his reason for
occupying Piedmont, for reorganising Lombardy and Holland, and for recasting
the map of Germany. His latest intervention in Switzerland gave him the control
of the most important strategic position in central Europe.
Among
Bonaparte’s works of constructive policy none has been more generally admired
than the Act of Mediation. It has been termed a masterpiece, and such it may
have been; but it was a masterpiece of Machiavellian policy. Bonaparte did not
consult the Swiss when he gave them a Constitution. In conformity with the
promise which he had made them in October, 1802, he summoned to Paris in the
beginning of 1803, as a consultative assembly, the members of the Senate and
all the citizens who had during the last three years filled the higher posts in
the central administration. Some sixty deputies obeyed the summons, the greater
part of whom belonged to the party of progress and unity. Bonaparte, however,
was no more disposed in 1803 than he had been in 1800 to show special favour to
any one party. Accordingly, at the first sitting, he asked for the appointment
of a commission of ten members, five Federals and five Unionists, who, together
with four French delegates, should study the question of the Constitution.
The scheme
of the First Consul was a skilful compromise between new ideas and the
traditions of Old Switzerland. The Unionists did not obtain the centralised
authority which they demanded, while the aristocrats of the towns were
compelled to renounce their privileges, and to include the former subject
districts in the new Federal Constitution on an equal footing with the other
cantons. The commissioners, in conjunction with the French delegates, were
required to draw up memoranda containing their observations on the scheme. A
preliminary draft was then prepared, which was read and discussed on January
29, 1803, at a meeting of the commission, presided over by Bonaparte. He
listened to all the objections which were urged, and consented to modify
certain points of detail; but in its essence the scheme was left precisely as
he had conceived it. On February 19, 1803, the ten commissioners added their
signatures in the name of the Swiss nation, which had not been consulted and
upon which this constitution had been thrust.
The Act of
Mediation replaced the Helvetic Republic, one and indivisible, by a Swiss
Confederation of nineteen cantons, each enjoying sovereign powers and equal
rights. The Confederation was identical with the Swiss Federation of today,
except that it did not include Valais, Geneva, Neuchatel, or the former
bishopric of Basel, i.e. the Bernese Jura. Politically, the cantons were
divided into three groups, the rural cantons, the urban cantons, and the former
subject districts. The rural cantons comprised the rural and mountain districts
of central Switzerland as well as the Grisons; they recovered their ancient
democratic organisation with their Landesgemeinden,
or popular assemblies, which voted on the bills prepared by their Grand
Councils; the executive authority was placed in the hands of a small Council,
presided over by a supreme magistrate, or Landammann. The urban cantons
received a political organisation aristocratic in character; the supreme
magistrate (avoyer or burgomaster) governed
with the aid of a Senate, a Council, and a Representative Body, elected on a
limited suffrage, which contained deputies from the country districts. As for
the districts formerly subject, now recognised as independent cantons, they
also had Petty and Grand Councils; but, as in their case the electoral
qualification was lower, their Governments were more democratic in character.
All the
cantons were bound to conform to the terms of the federal compact, and were
forbidden to conclude alliances either amongst themselves, or with a foreign
Power. The local militias could, in case of necessity, be formed into a Federal
contingent of 15,000 men ; and it was decided that every canton should
contribute to the common expenses, which were estimated at 500,000 francs per
annum. Six of the cantons, viz. Bern, Fribourg, Luzern, Zurich, Solothurn, and
Basel, became in successive years the seat of the central authority. This
“directorial” canton was known as the Vorort;
and its first magistrate became Landammann of Switzerland. The powers of the
Landammann were restricted; he had the general management of foreign affairs,
opened and presided over the Diet, and was responsible for the maintenance of
internal order. He was authorised to convoke the cantonal authority in the
event of disorders taking place, or of urgent operations being necessary in
connexion with roads or rivers. He received a salary paid by his canton, which
fixed its amount and also paid the salaries of his aide-de-camp, of the
Chancellor of the Confederation, and of a clerk, the only three functionaries
who held permanent office in the Government.
In addition
to the Landammann, the central power consisted of the Federal Diet, which met
every year during a month in the summer at the Vorort.
Each canton sent a single deputy to the Diet, making 19 in all; but there were
25 votes, as every canton containing more than 100,000 inhabitants possessed
two votes. The Diet dealt with treaties, raised the troops necessary to provide
the Federal contingent, appointed the commander-in-chief, and settled disputes
between the cantons when arbitration had failed. It had no other powers. The
State possessed no standing army, hardly any revenue, and no diplomatic agents,
and, in obedience to the will of Bonaparte, was compelled to accept the
position of absolute neutrality.
It cannot be
denied that Bonaparte showed marvellous penetration in dealing with the
conditions existing in Switzerland. The Swiss were so sharply divided in
political matters that a general agreement was impossible; and neither of the
two great parties was willing to make concessions. By the compromise involved
in the Act of Mediation, which aimed at holding the balance equal between the
two sections, Bonaparte restored peace to the country. Between the premature
aspirations of the Republicans and the purely federal tendencies of those who
wished to revive in Switzerland, emancipated as she had been by the Revolution,
the obsolete forms of the old régime,
Bonaparte chose the form of Constitution best fitted to the circumstances. But
it is open to question whether, when engaged in his task of construction,
Bonaparte took the interests of the Swiss sufficiently into account. Their true
interest would have demanded a better grouping of the various districts,
greater centralisation, an army capable of enforcing respect for their
neutrality, and a common treasury which would have enabled them to carry out
urgent public works. A strong and compact Switzerland, however, was not what
Bonaparte wanted; it was to his interest that she should be helpless without
the aid of France, and strictly under her guardianship. By the Act of Mediation
he obtained what he wanted: from 1803 to 1814 Switzerland ceased to have a
distinct political existence; she became a mere satellite of France.
From the
domestic point of view, the Act of Mediation was beneficial. After many years
of barren strife Switzerland had at last time to breathe and work. The Act did
not please everyone, for the country was neither free nor independent; but the
bulk of the nation, satisfied with civil equality, and with the final
suppression of the abuses of the old régime and of the gross injustice of the old relations between the cantons and subject
districts, acclaimed with joy the work of Bonaparte. Above all, the inhabitants
of the smaller cantons were overjoyed to return to their ancient form of government;
and they drank to the health of the great mediator “who had relieved them from
the intolerable yoke of Unionism”. They sent addresses of congratulation to
Bonaparte, to which he graciously replied with the words, “The title of
restorer of the liberty which you received from Tell is more dear to me than
the most brilliant of my victories.” In later days the nation was to change its
tone; but in 1803 it was in full enjoyment of its newly recovered tranquillity
and peace.
FRANCE UNDER THE EMPIRE.
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