EVENTS IN THE
EARLY 19th CENTURY
The wars to unseat Napoleon as the Emperor of France and
to free the states and kingdoms of Europe including Russia from the grip of
Napoleon marked a watershed in the historical development of the European
continent. The ascension of General Napoleon Bonaparte as the leader of France
in 1799 following the French revolution that began in 1978 was a defining event
not only for France but for Europe as a whole.
Napoleon’s overthrow of the autocratic rule of the
Jacobins in France brought the violent part of the Revolution to an end. At the
head of a military government, Napoleon quickly consolidated his hold on power
and brought all the instruments of state power including the media and to a
large extent the Church under his rule and control. France was quiet but under
the autocratic rule of a self-styled Emperor who was bent on stretching to the
maximum the boundaries of his dictatorship.
After suppressing opposition and dissent at home,
Napoleon began a series of engagements that brought him military victories over
Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Holland, Prussia, Austria, and Italy and for a season
Russia. He became the new master of Europe and found that his only undefeated
rival was Great Britain, with who he remained perpetually at war.
The Napoleonic wars were a time of great conflict,
tension and turmoil in Europe as his conquests touched on virtually every
aspect of Europe. He sought to impose a French hegemony that made him a lot of
powerful enemies. His attempts at reform and reorganization of nations and national
boundaries left him with conflicts that continued to grow and escalate as more
nations allied with Great Britain in the struggle to destroy Napoleon’s hegemony.
Napoleon’s string of victories covered the defeat and
expulsion of the British from Toulon in 1793, defeat of a royal rebellion in
Paris, October, 1795, the defeat of the Austro-Hungarian armies in Italy
1796-1797 leading to the signing of the treaty of Campo Farmio extending French
territory. His campaigns in Egypt and the Middle East threatened Britain’s
position in the Mediterranean.
He however lost the battle of the Nile in 1798 when his
fleet was destroyed by the Royal Navy in a classic contest involving Admiral
Horatio Nelson as the British fleet commander. That defeat did not stop
Napoleon Bonaparte from returning to France to proclaim himself as Emperor in
1804.
In 1805 he defeated an alliance of the European powers at
Austria, repeating the same feat in Jena 1806 and Fried land in 1807. His
dominion over the continent became complete after the dissolution of the Holy
Roman Empire in 1806.
His defeat however by the British in the naval battle of
Trafalgar was a turning point when Viscount Horatio Nelson dashed the hopes of
Napoleon in establishing France as the dominant power at sea by smashing the
Franco-Spanish fleet in the famous battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 where
he also met his end at the hands of a French sniper while decked in full colors
as Admiral of the Fleet and elegantly savoring the full measure of British
victory over the French from his frigate HMS Victory.
Napoleon’s power base however began to erode with his
defeat in the Peninsula wars, 1808-1814, where the British General Sir Arthur
Wesley, checked Napoleon’s incursions into Portugal and Spain. Napoleon’s
attempt to overcome the Russians in the war of 1812 was met by a stiff
resistance led by the Russian General Mikhail I Kutuzov at a place called
Borodino where Napoleon’s advance was halted outside of Moscow.
His subsequent capture
of Moscow was undermined by the tactical withdrawal of Russia’s marshal
Borodino and his army from the city before its capture, the great fire set by
the Russians that devastated the city and the early onset of winter that
debilitated his ill-prepared army and demoralized his troops making them easy
targets for the Russians guerrilla tactics that dealt fatal blows on his weakened
forces occupying the Russian capital.
His retreat in the
midst of the Russian winter marked the end of the era of the French army as the
dominant military power in Europe as Napoleon’s forces in the retreat dwindled
from peak strength of 600,000 men to less than 10,000 fit and capable men when
he entered into France.
The defeat galvanized opposition to his rule within the
same nations he had subdued and occupied and lent fresh impetus to the
anti-French coalition of forces opposed to Napoleon and determined to see his
downfall. The coalition was led by Great Britain.
In 1813 Napoleon attempted to reassert his dominant role
in Europe, but his army was defeated by a European alliance at the battle of
Leipzig, October 16-19, 1813. Napoleon was forced into abdication of office in
1814 following an invasion of France by an alliance of European powers led by
Great Britain
His attempt at the restoration of his rule, when he fled
the island of Elba and returned to France was met by his final defeat in the
battle of Waterloo in 1815 by the British, Austrian and Prussian coalition under the command of the Duke of Wellington, Sir Arthur Wesley. He was then exiled to the Island of St Helena where he lived until
his death in 1821.
Coming closely after the defeat of Napoleon, was the Congress
of Vienna, September 1814-1815, where important decisions relating to the
political future of Europe were taken. The assembly of European statesmen met
at Vienna, Austria to ensure that the events of the Napoleonic years did not
repeat themselves in Europe.
The Congress’s
decisions were dominated by the rulers of Austria, Metternich, Russia, Tsar
Alexander I and Arthur Wesley, Duke of Wellington who led the military
coalition. Also prominent were Castlereagh of Britain, Von Humboldt of Prussia
and Talleyrand of France.
The Congress focused a lot on territorial adjustments
among the European states leading to the establishment of the German
Confederation and the kingdoms of the Netherlands and Poland which was placed
under Russian rule. The Italian city states gained recognition alongside the
kingdoms of Sardinia and Naples. Austrian territory was extended into parts of
Italy which conceded some of its territory to Prussia.
The United Kingdom was confirmed in some of its overseas
colonial conquests which were recognized by the Congress. The decisions taken at
the meeting were often times not a reflection of the yearnings and aspirations
of the people concerned as no consultations were made with the peoples mostly concerned.
The Congress of Vienna thus re-engineered the political
map of Europe which was to remain that way for the next half century. The fact
that no major war was fought in Europe for the next half century gave credence
to the assiduous and tactful diplomacy that was involved in crafting some of
the decisions taken.
No major peace conference on Europe’s future and
political boundaries was to hold until another 100 years had passed. The
Napoleonic wars had so drained Europe of its strength and energies that most of
the major powers channeled their strengths into resolving many of the major
disputes and conflicts diplomatically.
There was no doubt, that a number of skirmishes and local
conflicts rocked the continent, but none on the scale and intensity that had
rocked Europe during the Napoleonic years.
One unwritten law that had emerged during and after the
wars of Napoleon was that no single power would be allowed to emerge and take a
stranglehold on the affairs of Europe. That policy was to be severely tested
and contributed to the breaking out of two major conflicts in the early 20th
century and is still a policy thrust in Europe today.
The defeat of the French Navy by a British fleet led by
Admiral Horatio Nelson at the battle of Trafalgar in 1805 paved the way for the
Royal Navy to dominate the high seas for the next 100 years. Britain’s position
as an island, her dependence on maritime trade for the sustenance of her local
economy and maintenance of her overseas Empire necessitated the formation of a
large and formidable Navy that she depended on not only for the protection of the
island, but also for the protection of her maritime trade and far flung
colonies.
Napoleon Bonaparte challenged Great Britain’s naval power
in the battle of the Nile 1797 and the battle of Trafalgar 1805. He lost both
battles leaving Britain confirmed in her position as the greatest naval power
in the world. Britain’s control of the high seas enabled her to secure her many
colonies and ensured that ‘the empire, whose sun never sets’, never got
disgraced abroad militarily.
Britain’s naval power complemented her military strength
as her ability to move armies across the high seas to far flung distant battlefields
put her in a vantage position among the leading colonial powers.
Britain’s control
of the sea meant that her military could simply not be easily beaten abroad
where most of her colonial holdings lay. It was thus obvious why Britain was
not interested in any territorial expansions in Europe except for some Island
fortresses like Gibraltar, Malta, Crete that dotted the Mediterranean Sea.
Britain’s hegemony at sea also meant that she had an edge
in the extent of her colonial holdings. The British had the largest overseas
empire particularly her North American colonial holdings had that included the
erstwhile American colonies and Canada; a good portion of which were won over
from wars with the French and the Spanish in the 18th century in the
French and Indian Wars and wars of Spanish succession.
She also had a string of island possessions that dotted
the Caribbean and Western Atlantic like Jamaica, Barbados and so many others.
British interest however did not extend to South America where Spanish and
Portuguese explorers held sway. Her only notable possession in the South
Atlantic was the Falkland Islands and the Magellan straits.
British dominion and control of the high seas was very
much a source of irritation and frustration for the major European powers that
had to contend with the British policy of patrolling the high seas and
enforcing international laws and conventions which oftentimes she single handedly
set.
This policy often times
led to conflicts and wars such as the Anglo-American war of 1812-1814 which was
mainly borne out of American frustration with the British policy of search and
seizure of American vessels and impressing of American sailors into the
services of the Royal Navy during the tortuous and protracted Napoleonic wars
which concealed the basic problem, British non recognition of the sovereign
rights of the United States of America.
Britain’s naval patrols and seizure of offending ships
during the period of enforcement of the ban on slave trade beginning 1807 also
produced a lot of irritation. The high point in British naval imperialism came
with the attempt of Britain and France to open the straits of Dardanelles forcefully
during the Crimean war with Russia in 1853 when Russia closed the straits to
prevent Ottoman Turkey’s warships from gaining access to the Black Sea.
Remain informed as you serially follow the events that shaped the world we live in today
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