Napoleon I Timeline
August 15, 1769
Napoleon IThe artist Jacques-Louis David painted The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries, 1812.
Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Samuel H. Kress Collection, 1961.9.151785
After completing his education in France, Napoleon joins the French military, becoming an artillery officer.
1787–95
The French Revolution begins, and Napoleon sides with the revolutionaries. He fights in the French Revolutionary Wars and in 1793 is promoted to brigadier general. In 1795 a new constitution in France places executive power in a five-member Directory. Napoleon becomes a respected adviser on military matters to the Directory.
1796–99
Battle of the NileThe Battle of the Nile was fought on August 1, 1798.
© Photos.com/Getty Images1799
Napoleon: first consulNapoleon overthrew the government of France in a coup in 1799. He replaced it with a new government and made himself leader, known as first consul.
© Photos.com/Getty Images1800
A victory over Austria at the Battle of Marengo leaves France the dominant power on the continent.
1803
In need of money, Napoleon sells the Louisiana Territory to the United States, abandoning the idea of a French empire in North America.
1804
Napoleonic CodeAn early version of the Napoleonic Code.
Public Domain Photo1805–09
Napoleonic WarsNapoleon is shown on the battlefield at Eylau (in Prussia) during one of the Napoleonic Wars (the War of the Third Coalition, 1807) in this oil painting by Antoine-Jean Gros.
DEA/G. DAGLI ORTI—De Agostini/Getty Images1809–11
After divorcing Joséphine (who did not have any children with Napoleon) in 1809, Napoleon marries Marie-Louise, daughter of the emperor of Austria, in 1810. On March 20, 1811, Marie-Louise bears him a son, the future duke von Reichstadt.
1812
Napoleon: invasion of RussiaNapoleon looks on as Moscow burns in 1812.
© Photos.com/Getty Images1813–14
The Battle of Leipzig (October 1813) results in the destruction of what is left of French power in Germany and Poland. Napoleon is forced to withdraw west of the Rhine River. Allied forces invade France, capturing Paris on March 30, 1814. Napoleon is forced to abdicate on April 6 and is forced into exile on the island of Elba, off the west coast of Italy.
1815
Battle of WaterlooA collection of significant facts about the Battle of Waterloo.
Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc./Kenny ChmielewskiMay 5, 1821
Napoleon dies on Saint Helena.
Napoleon summary
Napoleon Bonaparte’s military career, dictatorship, and imperial rule
Napoleon I’s Achievements
Napoleon I | Achievements
Jacobin Club Summary
Jacobin Club, the most famous political group of the French Revolution, which became identified with extreme egalitarianism and violence and which led the Revolutionary government from mid-1793 to mid-1794. The Jacobins originated as the Club Breton at Versailles, where the deputies from Brittany
Friedrich Gentz Summary
Friedrich Gentz was a German political journalist, famous for his writings against the principles of the French Revolution and Napoleon and as a confidential adviser of Metternich. Though a commoner, he sometimes affected the von of nobility, having received a Swedish knighthood in 1804. Gentz’s