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Napoleón Bonaparte

Sara Puche García

Created on March 24, 2023

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Transcript

napoleón bonaparte

INTRODUCTION

WHO WAS HIM?

BIOGRAPHY

CONCLUSION

index

FAREWELL

INTRODUCTION

Hello, we are Sara and Claudia, and we are going to talk about Napoleón Bonaparte.

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WHO WAS HIM?

Napoleón Bonaparte was born the 15 th of August of 1769. He was the cause of the French Revolution. For little more for a decade, he took control for almost all of Western and Central Europe through a series of conquests and alliances.

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BIOGRAPHY

He was the second son of Carlos Buonaparte. As a child he was very generous. At the age of nine he won a scholarship to study at the military academy of Brienne, where he remained until he was fifteen. The figure of Napoleon emerged during the French Revolution, and over the years it grew to become one of the most important imperialist symbols in Europe.

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First as consul and then as emperor he dominated his country and embarked on an expansionist spiral. He won many of the battles he played, even those that were his two great defeats, in Leipzig and Waterloo. After being defeated in 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte had escaped from the Mediterranean island of Elba where he had been exiled. When it came time to imprison him after the Battle of Waterloo, his enemies chose one of the most remote places on the planet: St. Helena, a 121 km² island more than 1,900 kilometers from the nearest land in the South Atlantic, an ocean that was controlled by the British Royal Navy.

Despite such caution and that Napoleon was under armed surveillance, there were plans to rescue him, including one hatched by a group of former French soldiers living in Texas (then a province of Mexico), who wanted to resurrect the Napoleonic Empire in North America. He promoted the Napoleonic Code, one of the most celebrated civil codes that contributed to France's political stability. Napoleon's death is still shrouded in mystery, as the alleged stomach cancer that killed him may actually be arsenic poisoning.

CONCLUSION

His role in the French Revolution has given rise to numerous debates. For some historians, Napoleon spread the bourgeois principles of the Revolution through absolutist Europe, destroying the Ancien Régime. For others, he was a tyrant who ended the freedoms of the French and betrayed the spirit of the Revolution.

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