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13.3: Civil Life

  • Page ID
    172961
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    Despite the rapacity of the initial invasions, French domination brought certain beneficial reforms to its puppet states, such as single customs areas, unified systems of weights and measures, written constitutions, equality before the law, the abolition of archaic noble privileges, the secularization of church property, the abolition of serfdom, and religious toleration. Thus, in the early years of the Napoleonic empire, many conquered peoples experienced French conquest as part of a liberation.

    In addition to being a brilliant general, Napoleon was a serious politician with keen ideas on how to reform the government for better efficiency. He addressed the chronic problem of inflation by improving tax collection and public auditing, creating the Bank of France (1800), and substituting silver and gold for the almost worthless paper notes. The Civil Code of 1804 (also known as the Code Napoleon) preserved some of the legal egalitarian principles of 1789.

    In education, his most noteworthy invention was the lycée. As a secondary school, it used a secular curriculum for the training of an elite of leaders and administrators, while offering scholarships for the sons of officers and civil servants and the most gifted pupils of ordinary secondary schools. In 1801, a Concordat (agreement) with the Pope restored the position of the Catholic Church in France. However, it did not return Church property, nor did it abandon the principle of toleration for religious minorities. Napoleon's most revolutionary principle was efficiency. He wanted a well-managed, efficient empire that supported power. For example, he did not care what religion his subjects professed so long as they worked diligently for the good of the state.

    Napoleon imposed strict censorship of the press and had little time for democracy. Following the leading politicians of the Revolutionary period, he explicitly excluded women from the political community. The Civil Code of 1804 made women the legal subjects of their fathers and then their husbands, stating that a husband owed his wife protection and a wife owed her husband obedience. In other words, women had the same legal status as children. From all of his subjects, men and women alike, Napoleon expected obedience.


    13.3: Civil Life is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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