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Napoleon
Bonaparte
Emperor of France. Born Napoleon
Buonaparte (the spelling change was made after 1796) on August
15, 1769, in the Corsican city of Ajaccio. He was the fourth of
11 children of Carlo Buonaparte and Letizia Romolino. His father
derived from the lesser Corsican nobility. Following the
annexation of Corsica by France in 1769, Carlo was granted the
same rights and privileges as the French nobility. After an
elementary education at a boys' school in Ajaccio, young
Napoleon was sent in January 1779 with his older brother Joseph
to the College of Autun in the duchy of Burgundy. In May of the
same year he was transferred to the more fashionable College of
Brienne, another military school, while his brother remained at
Autun. Here Napoleon's small stature earned him the nickname of
the "Little Corporal."
At Brienne, Napoleon received an excellent military and academic
education, and in October 1784 he earned an appointment to the
École Militaire of Paris. The royal military school of Paris was
the finest in Europe in the years before the Revolution, and
Napoleon entered the service of Louis XVI in 1785 with a formal
education that had prepared him for his future role in French
history. Napoleon joined an artillery unit at Valence, where he
again received superior training.
First Military Assignments
Now a second lieutenant, Napoleon continued his education on his
own, but he was distracted by Corsica. Until 1793 his thoughts,
desires, and ambitions centered on the island of his birth.
Following the death of his father, in 1786 he received an
extended leave to return to Corsica to settle his family's
affairs.
After rejoining his regiment at Auxonne, he again spent more
than a year on his native island (1789-1790), during which time
he was influential in introducing the changes brought about by
the Revolution. Returning to France, Napoleon was transferred to
Valence in June 1791. But by October he had returned to Corsica,
where he remained for seven months. He spent the critical summer
of 1792 in Paris and then returned to Corsica for one last
episode in October. On this visit he took part in the power
struggle between the forces supporting Pasquale Paoli and those
supported by the French Republic. After Paoli was victorious,
Napoleon and the Bonaparte family were forced to flee to the
mainland, and the young officer then turned his attention to a
career in the French army.
The Revolution of 1789 did not have a major effect upon
Bonaparte in its early years. He did not sympathize with the
royalists. Nor did he take an active part in French politics, as
his thoughts were still taken up with affairs in Corsica.
Napoleon was in Paris when the monarchy was overthrown in August
1792, but no evidence indicates that he was a republican. Upon
his return from Corsica in the spring of 1793, Capt. Bonaparte
was given a command with the republican army that was attempting
to regain control of southern France from the proroyalist
forces. He took part in the siege of Avignon, and then while on
his way to join the French Army of Italy Napoleon was offered
command of the artillery besieging the port of Toulon.
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