Napoleon Bonaparte was the emperor of France after the French revolution. He was a great leader, but also might be considered a dictator of sorts. After the revolution Napoleon was said to have brought peace to the people of France in a time of distress. When Napoleon was leader he ended up both upholding and undermining the ideals and goals of the French revolution. Napoleon upheld the revolution by creating equality for all men, and by making a meritocracy, but he also undermined it by taking away most if not all of the women's rights, and taking away freedom of the press. Napoleon was born into a poor, but powerful family on the island of Corsica in 1769. At the age of fifteen Napoleon went to École Militaire of Paris where he got more …show more content…
For example Napoleon created equal rights for all men. One of the whole reasons the French revolution even happened was because people wanted to be equal and wanted to eliminate the estate system. When Napoleon came into power he created the Napoleonic code which was a list of laws. One of the laws stated that, “All citizens are equal before the law.” In Napoleon's rule this law was one of the most significant pieces of legislation that could have been provided to the French people. Napoleon made all men equal, which upholds all that the Revolution strived …show more content…
During the French revolution women were committed to working towards a society in which all of mankind were equal and free. When Napoleon claimed power he instituted a list of laws which stripped many of the French women's rights. For example, women couldn't get a divorce from their husbands, they couldn't own property, and any money a woman earned would be considered her husband's. It undermined the ideals of the French revolution, and who knows what women might have accomplished in an equal society if their rights were