Clear division between Ministry of Finance
(oversee collection of taxes) and Treasury
(dealing with government expenditure).
Central rather than local authorities
to assess and collect direct taxations
Reorganization of direct
and indirect tax system
Land tax register drawn up to
make sure tax collected effectively
Central Excise Office (1804), collects taxes
on tobacco, alcohol, gold, sliver, salt
Revenue increases by
over 400% between
1806-1814
Bank of France
Established 1800
A private bank with its own
shareholders, but given a range
of public functions
Right to issue paper notes
Currency stabilizes
1803- issues Franc
Long term stability – inflation down
– but continuous warfare increases
state expenditure from 700 million
francs in 1806 to over 1000 million
by 1813 – widening gap made up by
forcing defeat countries to pay
reparations.
Legal Reforms
Context
Successive revolutionary govts. try
to create nationwide legal system
North – Customary Law – liberal
acceptance of equality of person, civil
marriage, divorce and equal division of
property between heirs
South – Roman Law – emphasises male authority
and the father’s rights; women’s status inferiror
Code Napoleon
favours principles of
Roman Law.
Napoleon’s Civil Code (1804)...
On the one hand, preserves the gains of revolution...
confirms abolition of feudalism
fixed legal title for purchasers of confiscated
church, crown and émigré property
Also follow revolutionary principle of partage
(equal division of estates among male heirs)
But...
A man had total authority over his wife and family – he could
send an adulterous wife or a defiant child to prison
Lack of liberty in treatment of black people – slavery reintroduced in the French colonies
Workmen – subject to close police supervision through use of the livret
Explain why Napoleon introduced a new Civil
Code (the Code Napoléon) in 1804.
provide state with supply of civilian officials and
administrators and loyal, disciplined army
Education to bind the nation together –
hence the need for the government to take
direct central control over provision
However nor for everyone – majority attended only primary
schools run by the church – secondary education was open only
to the sons of the property-owning classes
Secondary education...
45 selected, militarised lycées (established 1802) –
government appointed teachers would teach common syllabus
from identical textbooks
No room for freedom of expression: some sent children to
more expensive private church school
Imperial University (Ministry for Education) – trained teachers
and sanctioned all secondary schools; total obedience –
teachers have to take an oath of loyalty and subject to petty
restriction – i.e. visiting Paris without permission would mean
a spell in prison
Religious
Relations with the Catholic Church
Conflict since 1790, but revival of Catholic
public worship under Directory
No government hoping for public
support could ignore this
Catholicism = monarchism. If Napoleon could win Catholic
support it would strengthen his stability
Acknowledge power of religion as a social bond...
No society can exist without inequality of fortunes; and inequality of
fortunes cannot exist without religion. When a man is dying of hunger
beside another who is stuffing himself with food, he cannot accept this
difference if there is not an authority who tells him, ‘God wishes it so’
... It is religion alone that gives to the state a firm and durable
support.
Why Napoleon made a Concordat with the Catholic Church in 1801?
Concordat would enhance Napoleon’s own glory and prestige and
validate his regime
Concordat might reconcile oppositional
nobles and priests to the regime
religion had been divisive since the Civil Constitution
of the Clergy (1790) deprives the Pope of influence
within France and made the Church subservient to the
state. Napoleon wanted to heal old sores and win
support for his regime
the election of Pope Pius VII in 1800 offered an opportunity for
a new agreement and the French army’s success in Italy was
likely to ensure favourable terms at this time
Napoleon may have wanted to ensure the loyalty and
support of the owners of former Church lands by making a
binding agreement on this issue with the Pope.
Terms of Concordat, July 1801...
Confirmation that the
separation of church and
state was to end
Confirmation that the
separation of church and state
was to end
Catholic Church was to
recognise Revolution and
agreed no attempt would
be made to recover church
lands
Catholic worship ‘the religion of the
great majority of citizens’ to be freely
exercised in France
Catholic worship ‘the religion of the great
majority of citizens’ to be freely exercised in
France