please do not talk at this timeoct 27 napoleon week! please get a chart from the front of the room...

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Please do not talk at this time Oct 27 • Napoleon Week! • Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart. Make your chart as complete as possible! What should Ms. Caramagno be for Halloween? Please vote for your favorite: Pirate Medieval Princess Turkish Belly Dancer Devil Jawa from Star Wars Jane Austen

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Page 1: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Please do not talk at this time Oct 27

• Napoleon Week!

• Please get a chart from the front of the room

HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart.

Make your chart as complete as possible!

What should Ms. Caramagno be for Halloween? Please vote for your favorite:

Pirate Medieval Princess Turkish Belly Dancer

Devil Jawa from Star Wars Jane Austen

Page 2: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

All these quotes are from the same person. What do they tell you about him? Make a list on Pg. 32A

“Power is my mistress. I have worked too hard at her conquest to allow anyone to take her away from me.”

“There are but two powers in the world, the sword and the mind. In the long run the sword is always beaten by the mind."

“Impossible is a word to be found only in the dictionary of fools.” "He that makes war without many mistakes has not made war very long." “Death is nothing, but to live defeated and inglorious is to die daily.” “Ten people who speak make more noise than ten thousand who are

silent.” “History is the version of past events that people have decided to agree

upon”. “I know when it is necessary, how to leave the skin of lion to take one of

fox.” “A man will fight harder for his interests than for his rights.” “A throne is only a bench covered with velvet.” “Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich.”

Page 3: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

The Rise and Fall of

Napoleon’s Empire

How does this Picture reflect the information you gathered from the quotes?

Page 4: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

How about these two Pictures?

Page 5: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Church Representatives

Empress Josephine

Page 6: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

For Each Slide….

• For each slide, add information to your chart. Make sure you put things in the correct category!

• As you go put a P next to things that are Political, an S next to things that are Social and an E next to things that are Economic.

• Don’t do the Questions yet!

Page 7: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Napoleon was born here, on the Island of Corsica

Page 8: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

I. Napoleon Seizes Power• 1769 – Born on Corsica• Military school in France on Scholarship• Saved National Convention, by firing shot at

a mob come to get them• Directory sent him into Italy- Success!• Egypt- while there he practices

administration, but loses to Nelson• Returns to France as the Hero of Egypt (the

news he lost is slower to arrive.)• 1799 – dissolved Directory, seized power with

friends Sieyes and Ducos and they three become consuls to run the government

• Later, even more popular, he declares himself the one leader of France

• He takes on the Powers of a Dictator

Page 9: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

II. Napoleon Rules France

• Plebiscite (public vote) approved new constitution – Napoleon stronger

• He repair the economy – fixed tax collection, established a national bank, fired the corrupt

• Lycees – started government run public schools, rewards based on merit

• Concordat – repairs the relationship with Church, He will claim influence but no control

• Establishes the Napoleonic Code – A system of laws that were uniform but eliminated individual rights, and restored slavery in Caribbean

Page 10: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

III. Napoleon Creates an Empire• 1804 – crowned himself Emperor• Wanted territory in New World, couldn’t

overcome slave armies in Haiti and sold the Louisiana Purchase to the USA

• Wanted to expand in Europe, other nations attacked & were defeated, signed peace treaties

• Austerlitz is his finest battle. He crushes the Russians and Austrians both

• Battle of Trafalgar – England’s Nelson destroyed the French fleet, Napoleon wouldn’t be able to invade Britain

• Most of continental Europe in his control by 1812

Page 11: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Please do not talk at this time Oct 28

• Disaster drill at the end of the period.• Do I have a volunteer to take the First Aid kit to the

evacuation spot on the Football Field?• Do I have a volunteer to lead the class if I am

prevented from evacuating because of Rubble?• Do I have a volunteer to assist my Buddy Ms.

Forster if I have to stay with an injured student or can’t get out of the rubble?

• Also, get out your Napoleon Work!

Test on the Enlightenment, American and French Revolutions Tuesday, Nov. 4th.

Page 12: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Army vs. Navy

Nelson

Page 13: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Battles of Napoleon

Page 14: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

The Greatest Extent of Napoleon’s Empire!

Page 15: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

IV. Napoleon’s Costly MistakesA) Continental System – blockade

against Great Britain, destroy economy, make continental Europe more self-sufficient, Britain did it better…

B) Peninsular War – French marched into Spain, took over govt., Spanish guerrilla forces attacked, French army severely weakened

C) Napoleon establishes his relatives as kings in the countries he conquers. These people are not competent rulers. The citizens of these countries revolt.

Page 16: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

D) Invasion of Russia – Meant to punish Czar for selling grain to England.

1812- 600,000 + French soldiers invade Russia

Russians pull back and refuse to fight, practice scorched-earth policy, and burn Moscow down.

Napoleon marched back to France in winter, lost his army to the cold. 20,000 walk out…

“Swallows fell from the sky like stones, frozen in flight in the bitter cold…”

Page 17: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

V. Napoleon’s Downfall• Major powers attacked:

England and Prussia• 1814 – Napoleon

surrendered at Liepzig, exiled to island of Elba

• New king unpopular, Napoleon escaped Elba, returns to France a Hero for 100 days and built a new army in 1815

• Battle of Waterloo – Napoleon defeated by combined forces of Russia, Prussia, Austria Sweden and England

• St. Helena – Exiled until his death in 1821

Page 18: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Now that you have these notes…

• Go back through your entries and label each event:– P for Political– S for Social– E for economic

• Also, Can you identify any of Napoleon’s Actions as Reactionary, Conservative, Liberal or Radical? Explain…

Page 19: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Find two people to work with and look at the questions at the bottom of your chart paper. Can you answer them with the information in your notes and on your chart?

Decide what your best answer is as a group and write that on the back of your chart paper.

1. What do you think was Napoleon’s legacy to France? That is, what do you think happened during his control that had a lasting effect on France?

2. How did Napoleon preserve the goals of the French Revolution?

3. What other things did Napoleon do to betray the goals of the French Revolution?

Page 20: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Video on Napoleon!

• This video will help you make connections between the French Revolution and Napoleon.

• Look at the Video Questions. How many can you answer right now?

• As you watch, fill in the answers.

• First we will look at some vocabulary….

Page 21: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Abdicate- To formally relinquish/give up ruling power.

• Armistice- Temporary end to hostilities and fighting by agreement between the opposing sides.

Page 22: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Artillery- A branch of an army armed with cannons.

• Coup- French for “to cut”, the violent overthrow of an existing government leader by a small group.

Page 23: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Guillotine- A machine for beheading by means of a heavy blade that slides down in vertical guides.

Page 24: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Please do not talk at this time Oct 31

Happy Halloween!• Get out your Napoleon Movie Questions

and start working on Question 10.• Autocratic- Rule by one person with all

the power• Democratic- Rule by all the people,

usually by voting for a representative to rule them

• Which of Napoleon’s actions were Autocratic? Which were Democratic? You may use your notes to get more ideas…. Share Out…

Page 25: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

In your group- Instructions:1. Read the quote. 2. Circle the parts that are “autocratic”.3. Underline the parts that are “democratic.”4. According to the information in this quote, is Napoleon Democratic or Autocratic?5. On the continuum, place a mark where you think Napoleon belongs.

Autocratic Democratic

5. Be ready to EXPLAIN why you put the mark where you did. Write your explanation on the bottom of the instruction paper. You will explain it to the class.

Napoleon Quotes Assignment

Page 26: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

Test Review Game…

• In A Vindication of the Rights of Women, this political thinker presented an argument for the education of women. She also declared that women should have the same political rights as men.

A. Mary Wollstonecraft

Page 27: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This philosopher's ideas greatly influenced criminal law reformers in Europe and North America. He argued against the use of torture and other common abuses of justice.

A. Cesar Beccaria

Page 28: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This aristocratic philosopher was devoted to the study of political liberty. In his famous book On the Spirit of the Laws, he proposed that separation of powers would keep any individual or group from gaining total control of a government.

A. Montesquieu

Page 29: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This philosopher strongly disagreed with other philosophers on a number of matters. For instance, although most philosophers believed that reason, science, and art improve the lives of all people, he argued that civilization corrupts people's natural goodness.

A. J. J. Rousseau

Page 30: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This philosopher's masterful use of satire got him into frequent trouble with the clergy, the aristocracy, and the government of France. Despite serving two prison terms and being exiled, he never stopped fighting for tolerance, reason, freedom of religion, and freedom of speech.

A. Voltaire

Page 31: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This political thinker felt that people are reasonable beings. He supported self-government and argued that the purpose of government is to protect the natural rights (Life, Liberty and Property) of people. If government fails to protect these natural rights, he said, citizens have the right to overthrow it.

A. John Locke

Page 32: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• This political thinker believed that all humans are naturally selfish and wicked. He argued, therefore, that strong governments are necessary to control human behavior. To avoid chaos, he said, people enter into a social contract. They give up their rights in exchange for law and order.

A. Thomas Hobbes

Page 33: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• What Order did these events occur in?

the repeal of the Stamp Act

the adoption of the Bill of Rights

the end of the French and Indian War

the calling of the Second Continental Congress

A. the end of the French and Indian War the repeal of the Stamp Actthe calling of the Second Continental Congress the adoption of the Bill of Rights

Page 34: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?

A. Thomas Jefferson

• Who’s ideas are featured the most heavily in the Declaration of Independence?

A. John Locke

Page 35: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• The Bill of Rights was based on ideas by which Enlightenment Philosophers?

A. Voltaire, John Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau.

Page 36: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• What happened on July 14th?

A. The Storming of the Bastille

Page 37: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Which Estate in French society most strongly embraced the ideals and principles of the Enlightenment?

A. 3rd Estate

Page 38: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Which group ran the Reign of Terror?

A. The Committee for Public Safety

Page 39: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• Who Paid Taxes in France before the Revolution?

A. 3rd Estate

Page 40: Please do not talk at this timeOct 27 Napoleon Week! Please get a chart from the front of the room HW: Use Chapter 7, Sec. 3 and 4 to add to your Chart

• What is a Social Contract?

A. The philosophical idea that people are willing to give up some individual freedoms in the interests.