Napoleon Reversing the French Revolution.

H. Kapoor
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Abstract

Napoleon Bonaparte turned France into a police state during his reign.[1] However, he did not continue the French Revolution as the French people hoped. The French Revolution brought forth liberty and to do as ones will if it does not harm another.[2] A new document brought by the French Revolution embodying these principles was the French Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen in 1789.[3] This Declaration stated under article 11 that there was to be a free flow of ideas and opinions in writing and the press.[4] Article 7 outlawed any cruel harsh punishment and arbitrary sentencing.[5] However, Napoleon reversed these fundamental principles of the French Revolution. Writers, the press, along with the French people were subjected to the General police and prefects and were banned from saying anything controversial, against his regime, anything about France’s revolutionary past, and against France’s allies.[6] Arbitrary, cruel punishments, and harsh rules were enacted by Napoleon through the Penal Code in 1810.[7] Napoleon did not continue the French Revolution and reversed it by turning France into a police state and monitored and censored the French people, the press, and writers.
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拿破仑推翻了法国大革命。
拿破仑·波拿巴在位期间把法国变成了一个警察国家然而,他没有像法国人民所希望的那样继续法国大革命。法国大革命带来了自由,只要不伤害他人,就可以为所欲为法国大革命带来的体现这些原则的新文件是1789年的法国人权和公民权宣言《宣言》根据第11条规定,思想和意见应以书面和新闻形式自由交流第七条禁止任何残忍、严厉的惩罚和任意量刑然而,拿破仑推翻了法国大革命的这些基本原则。作家、媒体以及法国人民都受到警察总局和地方长官的管辖,不得发表任何有争议的言论,不得反对他的政权,不得谈论法国的革命历史,不得反对法国的盟友1810年,拿破仑通过《刑法典》颁布了专制、残酷的惩罚和严厉的规则拿破仑没有继续法国大革命,而是把法国变成了一个警察国家,监视和审查法国人民、媒体和作家,从而扭转了法国大革命。
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