Some historians disagree that Napoleon Bonaparte was one the world’s greatest military leaders, but others maintain that he was a villain. Napoleon Bonaparte was an Italian by ancestry; he was born on August 15, 1769 in Ajaccio, Corsica capital today, in a large family of eight children, the Bonaparte family or his Italianized surname Buonaparte. Five of them were boys, Joseph, Napoleon, Lucien, Louis and Jerome. The girls were Elisa, Pauline and Caroline, under. His mother, Letizia Ramolino, was a woman of remarkable personality, energetic, bad temper, and strong and fiery character. His father Carlos Maria Bonaparte fought alongside for the independence of the island of Corsica against the French occupation, and then …show more content…
He wanted to be the new Alexander the Great and conquer the entire world like Alexander the Great, his exploits were blurred by the permanent frustration. Napoleon's work, which essentially freed the workforce, is the hallmark of the victory of the bourgeoisie class and it can be summarized in one of his statements: "If I had had time, would soon formed one people, each at travel everywhere, there would always be found in their common country.” This was his Unitarian vision of Europe, perhaps the major fascination exercised over Europe figure as diverse historic-graphical and cultural importance, ignoring its national peculiarities uniformity otherwise subject to imperialist aegis of …show more content…
Thus ended the second imperial period, its short duration has been called the Hundred Days (March to June 1815). The English, who were deported to a lost African island, St. Helena, where he slowly succumbed to the evils of a grim jailer, Hudson Lowe was delivered. Before he died, May 5, 1821, he wrote a memoir, the Memorial of St. Helena, which is described himself as wished to see him posterity. This has not been agreed on their unique blend of nasty personality broadsword barracks, statesman, visionary, adventurer and hero of antiquity obsessed