Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2014
This article establishes the significance of elections held in the annexed departments of the Napoleonic Empire from 1802 to 1813. It thus represents an original, and perhaps surprising, contribution to recent debate on the nature of Napoleonic imperialism, in which attention has shifted from core to periphery, and away from purely military matters. The electoral process under this authoritarian regime has been alternately neglected or derided, especially where the newly created departments of the Low Countries and parts of Germany and Italy are concerned. However, extensive archival research demonstrates that it was taken extremely seriously by both regime and voters, especially outside metropolitan France. These ‘First European Elections', as they may be dubbed, took place in regular fashion right across the Empire and are studied here on a transnational basis, which also involves the metropolitan departments. Though open to all adult males at the primary level, they were not exercises in democracy, but they did create some rare political space which local people were not slow to exploit for their own purposes. Above all, they served as a means of integrating ‘new Frenchmen’, particularly members of indigenous elites, into the Napoleonic system.
The authors would like to thank the journal's two anonymous reviewers for their helpful criticisms and comments and Devadas Moodley for commenting on a late draft.
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21 Under a regime of military occupation following its cession to France in 1768 by the Republic of Genoa, after 1786 the island was assimilated into the French kingdom.
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27 See, for example, the senatus consultum of 16 Vendémiaire XIV (8 Oct. 1805) annexing the Ligurian Republic: Bulletin des lois de l'empire français (hereafter Bull.), 4e série, iv, 90/1093.
28 Ibid. Article 3 reads ‘Les députations des départemens de Gênes, de Montenotte et des Apennins, seront nommées en l'an XIV; elles seront renouvelées dans l'année à laquelle appartiendra la série [électorale] où sera placé leur département.’ The senatus consulta of 24 Apr. and 5 June 1810 regarding the incorporation of the Bouches-du-Rhin and Bouches-de-l'Escaut do not conform to the general pattern.
29 Senatus consultum, 16 Feb. 1806, Bull., 4e série, v, 275/1325.
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32 AN, F1c iii Arno 1, Finance to Interior, 20 June 1809.
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39 AN, F1c iii Ombrone 1, Finance to Interior, 22 Jan. 1814.
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89 AN, F1c iii Escaut 3, 2 Apr. 1813.
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130 Prefects or presidents of colleges regularly held dinners for members on the eve of sessions; for the connection between membership and nobility in Napoleon's mind, see Coppolani, Élections, pp. 100–1.
131 Cited in Poullet, Institutions, p. 594.
132 Poullet, Esprit public, p. 60.
133 His entry in Dictionnaire des parlementaires, i, p. 576.
134 Ibid., their entries: v, pp. 260 and 313 respectively.
135 Collins, Parliaments, p. 142.
136 Entries for Altieri, Capalti, Nelli, Mariscotti, Scarpellini, Trajetto, and Zaccaléoni in Dictionnaire des parlementaires; Corsini's entry in Tulard, ed., Dictionnaire Napoléon, i, p. 562.
137 Clack, ‘Parliamentary elections’, pp. 365 and 367.
138 D'Hauterive, Police secrète, v (1809–1810), p. 290.
139 Clack, ‘Parliamentary elections’, p. 367.
140 Poullet, Esprit public, p. 67.
141 Of candidates who went on to be elected by the Senate under the Empire, nearly half were fonctionnaires, with sub-prefects particularly conspicuous: ‘Corps législatif’, in Tulard, ed., Dictionnaire Napoléon, i, pp. 548–9.
142 Poullet, Esprit public, p. 66; d'Hauterive, Police secrète, v (1809–1810), p. 310.
143 Clack, ‘Parliamentary elections’, p. 365.
144 Ibid., p. 367.
145 Rowe, Reich to state, p. 148.
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157 By contrast, the inhabitants of France's diminishing overseas possessions were in effect deprived of political representation by Article 91 of the Constitution of Year VIII.