Description: "All through this Italian campaign Bonaparte acted as if he were the head of the state, not its servant... He became a creator and a destroyer of states. Italy was not at that time a united country but was a collection of small, independent states. None of these escaped the transforming touch of the young conqueror. He changed the old aristocratic republic of Genoa into the Ligurian Republic, giving it a constitution similar to that of France. He forced doubtful princes, like the Dukes of Parma and Modena, to submission and heavy payments. He forced the Pope to a similar humiliation, taking some of his states, sparing most of them, and levying heavy exactions." — Hazen, 1917 Place Names: Italy, Bologna, Florence, Genoa, Milan, Pisa, Rome, Venice, Verona, Piedmont, Parma, Modena, Tuscany, States of the Church, Dalmatia, France, Switzerland, Adriatic Sea, Tyrrhenian Sea, Po River, Tiber River, Arno River, Stura River, ISO Topic Categories: boundaries,
inlandWaters Keywords: Northern Italy Illustrating Bonaparte's First Campaign, physical, political, historical, physical features, country borders,
major political subdivisions, boundaries,
inlandWaters, Unknown, April, 1796 to April, 1797 Source: Charles Downer Hazen, The French Revolution and Napoleon (New York, NY: Henry Holt and Company, 1917) 244 Map Credit: Courtesy the private collection of Roy Winkelman |
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