How did France go from the radical French Revolution to Napoleon?
After a decade of Revolution, the French people were weary of excitement, disorder and change. So great was the disgust at the Terror, so great the desiures to settle down in peace after the years of confusion. But above all, they were not pleased with their existing government, the Directory, which proved inneficient and corrupt. A majority of frenchmen were eager for a government which, while safeguarding the gains of the Revolution, would be competent and orderly. The respectable element in Paris had now completely gained the upper hand over the Jacobin lower classes, and it was driven to fury by this plain understanding of the hated radicals to perpetuate their power under a new guise. The National guard was at the disposal of the reactionaries, and on October 5, 1795, some 40,000 armed Royalists were marching on the hall of the Convention to attempt by violence a change in the Government, thus using a method well taught them by Danton and Marat. The position of the Convention was
It’s pretty simple. During French revolution, the masonic sect killed a big part of the French population (mainly poor people) in mass human sacrifices. Later, they decided to export this mass murder masonic policy under the order of a crazy general, who killed millions of people to export masonic mentality. At the end of his reign, France was exhausted, suffered huge demographic deficit and was smaller than before the Revolution.