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Does Napoleon's rise to power represent a continuation of
or an end to revolutionary ideals?
I NEED A ANSWER NOT A YES OR NO PLEASE

Answer :

Answer:

Napoleon did not turn his back on the Revolution. However, for him, the Revolution was not to be confused with the Convention, Robespierre, and the Terror. Through the experience of the Directory, Napoleon attached himself to the moderate Revolution of 1789, that of “equality”, with as its corollary, the return of civil peace and order. For him, as he said one day, the last page of the “novel” that was the Revolution must one day be written. The role of the new government was to write “its own history”, in other words, to consolidate the advances made by the Revolution and to make them irreversible. It was therefore following in continuity with the moderate Revolution that it fulfilled this historical mission, at the end of ten years of struggle, hesitations, and disorder. As is sometimes heard today, so it was for Napoleon: citizens could not enjoy equality and liberty without order.

Explanation:

Resource Used:

https://www.napoleon.org/en/history-of-the-two-empires/articles/bullet-point-8-napoleon-end-finish-revolution/

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