Carlo Buonaparte

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Carlo Maria di Buonaparte (March 29, 1746February 24, 1785) was the father of Napoleon I of France.

He was born in Ajaccio, Corsica. His father was Giuseppe Maria Buonaparte (May 31, 1713-December 13, 1763) and his mother Maria-Saveria Paravicini (1717- 1746/1750). His father had represented Ajaccio to the council of Corte in 1749.

His paternal grandparents were Sebastiano Nicolo Buonaparte (September 29, 1683-November 24, 1760) and Maria-Anna Tusoli di Bocognano (1690-September 17, 1760).

== Marriage

He married Letizia on June 2, 1764. They had a total of thirteen children:

He left Corsica shortly after his marriage to study law in Rome which at the time was the seat of Pope Clement XIII. He left Rome in a hurry on August 31, 1765. His reasons were uncertain. His hasty return to Corsica lead to him enlisting its recently founded University. He enlisted a course in Ethics by December of the same year.

Prior to his graduation Carlo was employed as a secretary by Pasquale Paoli, starting on 1767.

The Republic of Genoa had offered Corsica to Louis XV of France as payment for a debt in 1768. Many Corsicans were against this change of hands. Carlo was noted for a fervent speech against the French "invasion".

Carlo apparently changed his mind soon after the French conquest of the island. He was appointed assessor to the royal court for Ajaccio and the neighbouring districts on September 20, 1769. He never again questioned French authority.

He was awarded a Doctorate of Law by the University of Pisa between November 27 and November 30, 1769.

The French administration created a Corsican Order of nobility in April, 1770. Carlo already possessed the title of a "noble Patrician of Tuscany" due to his ancestry. He was recognized as a member of the new Corsican nobility on September 13, 1771.

He was named Corsica's representative to the court of Louis XVI of France at Versailles in 1778. He remained at court for a number of years.

He died in Montpellier. He was survived by his wife and eight of his children.

Carlo endorsed his son to become supreme ruler of France's army at first, but as the years went by, his son changed, and so did his opinion of him. He originally endorsed him because he agreed with the idea that the state should have more control over its people, but once it was obvious that it meant tyranny, Carlo saw that is wasn't ruling, but instead total domination. Napoleon had his hand "in every pot", so to speak, and literally controlled everything, right done to allowed fashion styles, housing rules, public sanitation, etc. It was very obvious that Napoleon had turned himself into a war mongerer, and he sidelined the interests of the people for his own priorities.

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