The Restoration was characterized by a moderate amount of political consensus and predictability in domestic matters, as men in power tried to appease both conservative, pro-monarchy factions and those who, in the first part of the 1800s, had been loyal to Napoleon and were now established in the bureaucracy and military. The French “Restoration” (of the royal family related to Louis XVI) lasted until 1830, and it is during this period that The Count of Monte Cristo is set. They eventually defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo, in 1815, causing him to be exiled to the island of Saint Helena. England, and other countries in Europe led by monarchies, joined forces with French troops loyal to the deposed king and queen (the Royalists). Napoleon’s rule, however, did not last very long. The Terror was finally quelled by the rise of an obscure Corsican named Napoleon Bonaparte who “exported” the Revolution to other countries in Europe, by way of military combat. After several years (and the execution King Louis XVI and his Queen, Marie Antoinette), the Revolution devolved into the Terror, in which competing factions jostled for control of the government and country. Many supporters of liberal representational democracy in France and across Europe and the world were initially hopeful that the French Revolution would establish a stable France ruled “by the people.” But the Revolution did not take this route. The French Revolution began in 1789, when representatives of France’s middle classes (those with some wealth but without noble titles and inherited land) demanded a set of reforms to the French government that eventually included the abdication of the King, Louis XVI, and the creation of a government by common people. Dumas’ legacy is not strictly literary: his son, Alexandre Dumas (“fils,” or Jr.) was also a prolific writer, and Dumas also had at least one other child out of wedlock, as he was known for having many affairs. His two monumental novels of love, adventure, vengeance, and exotic locales- The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers-are his most lasting works. While he cut his teeth writing plays, Dumas wrote in many different genres throughout his life, including essays, short stories, travelogues, and novels (the genre for which he is best known). His plays The Tower of Nesle (1832) and Kean (1836) were also hits. He achieved notoriety in France in 1829 for his play Henry III and His Court. As a young man, Dumas worked as a notary and scribe, but his passion was literature. While Dumas did not attend university, his mother valued education and worked hard to make sure her son attended secondary school. Dumas’ father assumed the name “Dumas” (his Haitian mother’s surname) during his military career, and he died when the young Dumas was a toddler, leaving the family to struggle. His father, the illegitimate child of a French marquis and a Haitian slave, rose in the French army to the rank of general: the highest rank of any black soldier in a European army at that time. Alexandre Dumas was born in Villers-Cotterets, France to a military family.
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