"Essentially a compromise between Roman and common law, the Code Napoléon consisted of a reasoned and harmonious body of laws that were to be the same across all territories administered by France, for the first time since the Emperor Justinian. The rights and duties of the government and its citizens were codified in 2,281 articles covering 493 pages in prose so clear that Stendhal said he made it his daily reading. The new code helped cement national unity, not least because it was based on the principles of freedom of person and contract. It confirmed the end of ancient class privileges, and (with the exception of primary education) of ecclesiastical control over any aspect of French civil society. Above all, it offered stability after the chaos of the Revolution"
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Historians from EnglandAnglicans from the United KingdomPeople from LondonJournalists from EnglandFellows of the Royal Society of Literature
Original Language: English
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Lawgiver (p. 276)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Andrew_Roberts%2C_Baron_Roberts_of_Belgravia
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Andrew Roberts, Baron Roberts of Belgravia
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