1815 French constitutional referendum
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This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2024) |
A constitutional referendum on the Charter of 1815 of the First French Empire, with Napoleon I restored to power in place of Louis XVIII, was held on 22 April 1815. Like in previous French referendums, the officially announced result was nearly unanimous. Out of seven and a half million eligible voters, 79% abstained that day.[1] Compared to the 1804 referendum, the yes vote had a net loss 2 million votes.[2]
Results
Party | % of votes | Votes |
---|---|---|
Yes | 99.67% | 1,305,206 |
No | 0.33% | 4,206 |
Total | 100% |
References
- ^ Bertaud, Jean-Paul (2021), "Chapitre 11. Les Cent-Jours (mars-juin 1815)", Le Consulat et l'Empire, Cursus (in French), vol. 3e éd., Paris: Armand Colin, pp. 185–195, ISBN 978-2-200-63065-2, retrieved 17 February 2024
- ^ Lyons, Martyn (28 June 1994). Napoleon Bonaparte and the Legacy of the French Revolution. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-349-23436-3.
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