On account of his friendship with
Maximilien Robespierre, Saliceti was denounced by the
Thermidorian Reaction and was saved only by the
amnesty of the
French Directory. In 1796 Saliceti was
commissioned to organize the
French Revolutionary Army in the
Italian Peninsula, and the two
départements into which Corsica had been divided after its recapture. Saliceti also became deputy to the
Council of the Five Hundred, and served the Directory in missions to the
Ligurian Republic. Although an adversary of Napoleon's
18 Brumaire Coup which created the
Consulate (9 November 1799), he was kept by Napoleon as his representative to the Republic of
Lucca (1801–1802) and Liguria (1805), engineering the territory's
annexation to the Empire. In 1806, he followed
Joseph Bonaparte to the
Kingdom of Naples, where Joseph had been imposed as
King, and served as minister of police and of war. Saliceti died in
Naples in mysterious circumstances, possibly poisoned. ==Bibliography==