First term The coronation ceremony was held on 13 September 1779 inside the Church of Santi Ambrogio and Andrea, since the
Palazzo Ducale's hall of the Grand Council was not accessible due to the fire of 1777, and subsequent reconstruction work. The first term of Doge Brignole was marked by a virulent smallpox epidemic which quickly spread throughout the Republic and by the numerous incursions of the Barbary pirates along the coasts of Liguria. A fortunate expedition against the raiders, mounted by Gerolamo Durazzo, Brignole's brother-in-law, allowed Captain Giovanni De Marchi to kidnap several
Xebecs off
Bordighera. taking more than fifty. Brignole left office on 4 March 1781, entering the junta of the Borders and then that of the Jurisdiction; from 1788 to 1796 he was the principal state inquisitor and in this capacity he managed to approve, at the end of 1790, a new stricter regulation of censorship.
Second term In a climate now surreal and close to decline, Giacomo Maria Brignole was elected on 17 November 1795 once again as Genoese doge, a unique fact in the secular history of the Republic of Genoa. For the difficult moment, he refused any kind of celebration and the consequent coronation ceremony. With
Napoleon increasingly at the western gates of the Republic of Genoa, the policy of Doge Brignole was based entirely on the neutrality of the Genoese state—not joining the
Austro-Sardinia coalition against
France. The situation began to precipitate for the customs government with the increasingly victorious Napoleonic battles that inevitably sparked the first "followers" among the noble representatives and the Genoese people. The same representative of France residing in Genoa,
Guillaume-Charles Faipoult, had direct orders from Napoleon to follow events in the capital of the republic. In May 1797, arrests of some
Jacobin rioters followed, which caused unrest in the city and divided the minds of the Genoese in favor or against the ever-growing Napoleonic power. The doge's son Gian Carlo Brignole also participated in the clashes with the Genoese Jacobins. Now pressured by troops from across the
Alps, he agreed with the senators to send an embassy to Bonaparte, who negotiated the establishment of a provisional government headed by the same doge Giacomo Maria Brignole on 14 June 1797, with the aim to draft a democratic constitution. == Under Napoleon's rule ==