Coronation On 25 August 1849, Soulouque was proclaimed emperor by Parliament under the name of Faustin I. His
coronation took place on 18 April 1852, in a ruinous splendor for the finances of this country, and the payment of the debt had to be interrupted. Soulouque paid £2,000 for his crown and £30,000 for the rest of the accessories (according to Sir Spenser St John, British chargé d'affaires in Haiti in the 1860s, on his account: "Hayti ou La République noire", pp. 95 –96). Gustave d'Alaux describes this fact in his book Soulouque et son empire: “His imperial majesty summoned the principal merchant of Port-au-Prince one morning and ordered him to immediately order in Paris a costume, identical to that of
Napoleon's coronation. Faustin I also commissioned a crown, one for the empress, a scepter, a globe, a hand of justice, a throne and all other accessories, such as those used during Napoleon's coronation. " In December 1849, Faustin married his lifelong partner, Adélina Lévêque. On 18 April 1852, in the capital,
Port-au-Prince, the emperor and empress were crowned in a huge and sumptuous ceremony, like the coronation of the emperor of the French. The emperor made a speech and concluded with: “Long live freedom, long live love!" (Gustave d'Alaux). The coronation is illustrated in the "Imperial Album of Haiti", engraved by Severyn, published in New York, 1852 (available at the British Library).
Politics To affirm his legitimacy, Faustin brought the sons of the first emperor,
Jean-Jacques Dessalines, back to Haiti. He restored the title of "prince" and "princess" to them, and offered a pension to the former empress Marie-Claire Bonheur. Later, he organized a violent repression against the
mulattoes and imposed
absolutism upon the island. The imperial constitution, which he himself drew up, proclaimed a hereditary empire. As the only son of the Emperor died in 1849, the succession passed instead to Prince Mainville-Joseph, a son of the Emperor's brother, Grand Duke Juan José. To have offspring on the throne, Faustin arranged the marriage of his eldest daughter, Princess Olive Soulouque, to her cousin Prince Mainville-Joseph. The couple went on to have three children.
War against the Dominican Republic The emperor's foreign policy focused on preventing foreign intrusion into the politics and sovereignty of Haiti. The independence of the
Dominican Republic (then called Santo Domingo), according to him, posed a direct threat to Haiti. In 1849, Soulouque launched his first invasion of the Dominican Republic, but his army fled not due to defeat but instead due to lack of food and supplies. In 1850 there was a second invasion, in which Haiti was stopped by the force of France, the United Kingdom and the United States. In the third and last invasion, in 1855, Soulouque entered the Dominican Republic outnumbered due to many of the men in the army abandoning him before they reached Dominican Republic. During his three expeditions, he had to face General
Pedro Santana, who was then in command of the Dominican Republic.
Nobility The emperor tried to create a strong centralized government that, while retaining a deeply Haitian character, was heavily inspired by European traditions, especially the Napoleonic Empire. One of his first acts after being declared emperor was to establish a new nobility. The Constitution of 20 September 1849, granted the emperor the right to create hereditary titles and to grant other honors to his subjects. Volumes 5 and 6 of The National by John Saunders and Westland Marston (published in 1859) explain that the Empire consisted of 59 dukes, 90 counts, 30 knights, and 250 barons. This new nobility also included the old nobility of the First Empire and the Northern Kingdom. The first patent letters were issued by Soulouque on 21 December 1850. Other sources add "three hundred knights" and "four hundred nobles" to this list. == The fall of the Empire ==