No, he supported the Republicans.
The French Revolution ends with Napoleon's coup against the Directory.
They all revolted against the existing order: the French revolution against absolutist royalty; Napoleon revolted against (and forcibly overthrew) the then existing French government, the Directoire; and Luther and other reformers revolted against the Catholic church.
He defended the Directory against Royalist counter revolutionaries.
He defended the Directory against a Royalist counter revolution with a whiff of grapeshot.
The coup by Napoleon and the French Consulate against the Directory on 10 November 1799.
Napoleon was a part of a coup against the Republican Directory in 1799.
Napoleon marks the end of the French Revolution.
I'm a Napoleon supporter so I have more good to say about him than bad ha. However, Napoleon in many ways went against the ideals of the Revolution. Firstly, the French Revolution fought for democracy but Napoleon was a dictator. Secondly, one other ideal of the French Revolution is to have checks and balances within the government but Napoleon made almost all the political decisions on his own. Overall, Napoleon's style of government was closer to absolutism which was a big no-no of the French Revolution.
Napoleon was part of a coup against the Directory in 1799.
It ended on 10 November 1799 with Napoleon's coup against the Directory.
It ended because of the 1799 coup against the French Directory in which Napoleon became the First Consul.
The American Revolution succeeded in establishing the long-term representative government while the French Revolution eventually produced a dictator (Napoleon Bonaparte). The American Revolution was different from the French revolution because the Americal revolution was a revolt against a colonial power. The French revolution was an uprising against the appression imposed by Members of the titled nobility.