No
He declared himself emperor, which is absolutism and against the ideas of the enlightenment.
bismarck
Napoleon Bonaparte, Catherine the Great, Fredrick the Great, and Joseph II.
The sculpture of the enlightened individual is the key symbol of buddhism.
nationalism
Stalin
Yes, he was a modern dictator. What made Napoleon's dictatorship modern was that it embodied popular sovereignty. The people should govern but they need some kind of representation and that can be one person--a dictator. A modern dictator exercises political authority in the name of the people and Napoleon promised peace and stability after such a horrific time of turmoil from the French Revolution.
The comparative form of "enlightened" is "more enlightened," and the superlative form is "most enlightened."
Napoleon made himself somewhat of a "divine right" ruler, controlling a government which was not in the hands of the people being ruled. He loved war, which the enlightened writers didn't approve of much, and he also didn't give true freedom of the press.
more enlightened
Cities cannot be enlightened -- only conscious beings can be enlightened.
Napoleon was called an enlightened despot because he implemented a range of progressive reforms while maintaining autocratic control over France. He promoted principles of the Enlightenment, such as legal equality, meritocracy, and secular governance, notably through the Napoleonic Code, which established civil rights and streamlined the legal system. Despite his authoritarian rule, his policies aimed at modernizing the state and promoting education reflected Enlightenment ideals, blending them with his desire for centralized power.