Napoleon’s influence encompassed the four continents of Africa, Europe, North & South America (sometimes called the Atlantic World), all of which were concerned with Napoleon’s ideas.
For example, during the Irish Rebellion of 1798, Wexford had declared a republic along French lines; the Cabildo in Buenos Aires rose against its Spanish imperial rulers to form a democratically elected Junta and in Manchester, England, in 1819, eighteen people had been trampled to death and over 400 injured during a protest in favour of political reform.
Napoleon’s exile and imprisonment on St Helena in the South Atlantic had done nothing to dampen demands for liberty or reduce deep resentment caused by British policy.