Ministry of the Interior Ministry of Finance & Imperial Credit. Minister of Manufactures, Mines, and Imperial Works. Ministry of Roads, Canals, Railways, and Telegraphs Ministry of War. Minister of the Navy & Mariti Power. Public Instruction & Education. Sciences, Arts, and Technical Instruction. Ministry of Agriculture. Minister of Foreign Affairs.
Napoleon II set the paper down and looked at it again.
The structure itself was sound. France had not been poorly governed. But the nas told him everything he needed to know about how the state had grown—layer by layer, decree by decree, without ever being trimd back. Long titles. Repeated responsibilities. Ministries stepping into each other’s work simply because no one had stopped them.
It was inefficient. And he hated anything that causes inefficiency.
He took a pen and began marking changes.
The Ministry of the Interior stayed as it was. It already handled what it needed to: internal administration, law enforcent, prefects, and civil order. No reason to rena sothing that worked.
The Ministry of Finance & Imperial Credit was shortened to the Ministry of Finance. Credit, taxation, treasury managent, and debt issuance would all fall under one authority anyway. Adding extra words did not add discipline. The ministry would oversee revenue collection, state expenditures, national debt, and monetary policy through the central bank.
The Ministry of Roads, Canals, Railways, and Telegraphs was condensed into the Ministry of Infrastructure and Communications. Its function was clear enough: construction and maintenance of roads, bridges, canals, railways, ports, and the national telegraph network. Anything that moved goods, people, or information across France belonged there.
Public Instruction & Education beca the Ministry of Education. Its task would be national curriculum standards, teacher training, literacy programs, and university oversight.
The Ministry of Sciences, Arts, and Technical Instruction was renad the Ministry of Science and Technology. Research funding, industrial innovation, patents, technical academies, and applied sciences would be centralized there. Art would be supported, but not allowed to dilute the ministry’s purpose.
The Ministry of Manufactures, Mines, and Imperial Works was split by logic rather than habit. Napoleon II crossed it out and replaced it with the Ministry of Environnt and Natural Resources. This ministry would regulate mining, forestry, water resources, land use, and industrial extraction.
The Ministry of War and Ministry of the Navy & Mariti Power were rged into a single Ministry of Defense. Army, navy, logistics, procurent, fortifications, and strategic planning would answer to one civilian authority.
Then ca the additions.
He wrote Ministry of Public Health. Its responsibility would be sanitation, hospitals, disease control, urban hygiene, and dical training. France had learned enough from past epidemics to know this could not remain an afterthought.
Finally, Ministry of Housing and Urban Developnt. City planning, housing standards, worker districts, and urban expansion would fall here. France had a lot of idle lands and with the industrialization at an all-ti high, population growth would be massive.
But Napoleon II thought that it was lacking. What are the other ministries that he could add to the lineup that still make sense?
"Electricity..." Napoleon II mumbled and there he had it. Energy!
Napoleon II tapped the pen once against the paper.
Energy.
It was obvious in hindsight. Railways, factories, telegraph lines, lighting, future machinery—everything he planned rested on power generation. Leaving it scattered across other ministries would only slow things down and invite conflict over jurisdiction.
He wrote the Ministry of Energy beneath the others.
This ministry would oversee power generation in all forms. Coal extraction standards in coordination with Environnt and Natural Resources. Construction and regulation of power plants. Developnt of electrical grids for cities and industrial zones. Fuel allocation for railways, factories, and military production. Research into new energy technologies would be coordinated with the Ministry of Science and Technology, but deploynt would remain here.
"Still, sothing feels missing," Napoleon II said and reread the cabinet lineup. It felt complete yet at the sa ti, it wasn’t. So he began contemplating again what the country needs.
What do people need?
And then his mind went back to the railways. Transportation! And then moving goods from one place to another, be it dostic or foreign.
"Ministry of Transportation. And for the other one, the Ministry of Comrce."
Transportation was not just infrastructure. That mistake had been made too many tis already. Roads and railways were useless without coordination, schedules, standards, safety, and logistics. The Ministry of Infrastructure and Communications would build. The Ministry of Transportation would operate.
It would oversee rail services, river traffic, ports, rchant fleets, and internal logistics. Passenger movent, freight regulation, tariffs on dostic transit, and national standards for vehicles and rolling stock would all fall under it. If sothing moved people or goods on a titable, this ministry would answer for it.
Comrce ca next.
Industry could produce endlessly, but without markets it would stagnate. The Ministry of Comrce would manage dostic trade, export policy, import controls, comrcial treaties, and market regulation. It would coordinate with Finance on tariffs, with Infrastructure on trade routes, and with Foreign Affairs when diplomacy intersected with profit.
He reviewed the lineup again.
Interior.
Finance.
Infrastructure and Communications.
Transportation.
Comrce.
Education.
Science and Technology.
Environnt and Natural Resources.
Energy.
Defense.
Public Health.
Housing and Urban Developnt.
Foreign Affairs.
Agriculture.
Fourteen ministries. Each would be headed by a capable minister of France. Now, it’s fourteen, perhaps he could make it fifteen?
Napoleon II looked at the map of France and then realized it.
An Empire is not an Empire without its colonies. Though France already possessed overseas territories, but they were administered as extensions of other ministries—Interior here, Comrce there, Defense when things went wrong.
That wouldn’t last.
He returned to the desk and wrote the final entry.
Ministry of Colonial Affairs.
This ministry would oversee administration of overseas territories, colonial infrastructure, local governance, security coordination, and economic developnt.
Napoleon II read the full list one last ti.
Fifteen ministries.
"This should be enough," Napoleon II smiled with satisfaction. Every month, there would be a cabinet eting where the ministers would report one by one to him. Now, for the nas.
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