Louis XVIII dies before 1814, Charles X becomes king upon the Restoration

Say Count of Provence doesn't flee France when it's prudent to do so, and loses his head in the Reign of Terror. When Napoleon falls in 1814, the Count of Artois is declared King Charles X of France instead. What are the ramifications of this?

I'm thinking there might be more popular support for Napoleon if/when he stages his big return from Elba, because while the people were in general afraid that Louis XVIII would roll back all of the Revolution's gains and reinstitute the Old Order/seigneurial dues/etc., Charles X actually DID want to do those things. So maybe this would mean more volunteers for Napoleon's armies during the Hundred Days?

Or maybe the far more reactionary Charles would manage to have Napoleon shot instead of sent to Elba in the first place.
 
If Charles X really does the same as OTL, he is going to disappear from power, and this quickly.
He has just to do the right shit.

Let's assume that Louis XVIII did, in 1814, something very silly and get captivated by Napoleon's army. He is judged summarily and executed thereafter. Now, Chalres X becomes his successor, and get even more radical than before. When the allies conquer Paris, he starts to implement the Restauration radicale, including

- ruling without parliament/constitution
- returning the biens nationaux
- restoring feudal propriety in the countryside
- restoring the trade and craft guilds of Paris
- purging the local administrations and the army from liberals, republicans and most notably bonpartists
- shooting old regidice members of the national conventions (Fouché, maybe even good old Cambacérès)
- restoring the white flag instead of the tricolor (okay, Louis XVIII did the same)
- restoring Catholicism as state religion, probhibit protestantism and discriminate against Jews
- residing in Versailles with the known absolutist court.

The Frenchs get very, very, very angry - peasent revolts errupt and a revolut of craftsmen and bourgeois takes control of Paris. A provisional government of (surviving) republicans and bonapartists is established, but not recognized by the exiled king and the reactionary powers - soon, the French rulers recognize that against the united front of European armies, they need not only revolutionary rhetorics, but also a military genius; so, in spring 1815, they secretly recall Napoleon from Elba who takes control of the revolutionary movement as Empereur and/or Dictateur.

The French government can certainly levy around 600,000 men, all motivated, since they knew what will happen and who will return in case of a defeat. After that, either Napoleon manages to defend the Belgium and later the Rhine, or he is beaten and monarchy is restored a second time under Charles X, this time even more bloodier than in TTL 814.
 
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