![cover of the book The Rise and Fall of the Paraguayan Republic, 1800–1870](/covers/files_200/3279000/7001c1df075bd6348cae4d7bb4308436-d.jpg)
Ebook: The Rise and Fall of the Paraguayan Republic, 1800–1870
Author: John Hoyt Williams
- Year: 1979
- Publisher: The University of Texas at Austin
- Language: English
- pdf
Paraguay plays a very small role in the modern world, but for part of the nineteenth century it was a significant regional force. Between 1800 and 1865 it changed from an imperial backwater into a dynamic, dictator-led, financially sound nation. Then came the terrible War of the Triple Alliance, and by 1870 Paraguay had virtually been destroyed.
John Hoyt Williams re-creates the era’s people, places, and events in rich detail and a vigorous style, but this is much more than a mere narrative. His archival research in Paraguay and several other countries enables him to offer new facts and interpretations, correct a number of misapprehensions, and explode a few myths.
He also provides the clearest, most objective portraits available of the three extraordinary men who ruled Paraguay during this time: Dr. José Gaspar de Francia, “El Supremo”; Carlos Antonio López, “the Corpulent Despot”; and López’s flamboyant son Francisco Solano López. Discussions of social, economic, and cultural conditions round out a masterly account of a remarkable historical period.