José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia was a lawyer and politician, and the first dictator of Paraguay.
Background
According to one account he was of French descent but the truth seems to be that his father, Garcia Rodriguez Francia, was a native of S. Paulo in Brazil, and came to Paraguay to take charge of a plantation of black tobacco for the government.
Education
José studied theology at the college of Cordova de Tucuman and is said to have been for some time a professor in that faculty, but he afterward turned his attention to the law and practiced in Asuncion.
Career
Having attained a high reputation at once for ability and integrity, he was selected for various important offices. On the declaration of Paraguayan independence in 1811, he was appointed secretary to the national junta, and exercised an influence on affairs greatly out of proportion to his nominal position. When the congress or junta of 1813 changed the constitution and established a duumvirate, Dr Francia and the Gaucho general Yegres were elected to the office. In 1814 he secured his own election as dictator for three years, and at the end of that period he obtained the dictatorship for life. He abolished the Inquisition, suppressed the college of theology, did away With the tithes, and inflicted endless indignities on the priests. For the extravagances of his later years the plea of insanity has been put forward. On the 20th of September 1840 he was seized with a fit and died.
Achievements
Religion
Deeply imbued with the principles of the French Revolution, he was a stern antagonist of the church.
Personality
In his accounts which have been published of his administration there is a strange mixture of capacity and caprice, of far-sighted wisdom and reckless infatuation, strenuous endeavours after a high ideal and flagrant violations of the simplest principles of justice. He put a stop to the foreign commerce of the country, but carefully fostered its internal industries. He was disposed to be hospitable to strangers from other lands, and kept them prisoners for years; lived a life of republican simplicity, and punished with Dionysian severity the slightest want of respect. As time went on he appears to have grown more arbitrary and despotic.
Connections
José de Francia discouraged marriage both by precept and example and left behind him, several illegitimate children.