(Redirected from Francisco Solano Lopez)
'Francisco Solano López' (
24 July 1826 –
1 March 1870) was
president of
Paraguay from 1862 until his death in 1870. He was the eldest son of president
Carlos Antonio López, whom he succeeded. Considered ambitious, perhaps arrogant, and possibly insane, Solano López is widely regarded as being responsible for the
War of the Triple Alliance, which led to his death.
Solano López was born near
Asunción. He was made
commander-in-chief of the Paraguayan army by his father, in 1846, during the spasmodic hostilities then prevailing with
Argentina. He was sent in 1853 as minister plenipotentiary to
Britain,
France and
Italy, and spent a year and a half in
Europe. He purchased large quantities of
arms and military supplies, together with several
steamers, and organized a project for building a
railroad and establishing a French
colony in Paraguay. In 1853, he met Parisian courtesan
Eliza Lynch. López fell in love with her and brought her with him back to Paraguay. There she was his
mistress and de-facto first lady till his death, strongly influencing his later ambitious schemes. In Paris he also developed an interest in
Napoleon.
Returning to Paraguay, he became
Minister of War in 1855. When his father died in 1862, his will stipulated that López assume the reins of government as vice-president. López then called a
congress that chose him as president for ten years. In 1864, in his self-styled capacity of protector of the equilibrium of
La Plata, he demanded that Brazil should abandon her armed interference in a
revolutionary struggle then in progress in
Uruguay. When Brazil did not respond, he seized a Brazilian merchant steamer in the harbour of
Asunción and imprisoned the Brazilian governor of the province of
Mato Grosso, who was on board. In the following month (December 1864) he dispatched a force to invade
Mato Grosso, which seized and sacked its capital
Cuiabá and took possession of the province and its
diamond mines.
López next sought to send an army to aid the Uruguayan president
Atanasio Aguirre against a revolutionary aspirant named
Flores, who was supported by Brazilian troops. Because Argentine President
Bartolomé Mitre refused to allow this force to cross the intervening province of
Corrientes, López decided to wage war on Argentina. A hastily summoned congress composed of López's own nominees bestowed the title of
marshal upon him and gave him extraordinary war powers. On
13 April,
1865, he declared war, seizing two Argentine war vessels in the Bay of Corrientes. The next day, he occupied the town of Corrientes, instituted a provisional government of his Argentine partisans, and announced that Paraguay had annexed Corrientes Province and
Entre Ríos Province. Meanwhile, in Uruguay, Flores' party had gained power and on April 18 united with Argentina to declare war on Paraguay. On
1 May, Brazil joined these two countries in a secret
alliance (the
Treaty of the Triple Alliance), which stipulated that they should unitedly pursue the war until the existing government of Paraguay was overthrown, "until no arms or elements of war should be left to it." This agreement was literally carried out.

Marshall Francisco Solano López. The stamp is Scott no. 771
The war which ensued, lasting until
1 March 1870, was carried on with great stubbornness and with alternating fortunes, though López's disasters steadily increased. In 1868, when the allies were pressing him hard, he convinced himself that his Paraguayan supporters had actually formed a conspiracy against his life. Thereupon several hundred prominent Paraguayan citizens were seized and executed by his order, including his brothers and brothers-in-law, cabinet ministers, judges, prefects, military officers, bishops and priests, and nine-tenths of the civil officers, together with more than two hundred foreigners, among them several members of the diplomatic legations (the San Fernando massacres). During this time he also had his mother flogged and ordered her execution, and also attempted to have himself canonized by the local bishops. López was at last driven with a mere handful of troops to the northern frontier of Paraguay, where, in the
Battle of Cerro Corá on
1 March 1870, he was surprised by a Brazilian force and killed by a grenadier as he tried to escape by swimming the river
Aquidaban.
There is a debate within Paraguay as to whether he was a fearless leader who led his troops to the end, or whether he foolishly led Paraguay into a war which it could never possibly win, and which nearly eliminated the country from the map. This debate was not helped by the revisionist stance taken by the
Stroessner regime, regarding national history. Conversely, he is considered by some Latin Americans as a
champion for the rights of smaller nations against the aggressions of more powerful neighbours.
See also
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History of Paraguay
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List of Presidents of Paraguay
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History of Uruguay
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History of Argentina
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History of Brazil
External Links
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Paraguay de Antes (pictures of Triple Alliance War)
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Satellite Map of Cerro Cora
References
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