José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia (born Jan. 6, 1766, Asunción, Río de la Plata—died Sept. 20, 1840, Asunción, Paraguay) was the dictator of Paraguay whose intensely personal rule and policy of self-sufficiency left the nation both isolated and without alternative political institutions.
Francia was trained in theology but turned to the practice of law. In 1811 he became secretary to the junta that had overthrown Spanish rule and in 1813 served as co-ruler. The next year he was elected dictator, and in 1816 he obtained the dictatorship for life.
Not content with freedom from Spain, Francia in 1813 declared independence from Argentina, though Paraguay’s only tie to the outer world lay on the river route through Buenos Aires. Determined to keep his country independent, Francia forbade all river traffic to Argentina and banned all foreign commerce. Paraguay thus became a hermit nation; few people were permitted to enter or leave.
Francia, or “El Supremo,” controlled the national revenues; fostered internal industries to make the nation self-sufficient; introduced modern methods of farming and livestock raising; and organized and equipped the army. He abolished the Inquisition, suppressed the college of theology, swept away tithes, and deprived the aristocracy of their privileges.
Francia was a frugal and honest ruler but unspeakably cruel. The nation survived at a primitive level of self-sufficiency but at a terrible cost in political liberty.