*** Welcome to piglix ***

Cándido Bareiro

Cándido Pastor Bareiro Caballero
Cándido Bareiro.jpg
8th President of Paraguay
In office
November 25, 1878 – September 4, 1880
Vice President Adolfo Saguier
Preceded by Higinio Uriarte
Succeeded by Bernardino Caballero
Personal details
Born (1833-10-27)October 27, 1833
Luque
Died September 4, 1880(1880-09-04) (aged 46)
Asuncion
Nationality Paraguayan

Cándido Pastor Bareiro Caballero (October 27, 1833 in Luque Paraguay – September 4, 1880 in Asuncion, Paraguay) was President of Paraguay from 27 November 1878 to 4 September 1880 and the leading politician of the post-war decade.

Bareiro served as ambassador and commercial agent for the Paraguayan government of Francisco Solano López government in Europe.

During the last months of Paraguayan War he returned to Paraguay in 1869 and entered politics, where he started a political movement that would result in creation of the Colorado Party. A strong ally of General Bernardino Caballero, he was elected President in 1878 with Caballero's help and died from a stroke after two years in office.

Son of Montiel and Luis Bareiro Felipa Mayor Dolores Caballero he was the grandson of the famous Paraguayan founding father of Independence, Pedro Juan Caballero. He went to a school managed by the Argentine teacher Juan Pedro Escalada. Bareiro benefited from the opening to the world which was initiated by the regime of Carlos Antonio López, with a group of other Paraguayan students on June 2, 1858 he sailed to Europe, where in London he finished his studies. He returned home in the middle of December 1863 and received a bonus of 200 pesos. In May 1865 he was awarded with the National Order of Merit.

The Uruguayan writer Jose Carranza Sienra, who met him at the start of the Paraguayan War, said of Bareiro:

... he has a clear talent, an illustration of anything vulgar, a simple and sympathetic look

On March 21, 1864 government appointed Cándido Bareiro as chargé d'affaires in the Paraguayan Embassy in London and Paris. He was relieved from his post in October 1867 due to inability to organize critically needed armament shipments to Paraguay. By the time he managed to return to Asuncion in February 1869, the city was already occupied by the Allied armies.


...
Wikipedia

...