The origin of Encarnación is tied to one of the most fascinating chapters of American history: the Guaraní Jesuit reductions. In the seventeenth century, the missionaries of the Society of Jesus founded in the south of present-day Paraguay a network of mission towns among the Guaraní. The city of Encarnación is historically linked to the reduction of Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación de Itapúa, founded by the Jesuits in that era in the Paraná River region.
The reductions were self-sufficient communities where the Guaraní, organized under the guidance of the Jesuits, lived, worked, prayed and developed arts and crafts, in a social, religious and cultural experience without parallel. The Itapúa region, where Encarnación stands today, was part of that vast mission territory that extended across southern Paraguay and the neighboring areas of present-day Argentina and Brazil.
The reduction of Itapúa played a role as a point of passage and port on the Paraná, connecting the world of the missions with the region. Although the modern city of Encarnación would develop much later, its name and its historical root come from that Jesuit founding, linking it forever to the legacy of the Guaraní reductions that today, in Trinidad and Jesús, are a World Heritage Site.
The extraordinary system of the Jesuit reductions came to an abrupt end in 1767, when King Charles III of Spain ordered the expulsion of the Society of Jesus from all the territories of the Spanish Empire, amid the tensions between the Crown and the powerful religious order. The expulsion affected all the missions of Paraguay and the region, including that of Itapúa, and marked the beginning of their decline.
Without the organization and guidance of the Jesuits, the reductions entered a process of decline. Many fell under administrations that failed to keep them running, the Guaraní population dispersed and the mission towns gradually decayed. The great architectural works, like the churches of Trinidad and Jesús, were abandoned or, in the case of Jesús, left unfinished, since the expulsion interrupted its construction mid-process.
The Itapúa region, however, remained populated, and over time the site associated with the old reduction of the Encarnación gave rise to the development of a settlement that would grow into a city. Thus, on the roots of the mission world, the modern Encarnación began to take shape, while the ruins of Trinidad and Jesús remained as a monumental testimony to that unique experiment that the expulsion of 1767 had cut short.
After the decline of the missions, the Itapúa region remained inhabited and, through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the settlement linked to the old Encarnación grew until it consolidated as a city. Its location on the bank of the Paraná River, on the border with Argentina and facing the site where Posadas would develop, gave it a vocation as a port and border city that would shape its development.
The Paraná River made Encarnación a point of passage and trade between Paraguay and the region. A key factor in its growth was the arrival of the railway, which connected Encarnación with Asunción and the rest of the country, and even with the rail network that, across the Paraná crossing, linked with Argentina. The port and the train spurred trade, immigration and the city's urban development.
Encarnación thus consolidated itself as the main city of southern Paraguay and capital of the department of Itapúa, with a strong commercial and border character. The proximity to Posadas fed an intense movement of people and goods between the two banks, which over time would give the city its fame as a shopping destination. On that base the twentieth-century Encarnación would develop, a dynamic border city.
The event that radically transformed modern Encarnación was the Yacyretá hydroelectric dam, a gigantic binational work between Paraguay and Argentina on the Paraná River, downstream of the city. On coming into full operation and raising its level, the Yacyretá reservoir raised the level of the Paraná River, which affected the low-lying area of Encarnación, historically tied to the port and border trade.
The river's rise forced, well into the twenty-first century, an enormous relocation process: the city's old low-lying area —with its trade, its port and many homes— was moved, and new urban infrastructure adapted to the new water level was built. This process, complex and not without social tensions, completely redefined the appearance of Encarnación.
From that transformation was born the modern waterfront and the urban sand beaches that today are the city's pride and the base of its identity as the 'Summer Capital'. What had been a problem —the flooding of the low-lying area— became, thanks to the new waterfront, an opportunity that reinvented Encarnación as a tourist destination and river resort. The city looked again toward the river, this time to enjoy it.
Contemporary Encarnación is one of the most dynamic and attractive cities in Paraguay. Thanks to its modern waterfront and its sand beaches on the Paraná, it consolidated itself as the country's 'Summer Capital', a river resort that each season receives thousands of visitors in search of sun, river and rest, in an experience unusual for a landlocked city.
To its resort profile, Encarnación adds being the home of the most famous Carnival in Paraguay: the Encarnación Carnival, which each summer lights up the Sambadrome with its troupes, its dancers, its feathers and its music, drawing visitors from all over the country and neighboring Argentina. The combination of beach and Carnival makes Encarnación one of the most festive and lively destinations in Paraguay in the summer season.
But the region's greatest treasure remains its historical heritage: the Jesuit missions of Trinidad and Jesús de Tavarangué, declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1993, are an unmissable visit and a unique testimony to the Guaraní-Jesuit legacy that gave rise to the city itself. Thus, today's Encarnación unites its mission root, its recent urban transformation and its tourist vocation, offering the traveler one of the most complete and captivating experiences in Paraguay.