There is a city in Paraguay where you cross from one country to another simply by crossing an avenue, with no immigration post or river in between, and that bears the name of a founding father of independence. That double identity —an open border with Brazil and deep patriotic roots— defines Pedro Juan Caballero. The city bears the name of Pedro Juan Caballero, one of the founding fathers of Paraguay's independence. Caballero was a central figure in the emancipation process that led the country to separate from the Spanish crown and from the influence of Buenos Aires in 1811. He was part of the group of patriots who led the events of the night of May 14 to 15, 1811, when Paraguay took the decisive steps toward its autonomy.
As a member of the junta and of the ruling circles of that founding moment, Pedro Juan Caballero was inscribed among the founding names of the Paraguayan nation. His figure is remembered as that of a man committed to the cause of independence, in a turbulent time when Paraguay was defining its destiny as a sovereign country.
That a northern city, on the border with Brazil, bears his name is a way of honoring this founding father and of inscribing the modern town of Amambay within the national narrative. The place name connects the thriving border city of today with the roots of the country's independence, recalling one of its protagonists.
The department of Amambay, in northeastern Paraguay, takes its name from the Amambay range, the chain that runs along the border with Brazil and that gives the region its characteristic landscape of hills, savannas and river sources. It's an area of singular nature within the country, different from the plains of the center and the wetlands of the south.
Historically, the northern and northeastern region was tied to the exploitation of the yerba plantations: yerba mate, a plant native to these lands, was for centuries one of the great economic resources of Paraguay and of this region in particular. The gathering and trade of yerba shaped the occupation of the territory and the life of many communities, in an activity that also gave rise to harsh working conditions, portrayed in the country's literature and social memory.
The border with Brazil was, likewise, a determining factor in the history of Amambay. The proximity and permeability of that boundary shaped the economy, culture and settlement of the region, in a process of constant exchange with the Brazilian side that continues to this day and that defines much of Pedro Juan Caballero's identity.
The historical event that forever marks the Amambay region occurred on March 1, 1870, at Cerro Corá, a short distance from present-day Pedro Juan Caballero. There the last act of the War of the Triple Alliance (1864-1870) took place, the conflict that pitted Paraguay against Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, and that became one of the most devastating in South American history.
Cornered after years of war and long retreats, Marshal Francisco Solano López, president of Paraguay and commander of its forces, reached these northern hills with the remnants of his army. At Cerro Corá he was overtaken by the Brazilian troops and died in combat, in a scene that Paraguayan tradition recalls with the phrase attributed to him: 'I die with my homeland'. With his death the war ended, leaving Paraguay devastated: an enormous part of its population —especially male— had perished, and the country was left ravaged and territorially mutilated.
For all this, Cerro Corá is one of the most meaning-laden places in Paraguayan history. The date of March 1 is commemorated as Heroes' Day, in homage to those who fell in the war and, in particular, to Marshal López. The site, today turned into a national park, is a place of memory and patriotic pilgrimage, as well as a space of notable natural value.
One of the traits that define the identity of Pedro Juan Caballero is its condition as a twin city of Brazilian Ponta Porã, in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul. Unlike most borders, separated by rivers or geographical features, here the international boundary is a 'dry border': the two cities grew attached, separated only by an avenue that acts as the dividing line between Paraguay and Brazil.
This geographical peculiarity generated a singular urban and cultural phenomenon: a binational zone where life flows between the two countries with extraordinary naturalness. People cross from one side to the other to shop, work, study or stroll, and the resulting culture is deeply mestizo, with the coexistence of Spanish, Portuguese and Guaraní, and a mix of customs, foods and music of both nations.
The development of both cities was always intertwined, and border trade became one of the engines of the local economy. Pedro Juan Caballero thus consolidated itself as an active commercial center and as one of the most characteristic border crossings in South America, where the border, far from separating, integrates the daily life of two neighboring peoples.
Today's Pedro Juan Caballero is a dynamic city, capital of the department of Amambay and one of Paraguay's great hubs of border trade. Its economic life revolves largely around the exchange with Brazil, with shops and arcades that draw shoppers from both sides of the border, and its binational atmosphere remains its most characteristic hallmark.
Beyond the trade, the city offers the visitor a rich cultural experience: the mix of languages and customs, the cuisine that combines the Paraguayan and the Brazilian, and the chance to experience up close the dynamic of an open, living border. The mestizo identity of Amambay, the fruit of centuries of contact between the two countries, is breathed in every corner.
To that appeal is added the enormous historical and natural weight of the region, led by Cerro Corá National Park, a place of patriotic memory par excellence. Thus, the city today combines its commercial vocation and its border character with a first-rate historical and natural heritage, which makes it a singular gateway for getting to know the north of Paraguay and one of the most decisive chapters of its history.