San Cosme y San Damián was born within the great phenomenon of the Jesuit-Guaraní Missions, the ambitious project that the Society of Jesus developed from the beginning of the seventeenth century in the south of present-day Paraguay, the northeast of Argentina and the south of Brazil. Through the 'reductions' or 'doctrines', the Jesuits organized the Guaraní peoples into communities that combined the Catholic faith with communal work and a remarkable artistic flourishing.
The Itapúa region, in southern Paraguay by the Paraná River, was one of the great scenes of this process. There some of the most important reductions were established, among them those that would give rise to the monumental ruins of Santísima Trinidad del Paraná and Jesús de Tavarangué —today UNESCO World Heritage— and San Cosme y San Damián itself. The Paraná River, great river artery of the region, articulated communications and trade among the towns.
Each reduction was organized around a large square, with the church as the main building, next to the college, the workshops, the storehouses and the dwellings of the Guaraní families. Life revolved around religion, work and the learning of trades and arts. San Cosme y San Damián shared that model, but would develop a characteristic that would make it unique among all the missions: its scientific and astronomical vocation.
The reduction of San Cosme y San Damián has its origin in the Jesuit founding drive of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Like many missions, it underwent settlement relocations throughout its history —seeking better lands, for defensive or organizational reasons— before consolidating in its site. The town took its name from Saints Cosmas and Damian, the famous physician-martyr brothers of Christian tradition, venerated as patrons of physicians.
Like all reductions, San Cosme was organized around a central square, with the church, the college, the workshops and the dwellings arranged according to the regular layout characteristic of the missions. The town's life revolved around faith, communal work and the learning of trades and arts, under the guidance of the Jesuit fathers and with the participation of the Guaraní in the communal government.
A valuable peculiarity of San Cosme is that its building complex was preserved in good condition compared to other reductions that ended up in ruins or were lost. This lets us today appreciate the mission architecture and better understand how these towns worked. But the great distinctive feature of San Cosme would not be architectural or artistic, but scientific: here, a Jesuit would scrutinize the sky and turn the reduction into an astronomy center unique in the region.
The great protagonist of the history of San Cosme y San Damián is the Jesuit Buenaventura Suárez (1679-1750), born in Santa Fe (in present-day Argentine territory) and considered the first astronomer of the Río de la Plata. Suárez resided and worked in this reduction, where he developed a remarkable scientific work under conditions that, seen from today, are astonishing for their precariousness and their ingenuity.
Far from the great European observatories, Suárez built his own astronomical instruments —telescopes, clocks and quadrants— taking advantage of the available materials and the skill of the mission's Guaraní workshops. With them he made systematic observations of the sky: solar and lunar eclipses, the satellites of Jupiter, and other phenomena, which he recorded with rigor. His work was not isolated: he exchanged data and correspondence with astronomers and scientists in Europe, which shows the surprising reach of his work from a corner of southern America.
His best-known work is the 'Lunario de un siglo', a publication that compiled astronomical calculations and predictions. The figure of Suárez demonstrates that the Missions were not only a religious and artistic phenomenon, but also a space where knowledge and science flourished. That in a reduction of Paraguay, in the first half of the eighteenth century, a Jesuit observed the sky with self-made instruments and dialogued with European science, is one of the most fascinating and least-known chapters of American history, and the reason San Cosme y San Damián occupies a unique place among the mission towns.
The world of the missions ended abruptly. In 1767, King Charles III of Spain decreed the expulsion of the Society of Jesus from all his dominions, in line with similar measures already adopted by Portugal and France, and as a result of political, economic and power tensions between the monarchies and the order. The expulsion was carried out in the American territories in 1767 and 1768, and fully reached the Guaraní reductions, among them San Cosme y San Damián.
The departure of the Jesuits, which occurred a few years after the death of Buenaventura Suárez (1750), deprived the missions of the leadership that had articulated their functioning for more than a century. The missions entered a progressive decline: the communal organization weakened, many Guaraní dispersed and the towns lost population and vitality. Over the following decades, the mission system disintegrated.
However, San Cosme y San Damián survived as a town and preserved much of its mission building complex, which today makes it one of the best-preserved sites of the Paraguayan missions. That material survival, added to the memory of Suárez's scientific legacy, allows the town to keep alive a double heritage: that of the faith and art of the missions, and that of knowledge and the observation of the sky.
After the decline of the missions, San Cosme y San Damián continued to exist as a town and today is a locality of the department of Itapúa, near the Paraná River and Encarnación. Its appeal combines, in a unique way, two legacies: the mission heritage —with its well-preserved building complex, its church and its Jesuit buildings— and the scientific memory of Buenaventura Suárez.
In homage to that astronomical past, the town today has an observatory and an interpretation center that recall the work of the Jesuit and let the visitor know his history and, on clear nights, observe the sky of southern Paraguay, far from the light pollution of the big cities. It's an unusual tourist offering, uniting history, faith, art and science in a single destination.
San Cosme y San Damián is part of the circuit of the southern Paraguayan Missions, alongside the monumental ruins of Trinidad and Jesús de Tavarangué (World Heritage, in the same Itapúa region) and the Jesuit towns of the neighboring department of Misiones. Visiting San Cosme within that circuit enriches the understanding of the mission phenomenon, showing that those Guaraní-Jesuit towns were not only religious and artistic centers, but also, as the history of Suárez proves, places where knowledge was cultivated and people looked, with wonder and rigor, toward the stars.