The house includes the following rooms. ;Office room Important documents from this period, signed by various patriots of the Paraguayan independence are kept in this room. Here is also exhibited a bureau which belonged to
Fernando de la Mora and five pictures, among which one stands out, representing a key moment of the independence – the intimidation of Governor Velazco, painted by Jaime Bestard. ;Dining room Here are displayed furniture and objects in common use during the colonial period. A sword which belonged to
Fulgencio Yegros is exhibited in one of the windows, as well as a highlighted portrait of Doctor
José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia. ;Living room A suite of French furniture from 1830 is exhibited under a crystal chandelier and a brazier made of wood and bronze. Two full-length portraits of
Pedro Juan Caballero and
Fulgencio Yegros can also be seen. Religious carvings made in
Jesuits and
Franciscan workshops complete the room. ;Bedroom A bed which belonged to
Fernando de la Mora is placed here and his portrait can be seen on the wall. Below the picture, there is an embroidered shirt worn by him. A large chest used by
Juan Bautista Rivarola, a peculiar toilet, a magnificent prie-dieu and a polychrome niche complete the atmosphere of the room. ;Oratory Jesuit and Franciscan carvings and diverse religious objects of different origins are exhibited in this room. A portrait of the priest
Francisco Xavier Bogarín can also be seen here. ;Corridor Two large boards carved in wood from church doors in the missions are placed in the adjacent corridor. Below them, there are the remains of the disappeared eaves of the house, which give us an idea about the measurements and characteristics of the materials used in constructions during the colonial period. ;Yard A mural painted by
José Laterza Parodi is highlighted in this place. Here you can read the text of the note of 20 July 1811, addressed to the
Primera Junta in
Buenos Aires, in which the independence of
Paraguay was asserted. Below the note, the first coat of arms of the nation adopted during the government of Doctor Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia is displayed. At the foot of it there is the sundial from the Jesuit mission of Santa Rosa. A tumulus covering the mortal remains of the illustrious patriot
Juan Bautista Rivarola Matto and brought from the
Barrero Grande cemetery, nowadays
Eusebio Ayala can be seen in one of the yard corners. ;Capitulary Saloon Crossing the yard, there is a replica of the Capitulary Saloon of the old Cabildo de
Asunción, the first in the
Río de la Plata, established on September 16, 1541. In the centre of the room, there is the coat of arms of Spain from 1800. On the walls hang a magnificent portrait of the Emperor, Charles V; besides, other pictures show several revolutionary intents, previous to the independence. ==Historical Alley==